Showing posts with label Kelsey Didion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kelsey Didion. 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!


Monday, March 5, 2012

"Closing the Henries"
by Kelsey Didion


Kelsey Didion
“…and so ends my catechism.”

I type this entry in limbo. Henry IV has just closed with a final matinee, and this evening will be the second-to-last performance of Henry V. It seems somewhat surreal that this massive journey is coming to an end. After 5 weeks of rehearsal, 6 weeks of shows, and what will be a grand total of 40 performances, these plays are in our bones. We’ve lived with these characters for so long, it’s hard to say goodbye to them.

Thankfully, these plays promise to have a lasting impression: the joy of witnessing Shawn Fagan follow Hal’s enormous journey; the privilege and delight of sharing scenes with Cody Nickell’s Hotspur; watching Jeff Cornell discover Pistol in the rehearsal hall; the music of all the different languages and dialects between these two shows; fitting two monarchies, a tavern, Wales, and various battlefields on our “wooden O”—and how could anyone ever forget Michael Winters’ Falstaff?

Saying goodbye to Henry IV and V leaves me with a great sense of pride in our company, our “band of brothers.” It’s been an incredible ride, one I am deeply grateful for and will always remember.

- Kelsey Didion

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 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.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Design Comes to Life

by Rachel Pollock

My mainstage design debut for PlayMakers Repertory Company, Shipwrecked!, is currently running this month. We had the final dress and photo call Tuesday night so some of the topics I wanted to write about that required a stage shot to fully illustrate are now up for posting.

First: customized vest back fabric for Louis de Rougemont!

At the top of the show, Louis enters in a high-button suit with a vest and ascot, like this:


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Scott Ripley as Louis de Rougemont


We purchased his jacket and trousers, but the vest was patterned by draper Shanna I. Parks and constructed by first hand Samantha Coles Greaves. When shopping the fabrics, I found the vest front fabric quickly, but was a bit stumped on the back. Vests of the period typically have fine linen or polished cotton backs, but I wasn't finding anything locally that was appropriate. I didn't have time to get it shopped in NYC, but I did travel to some of the regional fabric treasure-troves.

I was specifically looking for a stripe, either coordinating or in a color range which could be dyed to coordinate. The play is performed on a particularly long thrust stage, which means that at any given time, a third of the audience is probably looking at an actor's back, and Louis pretty much carries this play. He's never offstage, and spends a fair amount of time without his jacket on--I didn't want people looking at a big plain flat expanse of solid color on the vest back. The concept of the costume designs is heavily dependent upon bold pattern.

At the Fabric Center of Walkertown NC (a strange warehouse-style store of mill ends, about an hour's drive from Chapel Hill), I found several striped linen and cotton shirtings, tickings, and other options. They were so cheap I bought enough of each to do the vest, and we set to experimenting.

First, Crafts Artisan and second year grad student Claire Fleming did some dye swatches, testing 2" x 3" swatches to see how they would change appearance when overdyed into the range of Louis's suiting and vest front fabrics. Several remained good contenders, but none retained the bold stripes I'd been hoping for. I realized it was something I was going to have to make happen myself.

First, I again turned to Spoonflower. I thought, perhaps having a striped fabric custom-printed would be the answer to my problem! They offer an organic cotton sateen that was a good weight and hand for the vest back, so I did a few textile designs and ordered swatches.

In the play, Louis recites Shakespeare a couple of times, once most prominently a speech of Prospero's from The Tempest, particularly apt as some of its themes dovetail quite closely with his own. In addition to standard stripes, I did one design in which the stripes were created with the text of Prospero's famous "We are such stuff as dreams are made on" speech. As soon as that idea hit me, I fell in love with it. I knew that I had to find a way to make Louis' vest back from "Tempest stripes," because, how excellent is that? That he'd play the show literally wearing Prospero's words upon his back? My digitally-rendered stripe design is viewable on Spoonflower at this link here.

These are the kind of little elements of a design that I LOVE putting in, whether anyone in the show consciously sees them or not. I know the actors can read them at least, if no one else can, and that's frankly enough--if everyone else only sees stripes, that's what I wanted them to see anyhow. And, some audience members will read this post and know the deeper significance of the stripes, and that too is excellent.

There are a couple of other specific instances of this that I can point out with the released press pictures, as well. For example:


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Aborigines Lauren Klingman, Kelsey Didion, and Josh Tobin


Earlier in the script, Josh Tobin plays a pearl diver on Louis' seafaring expedition who is attacked and killed by a giant octopus. (Seriously, a giant tentacle comes out of the center vom and drags him away!) So, when deciding what pattern to paint upon his aborigine mask, i decided to go with an abstract tentacle motif.


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Jimmy Kieffer as Gunda


In this scene, Jimmy Kieffer wears a feathered crown as Gunda, the leader of the aborigines. See that wavy black trim around the band, kind of like black waves? Later the play, Jimmy also plays Queen Victoria, and that black wave trim is used excessively all over her bodice and bustle train. Earlier, he was a pedestrian in 1869 London with a boutonniere on his frock coat lapel that featured two of those orange-tipped crown feathers.

I just really like the idea that graphical elements representing events and motifs of the play (waves, tentacles, feathers, etc.) exist to draw parallels between characters, actors, and to contribute to a cohesive whole. No one may consciously see them, analyze them and register what they mean, but they're there.

But, back to vest fabric stripes, eh?

The trouble I keep running up against--on this show and on others--with digital printing technology is that it is too unpredictable still in delivery turnaround to work with the regional theatre production schedule. Printers list a delivery window in which you will receive your stuff and when you get it in the early end of that window, it's great, but in this case, my swatch didn't arrive until a week later, and by that time we had to have moved on to layout and cutting. We'll make it work some day, either for a show where we have enough advance planning to work it out, or the technology's popularity and turnaround will catch up to our production schedule. Just not this time.

What I wound up doing to achieve my desired effect was taking the threadmarked vest back pieces and using fabric markers to write the text out in a predetermined stripe pattern. Here it is in process:


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Vest front fabric at rear left, stripe sample swatch, and the piece mid-inscription.


Here's what it says:

Our revels now are ended. These our actors,
As I foretold you, were all spirits and
Are melted into air, into thin air;
And—like the baseless fabric of this vision —
The cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces,
The solemn temples, the great globe itself,
Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve,
And like this insubstantial pageant faded,
Leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff
As dreams are made on, and our little life
Is rounded with a sleep.

Opening night: Saturday! Hopefully i'll have time to write about how we dyed the ocean before then. :D

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Shipwrecked! in Pictures

Previews for Shipwrecked! have begun and Opening Night is only 2 days away! Here's a sneak peek at the production through photos. Shipwrecked! is on stage now through December 19 and is great fun for all ages. In the words of Louis de Rougemont... "Welcome to this temple of the imagination. This hallowed hall where stories are told."

Scott Ripley as Louis de Rougemont

Dee Dee Batteast & Jimmy Kieffer as Players

Scott Ripley as Louis & Derrick Ledbetter as a Player/Bruno the Dog

Scott Ripley as Louis de Rougemont

Jimmy Kieffer & Derrick Ledbetter as Players

Kelsey Didion, Lauren Klingman & Josh Tobin as Ensemble/Foley Artists

Derrick Ledbetter as  Player & Scott Ripley as Louis

Scott Ripley & Cast

Kelsey Didion, Lauren Klingman & Josh Tobin as Ensemble

Dee Dee Batteast as a Player & Scott Ripley as Louis

Cast of Shipwrecked!

Jimmy Kieffer as a Player

Dee Dee Batteast as a Player & Scott Ripley as Louis

Cast of Shipwrecked!

Scott Ripley as Louis & Jimmy Kieffer as a Player

Scott Ripley as Louis, Jimmy Kieffer, Derrick Ledbetter & Dee Dee Batteast as Players

All photos by Jon Gardiner

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

SHIPTECHED!

by director Tom Quaintance

It's about 1:00am - I'm sitting in the Paul Green Theatre after we just wrapped up our weekend of "ten out of twelve" tech rehearsals.  We go from noon to midnight with a dinner break each night from 5:00-7:00. Long days.  A common term to describe this time is "tech hell" - but it is my favorite part of rehearsals.  An army of amazing designers, talented technicians and phenomenal artisans are putting together the complex technical elements of the show.  I can't speak to how well the show is directed, but it is designed beautifully.

This is a particularly exciting show to tech.  SHIPWRECKED is chokerblock full of theatrical challenges.  We tell a story that ranges across decades and continents, from England to the Coral Sea.  The show is a tight 90 minutes, but it feels like we packed the tech of a much longer show into the confines of this story.  I love the old school theatre storytelling done with technical virtuosity; the shadow puppets, the Foley artists upstage creating the ambient sound effects of the show, the actors creating a storm by flinging their bodies across the stage, the list goes on and on.

This play could be done with three actors, a chair and a box of paper clips... this is not that production.  Donald Margulies, in his afterword of the play, says of the story of Louis de Rougemont: "In it I saw the potential for a purely theatrical play about the power of the imagination."  This production revels in that idea of pure theatricality.  We demand much of both the imagination of the audience and our own imagination as artists.  There is no conceit here that we are only going to tell this story using things Louis could have brought with him from the 19th century, or from a single box we drag on stage.  We are celebrating our storytelling power as theatre artists - and tech is where we get to see it all come together.

I can't wait for previews to start.  We've thus far been rehearsing without one of our most important characters.  Finally, on Wednesday, the audience arrives.


The cast of Shipwrecked! in the rehearsal hall before tech

The cast of Shipwrecked! in the rehearsal hall before tech

Director Tom Quaintance and cast members Jimmy Kieffer, Derek Ledbetter, Scott Ripley and Dee Dee Batteast

Stage Manager Sarah Smiley with Foley artists Josh Tobin, Lauren Klingman and Kelsey Didion

Some of the Foley instruments used on stage to provide the show's sound effects