Photo Friday
April 20, 2012 at 4:10 pm | Posted in Macbeth, On the Mainstage, Photo Friday, Theatre 101 | Leave a commentHooray for Friday! We are well into our run of Romeo and Juliet and Macbeth and it has gone well (mostly) so far! Here is a picture of a prop that gets loads of use in our production of Macbeth!
BLOOD!
Looks yummy, doesn’t it?
You can find the recipe for prop blood in our latest newsletter! To subscribe, just click here
Have a great weekend!
Post-Mortem
December 13, 2011 at 8:01 am | Posted in Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet, Theatre 101 | Leave a commentDid you know that once a show closes, the production and artistic team have a Post Mortem? Shakespeare in Action just had one for Romeo & Juliet and Macbeth this week.
Post Mortem – “done, occurring, or collected after death”. In the medical world an autopsy is an examination on a cadaver to determine or confirm the cause of death.
In the theatre world, a POST MORTEM is a critical assestment after the fact. When a show comes down (closes) the various heads of departments (management, design areas, and artistic) and others will come together to discuss what was done right and what was done wrong throughout the process and how it could be better done in the future. It usually takes place a week or so after strike.
Everyone loves closure. It’s a fantastic way to end one chapter in order to begin the next. A post mortem is a practice that can be applied to any ‘thing’ that has come to a close. It reminds us of the aspects in which we need to improve upon and the success and pleasures that were felt/exlpored while partaking in the particular circumstance/relationship/event/show etc.
Theatre 101: Aside
August 13, 2011 at 9:00 am | Posted in Theatre 101 | Leave a commentDo you know what the term “aside” means? How about in the world of theatre?
An aside is a remark, comment or even speech given by a character, and it’s made directly to the audience. This is often called “breaking the fourth wall” because it breaks the invisible barrier between actors and audience. As the audience, we’re supposed to implicitly understand that this remark is not being heard by the other characters in the play. It’s often used as a way to help the audience members relate better to the character who’s speaking. Sometimes, the remark is something witty and sarcastic. It usually comments directly on the action of the play.
Famous asides in Shakespeare plays include moments in Macbeth and Hamlet. If you’ve ever seen the movie Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, or the TV show Malcolm in the Middle, think about those moments where the main characters look directly into the camera and speak. That’s a version of an aside. Also think about the moments on TV shows like The Office where characters will look right into the camera and make a face, indicating an opinion about something that’s going on in the main action of the show. That’s a wordless aside!
Here’s a video that shows some of Jim’s looks on The Office:
Theatre 101: Blocking
July 21, 2011 at 9:00 am | Posted in Theatre 101, Theatre History | Leave a commentThis summer we’re all going to learn some theatre terms! Like any field or profession, theatre makes use of a lot of unique terms and vocabulary words that you don’t necessarily hear in the outside world. Your blogger didn’t have any theatre experience until she became an intern at Shakespeare in Action, so she’ll be learning some of these terms for the first time as well! (And if you happen to find any errors in these Theatre 101 posts, please be kind – and let us know at intern@shakespeareinaction.org!)
We’re going to start with an acting term – “blocking.” Blocking describes how an actor moves around the stage during a performance. The term was inspired by the 19th century director W.S. Gilbert, who used wooden blocks on a miniature stage to work out where his actors should be during a performance.
Directors usually decide on blocking during rehearsals, sometimes with help from the actors or based on the stage directions in the text of the play. Stage directions are things like “enter stage right” or “exit, pursued by a bear” (a strange piece of direction from The Winter’s Tale), notations in the text of the play that tell us where and when characters enter and leave. Sometimes stage directions can be very minimalist, as in most Shakespeare plays – meaning that there aren’t many directions. Sometimes, however, playwrights have a definite vision of where they want all their characters to be, and write in stage directions accordingly.
Directors will also work with lighting and set designers to figure out where actors should stand and move during the play. Good lighting is essential so that the audience can see properly, and if actors need to do anything complicated with props – like pretend to cook, for example – set designers will take that into account when they design the set and find the props.
Live theatre may seem spontaneous, but actually each performance has been carefully planned out and blocked (in traditional productions). Actors will move the same way from performance to performance – scratching their head at the same point of the play each night, or falling to their knees in a certain scene. Stage managers will make sure that actors follow the proper blocking, since directors are not always there to observe performances. It’s important to have a plan that everyone follows, otherwise actors would be running into each other or the sets as they moved about!
All of the areas of the stage have names so that everyone knows where they are supposed to be:
Shakespeare’s Birthday: A Tale of Mystery and Intrigue
April 21, 2011 at 10:33 pm | Posted in Shakespeare's Life, Special Events, Theatre History | Leave a commentAll right, dear readers, settle in for a quick history lesson. Got a mug of hot chocolate and a blanket? I’ll wait…
Yes, I did say in my last post that Shakespeare’s 447th birthday is this week. But! I didn’t give you a specific day, did I? And that’s because scholars just don’t know when William Shakespeare was really born! It might seem weird to us that things like actual days of birth went unrecorded back then – the information could have been lost (the Elizabethans were notoriously spotty record keepers and were just starting to collect all this data right around the time of the Bard’s birth) or just never registered with the authorities.
In any case, scholars guess that Shakespeare’s birthday was April 23rd. Most babies at that time were baptized very quickly – just a few days after their birth. The Elizabethans celebrated all kinds of Saint’s Days, which were days honouring various saints (as you might have guessed), and babies were usually baptized on the first Saint’s Day after their birth.
We definitely know that Shakespeare was baptized on the 26th because, according to this nifty online resource, the baptismal records of the local Stratford church show the following name on April 26th, 1564:
Gulielmus filius Johannes Shakespeare
That’s Latin for “William, son of John Shakespeare.” The 26th is not a Saint’s Day, but since we know for sure that Shakespeare was baptized on that day, we can count backwards and guess when he was born. Many scholars and historians in the past chose the 23rd of April because Shakespeare also died on that day, 52 years later in 1616. You have to admit, the symmetry is appealing. But really we have no idea what day was Shakespeare’s real birthday. We can only guess. Scholars around the world generally agree on the 23rd, and it is celebrated accordingly.
Whew – are you still with me after all that birthday information? There are plenty of websites where you can read all about the controversy surrounding Shakespeare’s life. There’s also a great, funny and easy-to-read book on the subject by Bill Bryson.
The truth is, as Bryson writes, we just don’t know much about Shakespeare at all. He wrote some of the world’s most famous, memorable, funny, moving and innovative plays, but he left hardly any marks of his own personality or life upon the world. We hardly know where he lived, what he thought, how he wrote or even how much time he spent with his family. That’s not necessarily unusual, since we don’t know a whole lot about other, similar figures from the same time period – as I mentioned, record keeping was spotty at best and downright nonexistent at worst. But it sure would be nice to know more about the man who gave us Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, Macbeth and all those other wonderful characters, wouldn’t it?
Nevertheless, just because we don’t know the man’s real birthday doesn’t mean we can’t celebrate! So come back on Saturday the 23rd for a special birthday post!
Quite the Character!
February 10, 2011 at 11:23 am | Posted in Theatre History | 3 CommentsHave you ever tried to count how many characters Shakespeare has created? It’s a soaring combination of fictional, historical and mythical characters that all weave together to form the world of Shakespeare. They’re an interesting mix of evil sidekicks, lovers and dreamers.
Let’s take a look at his villains. There’s the iconic Macbeth and Lady Macbeth whose guilt is a premise for their demise. Brutus and Cassius run the show in Julius Caesar and then there’s Richard III who was so cruel he got a whole pay to himself. Lastly there’s possibly the most sinister, Iago. He misleads Othello and betrays his trust in a plan to take down the Moor.
In honour of Valentine’s day, can you think of any of Shakespeare’s most romantic characters? I’ll start you off with the one and only Romeo, the most iconic romantic character of our time!
Ready, Set, Shakespeare!
May 30, 2010 at 8:00 am | Posted in A Midsummer Night's Dream, Central Commerce Collegiate, On the Mainstage, Shakespeare Alive!, Shakespeare's Shorts, Theatre History, Touring | Leave a commentTags: A Student Prepares, actors, Auditorium, Central Commerce Collegiate, Diary of Anne Frank, mainstage production, Midsummer Night's Dream, Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare Alive!, Shakespeare's Shorts, stage, theatre
We are proud to announce our new 2010-2011 season. Please join us in creating invigorating, challenging, joyful theatre experiences for students!
SIA is Canada’s leading Shakespeare company for young audiences, with over 22 years experience. We return with a new season of work for students of all ages, featuring three timeless classics told with our usual innovative and artistic flair! And some brand new programs to boot!
What makes us different is that we hire professional Equity actors, meaning your students will see the highest quality performances at the most affordable rates in Toronto!
Stay tuned to our website and blog for more information (website to be updated shortly!) or call us to book today. Remember, if you book before June 30, you can buy tickets to our mainstage shows for a LOW $12 per student. That price includes all taxes and we don’t charge a booking fee.
Let us know what you think of the season and we hope to see you soon!
A brief (theatre) history lesson: Central Commerce Collegiate
February 10, 2010 at 10:00 am | Posted in Central Commerce Collegiate, Miscellaneous, Theatre History | Leave a commentTags: Central Commerce Collegiate, Herman Voaden, history, Progressive Arts Club, theatre, Toby Ryan
by John Wojewoda and Brittney Filek-Gibson
Central Commerce Collegiate is at 570 Shaw, just north of College, located in the Palmerston-Little Italy neighborhood of downtown Toronto. The school opened its doors to local students in 1916 as Central High School, though commercial education in Toronto dates back to 1892. At the beginning of this, CCC’s 93rd school year, Shakespeare in Action found a permanent home in Room 18, thanks to the generosity of the TDSB. Central Commerce Collegiate (as it came to be known in 1991) has many interesting features, but one of its best is the beautiful old theatre right in the middle of the building. Currently undergoing a bit of a facelift, it has many notable features, like a faux sky light reminiscent of to an opera house or some European theatre.
So Central Commerce Collegiate, affectionately know as CCC, was originally a school whose focus was business and commerce, but curiously, it has a strong historical connection to Canadian theatre. In 1928, Herman Voaden was appointed head of the English department at CCC, which was then known as The Central High School of Commerce. Who is Herman Voaden? Well, he is considered by Canadian art historians to be the most significant Canadian Playwright before World War II. Basically, he’s the father of the modern Canadian play. Still influential, though largely unknown, there is even The Herman Voaden National Play Wrighting Competition at Queens University has been running since 1997. Voaden was also influential as a zealous arts lobbyist and headed the Canadian Arts Council (1945-48), the Canadian Conference of the Arts (1966-68) and the Canadian Guild of Crafts (1968-70). Thanks for paving the way, Mr. Voaden!
But it doesn’t end there. One of Herman Voaden’s students was also an important (and largely unknown) figure in Canadian theatre history. Toby Ryan (nee Gordon) attended CCC in the early 1920s where Herman Voaden was her English teacher. Born into a working class family of avid theatre-goers, Toby Ryan was already well-versed in the world of theatre by the time she made it to CCC, but it was Voaden who instilled in her a love of the written word and especially of Shakespeare. Although she did not go on to become a famous Shakespearean actress or anything of the sort, she helped to found and promote socially-minded, progressive theatre at its inception in this country.
Toby was a member of an organization known as the Progressive Arts Club. The Toronto branch spawned the Worker’s Theatre, whose most controversial performance, Eight Men Speak, was shut down by government censorship, and the Theatre of Action, who founded a summer school and were active participants in changing the face of professional theatre. Their work was largely socialist, pro-union, progressive, political, socially conscious, and darn fine theatre. They played in theatres, but also in union halls, labour temples, and even managed a tour of Southern Ontario. Their plays often featured workers in leading roles; they sought to portray the times as they actually were, not in theatrical ideals. They were also responsible for the Toronto premiere of the most influential play of the 1930s, Clifford Odets’s Waiting For Lefty.
To bring us back full circle, Toby’s participation in Toronto’s Progressive Arts Club was actually part of a larger movement across the country (and abroad). These clubs were formed all over the country and produced plays that engaged with the politics and people of the time. In Vancouver, the PAC won the Dominion Drama Festival (of which Herman Voaden was a founding member) with their production of Waiting For Lefty. Winnipeg was home to another branch. Montreal was also quite active and was one of few English language theatre groups in the city at the time. In fact, Odets himself visited the Montreal group and was so impressed that he sent them a donation of $50 (big bucks in the 1930s). This group also lasted much longer than the others, well into the 1950s, and, when they eventually disbanded, the last $25 in their bank account went to fund a new theatre initiative in Stratford, Ontario, now well known for its connection to the Bard.
All of this, plus the fact that CCC was featured in the X-Men movie, makes it an excellent home for our company. And we have big plans to contribute positively to the continuation of this incredible history!
For more information about CCC:
Official TDSB Central Commerce Collegiate website
For more information about Herman Voaden:
Biographical info
University of New Brunswick website (complete works and essays)
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