Showing posts with label Katie Paxton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Katie Paxton. Show all posts

Friday, April 6, 2012

Production photos of "Noises Off"

Noises Off is on stage! Check out these fun photos we took at the final dress rehearsal this past week. It's a hilarious show!

(Click on the photo for a full size version.)


The cast of Noises Off

Susan Cella, Matthew Schneck, Katie Paxton & Kelsey Didion

The cast of Noises Off


Andrea Cirie, Scott Ripley & Susan Cella

Andrea Cirie, Jeffrey Blair Cornell, Brandon Garegnani, Ray Dooley

Noises Off is now playing through April 22. Click here to learn more!


Thursday, January 26, 2012

"New clothes, new smells, new lights, new sounds"
by Katie Paxton

Katie Paxton
by actor Katie Paxton

Katie plays four characters in The Making of a King, including Doll Tearsheet and Lady Mortimer.


“Inhabit your costume with utter familiarity, and make it work for you; after all, your character chose it in order to convey an image to the world.” --Maria Aitken

New clothes, new smells, new lights, new sounds. New floors, new shoes, new hair. The first day of technical rehearsals harkens back to my childhood: reaching into my dress-up trunk and seamlessly stepping into the characters I’ve created in my mind.



Katie Paxton as
Doll Tearsheet in Henry IV.
Photo by Jon Gardiner.
For me, a huge part of my process is my character’s clothing. My favorite part of tech is seeing the dressing room and feeling the fabrics of my costumes. What we wear is so indicative of who we are, whether we like it or not, and it is no different for the people in the Henry plays. Before we even started rehearsals, costume renderings were available to actors so that we could hit the ground running on character work. Costumes help the audience to identify individual characters while recognizing a common world the characters live in through the artistic vision of the Costume Designer (for this production, the lovely Jennifer Caprio).

During technical rehearsals, we are stitching together each individual artists’ work on and off the stage. The lighting designer, sound designer, costume designer, directors and actors each add a unique piece of cloth to the tapestry of our production.

The idea of putting it all together can seem impossible (Can this cockpit hold the vasty fields of France?)--but I was astonished by how our plays effortlessly slipped into the Paul Green Theatre like a pair of old gloves in my childhood trunk.

We teched through and ran each show in four days, which means room left to play, tweak details and explore before previews...who woulda thunk?! That has to be a record. If not, it’s certainly a testament to our phenomenal team of artists on this epic project, working day and night to tell the story of The Making of a King.


The Making of a King: Henry IV and Henry V runs January 28 to March 4. Click here for more information and tickets.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

"Virginia Woolf" Photos Are Here!

Once again we've brought in photographer Jon Gardiner to get some production photos at the final dress rehearsal of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? - and these shots are pretty spectacular! Check them out below to get a sneak peek of this sizzling production.
Ray Dooley as George, Katie Paxton as Honey,
Julie Fishell as Martha and Brett Bolton as Nick



Katie Paxton and Brett Bolton

Brett Bolton and Ray Dooley



Julie Fishell and Brett Bolton


Ray Dooley and Julie Fishell

Photos by Jon Gardiner.
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is now playing through December 18th.

Friday, September 30, 2011

Making hats for "In the Next Room", part 3

by Rachel Pollock, Crafts Artisan

Today, the trimming of the final two hats from In the Next Room!

Recall from prior posts on this topic that the hat trim is intended to be a physical representation of the metamorphosis of the character of Mrs. Daldry over the course of the play, and that the first two hats progressed in decoration from a reserved veiled hat to a more adventurous hat with a single upright "wing."

But what about the third and fourth hats?





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Hat #3 features a rainbow ombre-dyed length of embroidered silk, sprays of coq feathers, taffeta ribbon bows, and velvet roses.

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Front oblique view.

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Rear oblique view.

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Hat #3 worn onstage! Wow, how flamboyant and fabulous it looks! Katie Paxton as Mrs. Daldry, Matt Garner as Leo Irving, Kelsey Didion as Mrs. Givings. (Photo by Jon Gardiner.)


In the fourth hat, the theme of metamorphosis becomes encoded in a fairly literal symbol: the butterfly. Designer Anne Kennedy wanted to expand the adornment of the hats from the fairly traditional realm of fabrics, ribbons, flowers, birds and bows, to encompass what would appear to be actual butterflies (which are really made from painted and dyed feathers)! What fun!




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We purchased the butterflies from a floral supplier, but they were too bright (top row). You can see how we sprayed down the brightness with a mist of black paint (bottom row).

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Millinery assistant Leah Pelz then assembled some of them into these ornamental sprays.

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Whoa. Now that's Hat #4.

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In addition to the butterflies, some of the adornments include 9" wide satin ribbon, taffeta ribbons, faux grasses, feathered sprays, faux rosehips, and a red raffia thistle.

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Oblique view.

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Rear view.

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This image shows the hats ready to go into the dressing rooms. I always pin these detailed hat care documents onto each head for the wardrobe crew, so they know how the hats are to be worn and stored safely.


Unfortunately, I don't yet have a stage shot of the fourth hat, but i'm sure you can tell from the other three onstage, how fun it looked!

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Making hats for "In the Next Room", part 2

by Rachel Pollock, Crafts Artisan

I initially thought this was a two-part post but I've realized that I'm going to need to split this into three, I think. At the end of the prior post on the topic, all four multiples had been blocked into the desired shape, using a terra cotta flowerpot as a crown block and a brim block I made a couple years ago for The Importance of Being Earnest.

The next step for all the hats was to wire and bind the brim edges and line them.

For some felt styles (say, a fedora), you might choose not to wire the brim edge, but I chose to on these for a couple of reasons. First, the wire and binding will go a long way in helping to maintain the upward curl of the brim in places, since it offers a strong reinforcement to the shape which was initially created in the blocking and sizing process.

Second, these hats are taken off and put back on multiple times an evening, by both the actress herself and her dressers. They need to be as sturdy as possible to withstand that much handling (consider that in "real life," you might wear this hat once a week, tops, if it were your favorite hat, whereas this hat is being worn every night of the week and twice on matinee days).

And third, the designer wanted them finished with this super-cute pinked-edge burgundy suede binding from Mokuba, so we had a perfect means to hide the wiring built into the look itself.

I also tend to line my hats for stage before trimming them out. For a streetwear/fashion hat, you would wait til after trimming to line it to hide the interior stitches securing the trim, but because hats for stage go through SO much aesthetic change in the tech process (on these we have changed the trim on three of the styles twice now, and we aren't even through previews yet), I line before trimming. On felt hats like this one, the lining serves as a stabilizer, too, so that the felt of the hat doesn't bear all the stress of the stitches attaching the trim, so that's a nice secondary benefit to this decision.

My primary assistants at this point were first year graduate Leah Pelz and PRC's staff Costume Technician, Adam Lukas Land, though on at least one occasion I had five undergraduates all at some stage of some craft process working in my room as well. It was fun, all of us working on hats in various stages of completion a taste of what it must have been like to work in the production room of a 19th century milliner's studio when these types of hats were originally made.



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Here's a shot of the hats with their brims wired and bound.

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Each hat is lined in a crossweave taffeta, with the label set into the crown. These have not only the actress/role name in them, but also the hat number.

The next step was to begin trimming them out, and since the hat trim was intended to be a physical representation of the metamorphosis of the character of Mrs. Daldry over the course of the play, this involved a lot of discussion with costume designer Anne Kennedy about how that was to manifest in the decor.

The first time Mrs. Daldry is introduced to the audience, she and her husband have arrived for an appointment with Dr. Givings, who treats patients for "hysteria," which in Mrs. Daldry's case seems to denote what we would call depression today. She doesn't leave the house or open the curtains in her room, and she shuns light by wearing a veil on her hat. We also learn that she isn't happy with her marriage, and that their childlessness is causing both the Daldrys grief.



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First hat, with rust net veil edged in narrow brown ribbon shot with a single iridescent strand. The veil attaches to the hat with a brown embossed-stripe velvet ribbon bow.

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The hat itself is trimmed in a ruched band of crossweave silk taffeta with a topstitched plaid pattern.

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Katie Paxton as Mrs. Daldry
Jeffrey Blair Cornell as Mr. Daldry
(Photo by Jon Gardiner.)


For the second hat, Mrs. Daldry is returning to the doctor's for further "treatment" of her hysteria. She has begun to play the piano again, something her depression (or "hysteria") had previously prevented her from doing. She is far from happy, but she is taking her first steps toward a better frame of mind.

In millinery terms, the idea is that she's taken her hat to the local milliner and asked that it be made over to a bit more daring and (for 1880) modern style. Ladies magazines of the time were showing styles that featured a lot of verticality in trims--towering loops of ribbon and feather sprays, and even bird wings (some mock, some real). The veil has been abandoned, as she no longer needs a physical barrier between herself and the world in order to cope with leaving her house, and she has begun to rediscover an appreciation for sunlight and gardens.

The decor of Hat #2 features a confection of ribbons as a hatband and ornaments, scattered silk flowers and leaves, and an actual antique millinery "wing" (not a taxidermized actual bird's wing, but a piece of decoration made from dyed feathers to resemble one).





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Front view
The trim on the crown of this hat is where ribbon candy gets its name!

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Side front

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Profile view

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Side back

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Katie Paxton as Mrs. Daldry
(Photo by Jon Gardiner.)


I'll stop there, and follow up in a third post on the third and fourth hats, which evolve even further into the realm of elaborate and symbolic trimmings!

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Photos from In the Next Room!

We had our final dress rehearsal for In the Next Room (or the vibrator play) last night, and our production photographer Jon Gardiner was in the house to shoot our publicity photos. They look fantastic! The show is a lot of fun with brilliant actors, elaborate period costumes and a beautiful set, so we have a great album of outstanding photos to share with you.

(Click any image to see a full size version.)

Julie Fishell, Matthew Greer and Katie Paxton (lying down)

Matthew Greer, Katie Paxton, Jeffrey Blair Cornell and Julie Fishell

Kelsey Didion, Katie Paxton and Matthew Greer

Katie Paxton and Kelsey Didion


Dee Dee Batteast and Kelsey Didion

Katie Paxton, Matthew Greer and Kelsey Didion

Photos by Jon Gardiner.

These are just a selection of pics from the full album. Click here to see the rest on our website.

In the Next Room (or the vibrator play) runs from September 21 to October 9, 2011. Click here for more details.