Showing posts with label The Making of a King: Henry IV & V. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Making of a King: Henry IV & V. Show all posts

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

Thursday, February 16, 2012

"The Making of a King" Reading List

by Connie Mahan, Marketing Director

A select, eclectic and accessible pop culture film-bibliography:
or, a raft of film, TV and books in connection with our topic.
(Lord help me, I’ve read and watched all these and many more.)

Film:
  • The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933/Charles Laughton as a rollicking monarch, plus a flock of early British film stars)
  • Tower of London (1937/Boris Karloff, with Basil Rathbone as Richard III)
  • Henry V (1944/Laurence Olivier, 1998/Kenneth Branagh)
  • Richard III (1955/Laurence Olivier, 1995/Ian McKellen)
  • The Lion in Winter (1968/Peter O’Toole as Henry II and Katharine Hepburn his Eleanor of Aquitaine. The 2003 version with Glenn Close and Patrick Stewart is not at all bad either.)
  • Becket (1964/Richard Burton in the title role with Peter O’Toole, as a younger Henry II)
  • Anne of the Thousand Days (1969/ Burton as Henry VIII this time)
TV series:
  • "The Six Wives of Henry VIII" (1970 BBC)
  • "Elizabeth R" (1971 BBC)
  • "The Shadow of the Tower: The Rise of the Tudor Dynasty" (1972 BBC)
  • "The Tudors" (2007-2010 Showtime/BBC America)
  • "Terry Jones: Medieval Lives" (2004 BBC, fun semi-animated documentary by the former Monty Pythoner)
  • "Black Adder" (1982… BBC, Rowan Atkinson’s fractured history sitcom, the first of the four series is set in the British Middle Ages circa Richard III)
  • "A History of Britain" (2000-2002 BBC/The History Channel)
  • "Monarchy" (2004-2006 UK Channel 4)
Film and TV selections available on Netflix, among other outlets.

Books:
  • Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel (2009) mega award-winning fictionalized bio of the rise of Thomas Cromwell in the reign of Henry VIII
  • The Women of the Cousins’ War, the Duchess, the Queen and the King’s Mother (2011), biographical compilation by Philippa Gregory and others
  • The White Queen (2009), The Red Queen (2010), The Lady of the Rivers (2011), The Other Boleyn Girl (2001), The Constant Princess (2005), The Boleyn Inheritance (2006), and other historical novels of the Wars of the Roses and Tudor Court by Philippa Gregory
  • Mary Queen of Scots (1969), The Lives of the Kings and Queens of England (editor, 1975), The Weaker Vessel: Woman’s Lot in 17th Century England (1984), The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1992) by Lady Antonia Fraser (Pinter)
Could go on and on with works on Elizabeth I, Joan of Arc and others…but we’ll save those for another play/another blog post.

Connie Mahan

Anglophile, history and film maven


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The Making of a King: Henry IV & Henry V is now playing through March 4. Click here for more information and tickets.


Monday, February 13, 2012

"Behind the Grime" by Rachel Pollock

by Rachel Pollock, Crafts Artisan

My favorite project on Henry IV is far and away the aging process for Falstaff's fiddleback leather coat, which was custom made for actor Michael Winters in the role. We brought on board tailor Kara Monroe (also a UNC alum from our costume production MFA program) to pattern and construct the coat from three hides of lovely buttery leather. (It had to be big to go over Mr. Winters' prodigious fat padding suit!)

Kara made a beautiful garment, but a just-made coat looks like exactly that: a new piece of clothes! Falstaff is not the sort of man who has a brand new anything in this play, unless it's maybe a brand new bottle of booze. Costume Designer Jennifer Caprio had very clear ideas about the nature of the coat--my notes from our discussion about the aging say:
  • his favorite coat
  • worn it for 30 years in battle/war/bar brawls
  • lays around brothels in it
  • drinks all night in it, passes out in it

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Costume design rendering by Jennifer Caprio
 
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Michael Winters as Falstaff in a fitting for the coat.
 
I tell my students that the nature of the aging process is twofold. There's breakdown, which might be as simple as laundering a new shirt with washing soda or might be as extensive as ripping a ragged hem or tearing holes in knees/elbows. And, there's pigment age, which might be dipping white shirt in a pot of tea or might be splattering it with paint or ink or dye. For the Falstaff coat, I did very little breakdown, only using a fine grit sandpaper on some of the flat-fell seams and across the tops of the shoulders, just to soften the leather and rough up the surface a tad. The majority of work involved pigment aging--in this case, application of leather dyes and French Enamel Varnish.

French Enamel Varnish, more commonly called FEV in our industry, is a medium that you mix yourself according to your needs. Its components are leather dye, denatured alcohol, and shellac, and your project determines the ratio. If you need something runny, use a minimal amount of shellac; if you need something thick, use a lot of shellac and not much alcohol. Use more dye for more pigmentation, less for lighter hues. Use gloves when you work with it and only apply it in a well-ventilated area. I cut on the big wall vents in my dye shop and, thanks to the mild winter, even opened the windows.

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Application of FEV on interior of Falstaff coat.
 
I applied this treatment in four layers, and unfortunately it went fast enough and I was busy enough I only have the one process shot laying on the table. But I can tell you about it! First, I used a dauber to apply tan leather dye to all the seams on the coat. Kara and Jen had put a lot of thought into the construction of this coat and I wanted to highlight that fiddleback seam placement, and the number of gores in the frock. The tan leather dye served to pump up the eye's perception of those seams onstage.

Next, I used a toothbrush to flick the tan dye and some medium brown leather dye up from the hem like residual stains from ancient mud splatters, and also to drip it down from above (like drunk-guy spillage and rain-stain from some bad weather on an age-old battlefield) onto the lapels and chest. I also used a chip brush with the two kinds of leather dye and two related colors of FEV to paint a sort of ombre effect from the hem up, to create some sweat stains in the armpits and around the collar, and to do some allover dry-brush toning.

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Front view on form.
 
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Rear view on form.
 
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Stage shot of ensemble by Jon Gardiner with Michael Winters as Falstaff in foreground.
 
Hope you enjoyed seeing "behind the grime," and if you are in the Triangle area, definitely check out these two plays. They are, quite literally, epic.

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The Making of a King: Henry IV & Henry V is now playing through March 4. Click here for more information and tickets.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

"Welding fit for a King"
by Trevor Collins

Trevor is a carpenter in the PlayMakers scene shop and is responsible for building the sets for Mainstage and PRC2 productions.

Big Bertha, the massive PlayMakers welder
In the PlayMakers shop there are three Lincoln Electric MIG welders, however only one of them has been given a name: Bertha. Big Bertha to be precise, and she is about two sizes larger than the other two newer welders in the shop. The graduate students, both past and present, remember her fondly. Despite her larger size, given a choice, Bertha is the welder we reach for nine times out of ten.
For the set build of Henry IV and Henry V, Bertha saw a lot of action. Since the set is predominantly made of steel, we required a larger number of crew members in the steel section of the shop than usual.  With so much steel in the production, all three welders have been employed, but Bertha has remained the favorite.


“Welding” or steel work is about 70% preparation, 10% welding, and 20% clean up. After all of the work of cutting the numerous pieces, setting up the countless jigs, bending all of the trussing and double checking everything a multitude of times, having Bertha at your side, to assist in creating one of the nicest welding beads you’ve ever produced, is icing on the cake.

What sets Bertha apart from the other MIG welders in the shop is that the black box housing the welding wire is removable. It can be rolled around about 20 feet away from where the rest of Bertha is. Once we moved the set into the Paul Green Theatre, we were able to keep Bertha at the back wall of the theatre and weld anywhere on the set, saving us lots of time and energy in not having to lift one of the welders onto the stage.

Bertha is a vital piece of equipment in the scene shop enabling us to complete our sets in time for tech. She is one of those tools that makes you wonder how any shop could survive with out having a Big Bertha of their own.

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

Monday, February 6, 2012

From Sketches to the Stage

Costume designer Jennifer Caprio has generously shared some of her design materials with us to give an inside look at the design process. Here are a couple of her beautiful watercolor "renderings," shown alongside actual production photos that show how the final costume came together.

Falstaff

Falstaff Costume Rendering
Falstaff, played by Michael Winters, with young prince Hal (Shawn Fagan)
 Hotspur

Hotspur Costume Rendering
Hotspur, played by Cody Nickell (R), with Worcester (Ray Dooley)

Costume design images courtesy of Jennifer Caprio.
Production photos by Jon Gardiner.

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The Making of a King: Henry IV & Henry V is now playing through March 4. Click here for more information and tickets.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

"The Making of a World" by Elizabeth Moss

by Props Artisan Elizabeth Moss

Elizabeth works in the PlayMakers Props Shop, which is responsible for building or borrowing all the props and furniture for each production, including The Making of a King.


"The Making of a World: Props for Henrys IV and V"
Down in the scene shop they’re putting on the final touches, onstage they’re focusing lights and painting late into the night. Upstairs the costume shop is racing to the finish, and directly above us we can hear the sounds of battle being staged.


But what are we doing down in the prop shop, tucked away in the middle of the building?  Some days it seems like everything! The nature of a prop shop is wide ranging, and if it’s not worn or part of the stage: we’re doing it. We’ve got everything you need to wage two wars in two countries. On a thrust stage where the actual scenery does not change from one place to another, it is the furniture that indicates the shift from a London Palace to a battlefield in France. Let me give you a little idea of what’s going on in the shop.


Today the front table is littered in letters, arrest warrants, and proclamations: paper goods are almost finished: a few royal looking seals, some ribbon maybe, and each set (there are many backups for each letter) will be packaged in an envelope, and labeled with scene number and short description
Over on the ironing table is a fur lined blankets for the Percys. Gets cold up in those northern castles I guess. Draped over one of the sewing machines is a pile of gold fabric; it’s just been turned into a Pavilion drape for the French. On the back tables Joncie, one of our fabulous over-hires is making a flask and holster for Falstaff.  We’re also working on reupholstering a chaise, and building a bathtub. Down the ships ladder in the carpentry area we’ve just finished with Henry IV’s bed and the bottom half of the chaise.

Then there’s the life sized boar in the hallway. We’ll call him Richard. We’re still not sure if he’ll be making his PlayMakers’ Debut with this show, but he’s fun to have around.

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The Making of a King: Henry IV & Henry V is now playing through March 4. Click here for more information and tickets.

The Making of a King: Is it Opening yet?

by "our secret source in tech"

Three days until opening and we are still tweaking the show. All of it worth it, of course, but my body and mind are starting to feel the strain. I feel like that guy in The Wages of Fear driving a truckload of nitroglycerine across a lunar landscape... "No... Sleep... 'Til Harfleur!"

Some observations:
  • Everyday I key into something different. Last night I was struck by Patrick McHugh's pitch-perfect Poins, and the strength with which Dee Dee Battest (Montjoy) will plant herself and serve up text.
  • There's Jennifer Tipton up on the scafolding... she's still checking light levels.
  • Did I just hear a dog barking on stage?

  • What? The rain on stage is fueled by the mens dressing room shower? and here I thought they had a deferred maintenance issue.
  • When did Billy Corgan join the cast? Oh wait, that's Ray Dooley.
  • Wow, Westmorland has a really big sword.
  • Why wasn't Tug dressed in battle armor for Shrewsbury?
I come from Eastcheap

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

The background of 'The Making of a King'

 Background and dramaturgy material courtesy of dramaturg Adam Versényi

Plot Summaries

The Making of A King draws its events from a group of four related plays by Shakespeare:  Richard II, Henry IV, Part I, Henry IV, Part II and Henry V.  In Richard II we see the downfall of one king and the rise of another.  Richard II banishes Henry Bolingbroke and claims all of his lands and possessions.  Henry returns to England and, with his allies the Northumberland Percys, leads a rebellion. Richard is defeated, forced to abdicate the throne, and Bolingbroke is crowned Henry IV. 

The two parts of Henry IV I show us the fractious nature of the new king’s reign.  Threatened constantly by insurrection, much of it led by his erstwhile allies the Percys; Henry IV is also greatly distressed by the behavior of Prince Hal, his son and heir, and we track his journey from youthful abandon in the taverns of Eastcheap to valor in his father’s cause during the Battle of Shrewsbury.  By the end of the play Prince Hal distances himself from his old drinking companions, especially the father-substitute he found there, Sir John Falstaff, and is crowned Henry V.

In Henry V we see the new king as a man who feels he has been called upon to cement the control of the Plantagenet line on the English throne and to unite the kingdoms of France and England.  Following his father’s advice to launch a foreign war to quell civil unrest at home, the young king decisively invades France. In the process he demonstrates his growing understanding of statecraft as he dispatches both aristocratic traitors and common soldier thieves from his old tavern days. By the play’s end Henry V, against monumental odds, defeats the French at Agincourt, marries the French King’s daughter Katherine, and is crowned King of England and France combined.

From Agincourt by Juliet Barker, October 2005

The Making of A King


Henry IV, in Henry Holland,
Baziliologia, 1618
While the British Monarch is largely a figurehead today, the subject of royal weddings, Helen Mirren films, and tabloid scandals, the British Monarchy was for much of its existence a powerful political and military force.  That is not the way it began, however, and Shakespeare’s plays deal in many ways with the personal, dynastic and social forces that forged the monarchic state.

Henry IV shows us Prince Hal’s coming into his own during the uncertain times that follow his father’s usurpation of Richard II’s throne.  Henry IV is bedeviled by numerous forces:  civil unrest fomented by the lords who helped him claim the throne and now feel abandoned by him; fear that Richard II’s designated heir, Edmund Mortimer, will press his claim to the throne; and the clear sense that, by killing Richard, he has both violated the divine right of kings and made it impossible to assume that right for himself.

The beginning of the play focuses on the tension between a centralized monarchy and the diverse geographical regions, languages, and cultures that comprised the British monarchy. Henry IV is trying to break the grip of powerful independent warlords, particularly from the North, who have challenged the authority of the king.  In essence, what Shakespeare dramatizes here is a painful transition from a feudal system to a nation-state. The Northumberland Percys and Worcester place feudal loyalties above fealty to a single monarch and Hotspur is the strongest embodiment of feudal chivalry with its code of honor, its admiration of heroism on the battlefield, and its elevation of loyalty to self and family above any loyalty to the state.

Hotspur’s greatest danger to Henry is his assertion of feudal rights against the law of the land.  Rather than the traditional image of the monarch as the sun, Hotspur sees him as the moon, a mere reflection of the king that Henry deposed.  Fiercely independent, embracing personal honor and lineage over nationalism, valuing bravery and force of arms for its own sake rather than what it can achieve, and zealously asserting his political autonomy, Hotspur is a weapon skillfully wielded by those, such as Northumberland and Westmoreland, who want to break Henry’s rule.

An artist's illustration of the town and part of Harfluer.

Shakespeare alters his sources to make Prince Hal and Hotspur the same age—the historical Hotspur was closer in age to Henry—and makes the Hal of his play a bit older than he was in reality. The historical Hal was only twelve years old during the Battle of Shrewsbury where, despite being wounded by an arrow in his face, he fought valiantly.  Shakespeare makes these alterations to make Hal and Hotspur’s final confrontation more dramatically compelling, and Hal must defeat Hotspur to inherit a secure kingship from his father, but his greater challenge will be to defeat the lure of the tavern world where first we find him reveling.

Taverns were alehouses where anyone could drink publicly. All layers of society from the criminal to the courtly mixed freely outside the rigid class distinctions and constraints of the court. During Henry Bolingbroke’s exile Hal was a ward of Richard II and the experience of watching his father depose and execute his mentor may also contribute to Hal’s motivation for fleeing the court to dally in the tavern world.  Where Hotspur is a rival for Hal, Falstaff is presented as surrogate father to him and, therefore, a rival to Henry for paternal authority.

Shakespeare seems to be suggesting that Falstaff the thief is akin to Henry the usurper, who stole the throne from Richard.  Both create positions of power they base upon theft.  Hal, who will inherit the kingship through legitimate succession, has the opportunity to establish the crown as rightly his.  All of this suggests, and the play extends the idea, that political power depends not upon divine right, but upon performance.  He who best plays the king is the king. This is a particularly apt concept for Elizabethan England where, as Machiavelli observed in The Prince,  “political power is secured by theatrical illusion—a populace can best be controlled by dissimulation, image-making, and role-play.”

This is one reason that Henry IV’s recurring illness became such an issue both historically and in the play.  What he actually suffered from is unclear, only that he suffered many bouts of a debilitating illness starting in 1405.  Whatever the specifics of the diagnosis, all his contemporaries agreed that his illness was divine retribution for having usurped the throne.  Henry himself seems to have believed this as well.  The first words of his will are, “I, Henry, sinful wretch” and refer to “the life I have mispended”.

While Henry IV begins with the world of the court and the feudal lords, the play also presents a richly observed catalogue of all of the other social classes that comprise the new nation.  Hal boasts that he “can drink with any tinker in his own language”, implying that being able to speak the common tongue is essential to his future governance.  Throughout the play Shakespeare explores various alternatives to the official speech of the court, moving those voices from the margins to the center, with the loudest voice of all provided by Falstaff. 

As the play proceeds Falstaff is increasingly painted as a cynical, manipulative and degenerate character that Hal must reject in order to rule.  But the brio with which Falstaff speaks, the bravado with which he moves, and the keen eye with which Shakespeare observes denizens of the world beyond the court insures that while we understand the necessity of Hal’s transformation into Henry V, the demands of the state also reject human compassion and theatrical excitement.  Our sympathies remain with Falstaff.
Henry V in a fifteenth century
portrait by an unknown artist.
Shakespeare’s Henry V dramatizes the new king’s decisiveness as he moves to consolidate his power at home and brilliantly beats the French at Agincourt.  Interestingly enough, the animosity between the English and the French, many of the techniques of warfare that they used, and the feudal system that Henry IV began to break and that Henry V completely quashed, can all be traced back to the Norman invasion of England in 1066.

By the time of Henry V’s rule the feudal system had largely been superseded by a centralized state and by invading France Henry resumed the Hundred Years War.  Its basic cause was a dynastic quarrel between the kings of England, who held the duchy of Guienne, in France, and resented paying homage to the kings of France. The conflict languished until 1415, when Henry V defeated France’s best knights at Agincourt.  He then allied himself with Burgundy and went on to subdue Normandy.  In the Treaty of Troyes (1420), Charles VI of France was forced to recognize Henry as regent and heir to the throne of France, disinheriting his own son, the Dauphin.  By 1429 the English and their Burgundian allies controlled practically all of France north of the Loire and had Orléans under siege.

French fortunes were reversed that year, however.  Joan of Arc lifted the siege of Orléans and saw the dauphin crowned Charles VII at Rheims.  Her capture and execution did not end the string of French victories.  In 1435 Charles obtained an alliance with Burgundy, and by 1450 France had reconquered Normandy.  By 1451 all of Guienne except Bordeaux was in French hands.  Bordeaux fell in 1453, leaving the English only Calais (which they retained until 1558).  Domestic difficulties, specifically the War of the Roses, kept England from making any further attempts to conquer France.  The Hundred Years War inflicted untold misery on the French people.  Famine, the Black Death, and roving bands of marauders decimated the population.  An entirely new France emerged.  The virtual destruction of the feudal nobility allowed the monarchs to unite the country more solidly under the royal authority and to ally themselves with the newly rising middle class.  England ceased to think of itself as a continental power and began to develop as a sea power.  While this description of the Hundred Years War goes beyond the scope of Henry V’s involvement, it illustrates both the roots of the English-French conflict and how both countries were moving from a feudal worldview to one based upon the concept of the nation-state.



While we have combined these history plays into two nights of performance, up until the twentieth century Shakespeare’s histories were performed largely as stand alone pieces.  Furthermore, both in Shakespeare’s day and throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries the two parts of Henry IV were seen as Hotspur and Falstaff’s plays, leading to the probably apocryphal story from Shakespeare’s first editor that Queen Elizabeth was “so well pleas’d with that admirable Character of Falstaff in the two Parts of Henry the Fourth, that she commanded him to continue it for one play more, and to shew him in love”, that being the genesis of Shakespeare’s The Merry Wives of Windsor.  Contemporary performances of these history plays have focused more upon Prince Hal than upon Falstaff or Hotspur, but perhaps more importantly, they have also revealed the broad canvas on which Shakespeare paints his world.

In The Making of A King we travel from high court to lowly tavern, from comedy to tragedy, fact to fiction, private memories to public motives.  While one strand of the plays shows how authoritative control and the making of a nation-state is achieved, another strand of the plays vividly portrays how the diverse populations that live in that new nation-state respond to its creation around them.  As audience members we glory in larger than life characters like Falstaff and Hotspur, but Shakespeare pays no less attention to minor characters like Justice Shallow or the soldier Williams.  Perhaps that is what gives Shakespeare’s history plays their continued appeal.

While the plays’ concern with unifying the nation against the threat of civil war at home and invasion abroad must have resonated with the playwright’s own audience worrying about what would happen to their nation after Elizabeth’s death, our own time is no less unsettled.  As we bring one war to an end in Iraq our soldiers still face horrors in Afghanistan.  Our attempts to stave off economic depression seem tenuous at best.  Natural disasters like hurricanes and the probability of humanly created catastrophes like global warming wreak havoc with our daily lives.  National politics, while not fought on the actual battlefields of war, seem to have devolved into perennial legislative battles where politicians squabble over their own increasingly polarized definitions of what constitutes the nation.  In the meantime the thousands upon thousands of ordinary citizens protesting in the streets occupy our imaginations.  In such an environment Shakespeare’s history plays that constitute The Making of A King still have much to tell us.

Giving Up The Making of a King

Tom Quaintance
By Tom Quaintance

Twenty-some years ago I met Joe Haj working on the Guthrie Theatre’s History Cycle: Richard II, Henry IV part 1 and 2, Henry V all together in rep.  I was a directing intern just out of college, and Joe was in the acting company shortly after finishing the Professional Actor Training Program at UNC. 

It was an extraordinary experience.  I have more vivid memories from that show, both in rehearsal and performance, than most plays I have directed myself.

Henry V was the also the first Shakespeare I directed, with a $40 budget in a black box, with actors who were in other shows, so we’d rehearse from 11:00pm-2:00am.  I was in grad school in San Diego, and Joe came down and watched me work through the tennis ball scene early in the process.  The note he gave me was perhaps the most important in my entire time at UCSD.  We were struggling through the scene - aside from Henry (Scott Ripley) no one was really prepared.  Here I was, directing in front of the best actor I knew, trying to show what an “actors' director” I was.  We took a break and Joe took me aside and said something along the lines of: “It’s great to give the actors a chance to make a choice, but if you’ve got a better idea, say so. Especially if they have no idea at all.”  I think of that moment as the beginning of our work together as collaborators.

After grad school I directed Henry V twice more, once with Joe in the title role.  When Joe asked me to co-direct “The Henrys” as we were calling it a few years ago, I jumped at the opportunity.  To tackle those plays again! In the context of a country in a constant state of war! With Joe!  Thrilling.

I stopped by a rehearsal a few weeks ago.  I was in town after a meeting with the North Carolina Arts Council for my new job.  The last seven months has seen the birth of my beautiful baby girl Mireille, a move across the country from Los Angeles to NC with my wife Wallis, and a new title: Artistic Director of Cape Fear Regional Theatre in Fayetteville.  Like so much else in my career I owe this opportunity in large part to the support of Joe, McKay Coble and all the good folks at PRC.  We go into rehearsal next week for our production of Othello, and I’m having the time of my life, but to take this amazing job I had to give up The Making of a King.  For that brief visit to that rehearsal it was almost physically painful to be in that room watching all my friends bring Henry V to life.  From what I saw “’Tis wonderful.”  I’ll be there opening day and night, and I imagine a few tears will be shed…

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


Tuesday, January 31, 2012

"The Tug of War" by Matt Garner

Matt Garner
by actor Matt Garner

Matt Garner plays four characters in The Making of a King, including Warwick in Henry IV and the Dauphin in Henry V.



Early in my acting career, Shakespeare presented itself as this distant, intellectual quagmire - a party for smart people, to which I was not invited. I didn’t understand it, couldn’t appreciate its beauty and consequently began to loathe it. Any exposure to it left me feeling ostracized and ignorant.

Then I saw Propeller Theatre Company’s Twelfth Night at BAM in Brooklyn and the wall between me and the beauty of Shakespeare’s words came crashing down. I was enthralled. The language seemed so current, so effortless. Yet, the words were still Shakespeare’s, still 400 years old.

The truth is, Shakespeare becomes increasingly accessible in the hands of artists who lean into the storytelling (which is timeless) while preserving the rhythm and structure of the language. Since-retired PlayMakers vocal coach, Bonnie Raphael, called this the “tug-of-war.”

As actors in The Making of a King, it’s our job to live in this tug-of-war, balancing the elevated text with the need of the story. So many of our guest artists and company members are masters of this balance, and as a graduate student, it’s a great opportunity to learn from them and hopefully steal a few tricks.

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

Monday, January 30, 2012

"Infinite Possibilities" by Jen Caprio

Jennifer Caprio

Jennifer is the Costume Designer for The Making of the King.


Hi!  This is Jen Caprio, the costume designer for the Making of a King repertory.

I write this blog entry from tonight's work session for Henry IV.  Mike Winters is performing Falstaff as I write, a force of talent that is beyond enjoyable to watch.  We made it through 4 long days of technical rehearsals and the plays are in incredible shape.  No matter how many times I see this cast in costume onstage, I am consistently interested in their choices and performance. 
This project has been one of those special theatrical experiences that comes along once in a blue moon (maybe a Carolina blue one? is that what makes it so special?). When Joe contacted me this past fall to take part in this ambitious project, I switched around my schedule to design the clothes.  It is rare that you get to design a project of this scope, telling the arc of a character such as Hal/Henry all in one fell swoop.  The choices you have to make clothing wise knowing a character's outcome for a 2nd night of theater informs the first plays' choices in ways you don't get to experience otherwise.  On top of that, Mike and Joe's decision to take the plays out of period, but to not set them on a modern setting, is a designer's dream.  On one hand, it is more difficult a choice because I have to make up a world, and have infinite possibilities.  On the other hand, I have infinite possibilities and am not restricted to suits or codpieces.

We chose to place these characters' clothing into a timelessness that audiences can identify as similar to their own (pants and long coats) versus putting up that wall of a costumey-time long long ago and far far away (tights and doublets). It also keeps us out of saying that Hal or his father are any political figures of today.  The story we are more interested in telling is that of fathers and sons, and of the atrocities and consequence of wars, not this one we just "Finished", not Agincourt, but any and all wars.  The collaboration on these plays has been unified from the outset-it's been such a great experience working with Jan Chambers (the set designer) so tightly in color palate and texture-it helps to tell a more clear story.  It had also been a treat working with Jennifer Tipton (our lighting designer)-so often lighting can make or break a play, and she paints a beautiful picture with the light.

I should also say that the work from the costume shop has been spectacular.  I am continually impressed by the training program at UNC, and feel very blessed to come to work every day in this environment. There are over 100 costumes, 600 or so pieces at least, 60+ pairs of shoes, and I don't even want to count the belts!  We are working on opera scale (huge!) and it is an impressive sight to see all the clothes in the dressing rooms and in the halls on racks. 

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

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.

"A Tech Survival Guide" by Nathaniel P. Claridad

Nathaniel P. Claridad
by actor Nathaniel P. Claridad

Nathaniel plays Corporal Nym in The Making of a King: Henry IV and Henry V.



In my years of being an actor in DC, New York City, and now happily at PlayMakers Repertory Company, I have never been a part of a project of such epic proportions.  I have also never been part of a project that was in tech for NINE DAYS.

Usually, tech (which is when the creative team for any given show adds costumes, lights, sets, and props, and plods through the show making sure us actors look dashing and brilliant) lasts about two to three days, and goes straight into previews. But when you're doing essentially three plays (Henry IV Parts 1 and 2 being condensed into one play, and then Henry V), you're going to need more time.

So, since I've spent so much alone time with the character I'll be playing in both shows, Corporal Nym, ...here is a quick guide for surviving tech through the eyes of the dagger-happy tavern dweller, Corporal Nym:

Corporal Nym's Tech Survival Guide
  1. Buy a smart phone.  Being in a theatre from 12pm to 12am can cause copious amounts of cabin fever.  I find solace in Words with Friends.
  2. Find a daily ritual to keep your creative juices flowing:  the out-of-town actors treated the cast to Krispy Kreme...and the donuts came with a little hat...Nym's daily ritual?  Taking pictures of the cast in said hat.  There is nothing funnier than seeing a "hair-brained Hotspur" wearing a Krispy Kreme hat.
  3. Nym is not fond of war, so he has a bit of time to relax.  During long breaks, WATCH THE SHOW COME TOGETHER!  The creative staff for this epic is mind-bogglingly talented, and since I won't be able to watch the show during the run, this is my one chance to see what the audience will be "oooo-ing" and "aaah-ing" at.  I don't want to give anything away, but when watching the show, the word "magical" comes to mind.
  4. John Patrick, the vocal coach, has a favorite saying: "Stay curious."  And this is a great time to stay curious about the many actors in the show.  When you're in a dark theatre for 12 hours, there is no choice but to get to know the people you are sharing the stage with.  Ask questions, and get to know your castmates, more often than not, the answers and their stories will surprise and amaze you. 
  5. Nym is lucky enough to have a best friend: Bardolph (played by John Allore).  If you don't have a best friend in the show, find one...he or she will keep you sane and keep things fun.
  6. And last, but not least, after many hours spent in a tavern on stage...go to a real tavern on Franklin Street after tech.  Two 12 hour days will make anyone desire "small beer". 
See you all from the stage!


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

  

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

"Before we’ve even moved into the theatre" by Cody Nickell

Cody Nickell
by actor Cody Nickell

Cody Nickell plays Hotspur in Henry IV and Fluellen in Henry V.

     I write this blog post as the cast of The Making Of A King: Henry IV and Henry V gets ready to have its last rehearsal in the rehearsal space before moving into the theatre to start tech rehearsals. So far, it has been a fast and furious process, unlike anything I have ever been a part of.  The scope of the story that Joe Haj and Mike Donahue have set out to tell is breath taking and I have had an absolute blast watching my fellow cast mates and all the people involved wrestle this monster text down to the ground and build it back up into an exciting, moving, funny and surprising ride.

     The chance to see these plays done in conjunction with each other is such a rarity and to get to be a part of their creation here at PlayMakers means so much to me.  I saw my first production of a Shakespeare play right here at PlayMakers almost twenty years ago as a high school student in Chapel Hill (Twelfth Night).  I was absolutely amazed by the production and everyone involved (some of whom I am getting to work with on this show), and it went a long way in inspiring me to pursue theatre and acting as a career.  To get to come back home and explore the amazing words of Shakespeare on this stage with this group of people is thrilling to me.

     So in these plays, I am playing Hotspur in Henry IV and Fluellen in Henry V, and I have to say I couldn’t be happier about it.  Hotspur is an incredibly fun and complex character to play and one that I have always wanted to tackle.  I get a pretty great sword fight.  Grown boys playing with swords.  Always fun.  And it is one of my wife’s favorite characters in Shakespeare, and it certainly never hurts to impress your wife. 

     Some of the other highlights of this rehearsal process so far have been working with a composer in the room (an incredible Marc Lewis, creating an entire soundscape by himself), jumping from working with one director to the other, watching this incredible company of actors delve deeper and deeper into their characters, and when I’m not acting, I am having so much fun being an audience member (the tavern scenes in Henry IV are especially fun to watch with Mike Winters as Falstaff and Shawn Fagan as Hal leading their wacky band of brothers in all sorts of shenanigans).  The chance to see the characters develop over the course of these plays is amazing, especially the journey that Shawn is creating with Hal and Henry. It is a special thing to behold.

     And all this has happened before we’ve even moved into the theatre.  These next few weeks should be crazy and busy and exhausting but full of amazing new discoveries along the way to opening night.

Friday, January 20, 2012

"Moving Day" by Joseph Haj

Joseph Haj
by director Joseph Haj

Today is the day we move from the rehearsal room to the theatre to begin tech for Henry IV and Henry V.  We’re there for a long time.  We tech from 1-11 today (Friday), and from noon to midnight on Saturday and Sunday, and then we have a day off on Monday before we go back in on Tuesday for another week of tech before previews.

The PlayMakers team is incredible.  The admin staff goes to great lengths to protect my time when I’m in rehearsals, and that means additional work for them to shoulder.  The shops are working around the clock to get the scenery, costumes, lights, props and everything ready to go.  Our two stage managers, among the best in the business, are ready to guide us through tech.  Co-director Mike Donahue and I think we are exactly where we need to be in the process.

And the twenty-four member acting company?  Incredible. Generous, collaborative, smart, wildly talented, and on the cusp of something very special with these plays.

Many years ago, I was an actor in Genet’s The Screens at the Guthrie theatre in Minneapolis, and the lighting designer was Jennifer Tipton. I never knew that lights could be such a huge part of the storytelling. Jennifer is one of the most admired and in-demand lighting designers in the world, and it has been a long-held dream of mine to work with her on a project. I’m thrilled that it turned out to be this epic journey of The Making of a King.

Wish us luck! We’re on our way!


The Making of a King: Henry IV and Henry V begins performances on January 28. Click here to learn more and to buy tickets.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

"A lotta touch of Harry in the night"

by "a secret source within the rehearsal hall"

What's it like being an actor in The Henrys? A little like being on the march to Agincourt. Hurry-up-and-wait... Stay focused for hours on end... give your captain your full respect and attention.


Tonight we finished up our work in the rehearsal hall with our first full run throughs of both plays, Henry IVand Henry V. It's a very satisfying sort of tired. Tomorrow we move into tech in the theatre (and so begins a weekend of 10 out of 12s).

What I have learned in the past 5 weeks:

  1. If you give the rehearsal your full focus, even when you're not on stage, that care and attention will all come back to you.
  2. It is just as hard to listen and react on stage as it is to have all the lines and be in the spotlight.
  3. Referring to 2 above: you can learn a lot by shutting your mouth and observing Ray Dooley.
  4. Bring your imagination to the role / the scene, but listen to Joe and Michael; they will give you gold. 
  5. Everyone is a soft touch for Tug, the PRC dog.
  6. Playmakers is the most supportive arts organization I have had the pleasure to work with; actors, designers, admin staff... everyone counts.


What should the audience watch for in The Henrys? Something struck me about three weeks into rehearsal. In one particular rehearsal I was living with Falstaff and Hal. These characters only exist as theatrical creations, and after years of reading them / reading about them, there they were, in the flesh. It was a magical moment; one that can only be experienced when you have really good actors doing the work.  I can't wait for audiences to reach this same point of realization, as I am sure they will with all elements of The Henrys.

I come from Eastcheap

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Altering Armor for The Making of a King

by Rachel Pollock, Crafts Artisan

On deck at work, we are currently well into production on a pair of repertory shows, Shakespeare's Henry IV and V. The designs for this show are one of those non-era-eras that I like to describe as "postmodern collage"—a mixture of modern and historical styles all blended together to create intriguing looks not tied to any specific time, leather jerkins with jeans and workboots and that type of thing.
I like working on shows done in that way for contemporary audiences because it allows for all the super cool craft stuff that Shakespeare histories pretty much need (like armor!), but it also makes those things accessible to the modern eye in an empathetic way that true period pieces from about the 17th century back don't. It is very hard, in the 21st century visual milieu, to look like an indomitable, ruthless soldier in, say, pumpkin hose and tights.

Our designer, Jen Caprio, is renting and purchasing the armor because there is just SO much of it needed. If we were doing one of these plays, I could have built some, but both in repertory with the bulk of the rehearsal period happening over our winter vacation, that meant too little time and not enough staff to plan the making of any of the big pieces. Instead, one of the biggest responsibilities I have is to make the armor we've rented fit the actors we've cast, without altering it in any permanent way, yet maintain the standard of quality that I expect.
One of the things I stress in my classes is that there is the best way to do something, and everything else is a concession you ought to choose to make. In a classroom context, I teach what I believe to be the best way of doing things, since it is easier to make informed concessions required by things like a lack of time/money/labor than it is to break bad habits of shoddy workmanship. It is exciting to see all these pieces of armor from all different sources and makers, and look at the choices they have made in construction (some of which are helpful and others leave me scratching my head). Today I am going to write about how we reversibly altered a piece of leather armor for our productions in such a way as to maintain its level of quality inside and out.

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 Woven leather jerkin from OSF Costume Rentals
 
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Shoulder seam detail. I see some grommets I need to replace. Note elements like the integrated D-ring for clipping a gorget to.
 
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What's going on with this side-seam's double lacing?
 
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...it's hiding a quick-change closure in there!
 
This is the piece in question. It's made from strips of leather woven together and riveted at all the crossovers. The edges are bound with a rollover leather strip binding, and the two halves lace together at the shoulders and sides. It has also been aged and toned with paint and dye effects. We have rented it from the Oregon Shakespeare Festival's costume rental division.
Among regional theatres, the OSF is a powerhouse when it comes to quality armor production. Their pieces are made to withstand not only their own productions' run, but built to last for many shows and rentals thereafter. They make it policy to cut no corners, and their work is categorically levels of awesome: is it great, or is it spectacular? The artisans turning out their pieces know their work can't just be crap that looks decent enough from the front row and can cling on for a two-week run, and it's a pleasure to work on their stuff. OSF costumes are made with longevity and quality at the forefront, because they become assets in the rental side of the company.

So, if it's so great and all, what could we possibly need to do to this thing? Well, the design concept does not include any skirtlike hangdowns. We need to use it, but lose the long tabs along the bottom. Obviously, we're not going to make that happen with scissors and rivets.

For the fittings, to insure that it would work for one of our actors, I had my assistant Whitney use masking tape with a light-tack adhesive to just tape the tabs up inside. The light-tack adhesive would keep them out of the designer's sightlines for the fitting, without damaging or removing any of that great paint treatment. Tape was fine at this point, because why go to the trouble of a more professional finish if it wasn't going to fit any of our actors? So, tape-tape-tape, and off it goes to be fit.

A couple days later, it comes back. Yay, we love it on somebody, so we're using it! Now's the time to figure out something better than tape, because any tape that will hold up to over a month worth of repertory shows with fight choreography is going to damage the piece, which is not only Not Okay in my own personal book, it's Way Not Okay in our rental contract.


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Inside of the front with the tabs folded up in the desired style.
 
What will I do? I can't and wouldn't ever cut those tabs off or duct-tape them up. If it were ours, I might consider popping some of the rivets and replacing them with Chicago screws (like a rivet, but with a threaded shaft so they're removable) so I could hold the tabs up that way, but I’m not popping whole rows of rivets on a piece that's not ours.

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I took a measure of the area blocked out in black in the image above, for both front and back.
 
I use clips and clamps when I need to hold pieces of leatherwork together, not anything puncturing like pins or tacks.
 
I cut a rectangle for each from a section of black vinyl, doubled back an inch on each end for the lacing sections, then had Whitney punch holes to correspond with the holes in the sides of the garment itself. Above the vinyl insert is clipped to mark the holes for punching. Each vinyl insert is labeled to note whether it's front or back, since they're different sizes, just in case wardrobe needs to remove them at any point.


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Crafts assistant Whitney Vaughan shows how she's tacking up the tabs.
 
See those strips at the base of each tab at the back, to reinforce the rivets? Those are only riveted on, not glued also, which meant that Whitney was able to use a heavy carpet thread and slide a needle between them, and whipstitch the tabs to the vinyl insert without ever puncturing any of the leather. Here, the blue lines show a vague diagram of how that stitching runs, for a visual:


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Next, she laced the inserts into the armor, thus:


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We put Velcro on the insert since it would cover the strip on the armor itself, to maintain the quick-change closure option.
 
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Ta-da! Lookout, Hotspur! Prince Hal is ready for you!
 
So, there's one of many armory projects that are moving through my shop these days. I've got another couple in-progress, so once those move onto the Done Rack, I’ll give you the skinny on them as well.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Announcing our 2011/2012 Season!

We're thrilled to announce our terrific 2011/2012 season! Watch the video below to see Producing Artistic Director Joseph Haj give an overview of each of next year's plays.



Mainstage Season:

In The Next Room
(or the vibrator play)
 

by Sarah Ruhl
September 21 - October 9, 2011

The Parchman Hour

written and directed by Mike Wiley
October 26 - November 13, 2011

TBA
November 30 - December 18, 2011
An exciting production to be announced soon. Are you on our email list? That's the very best way to stay up to date on production announcements, special events, and discounts. Click Here to sign up!

The Making of a King
Henry IV & Henry V

by William Shakespeare
in rotating repertory
January 28 - March 4, 2012

Noises Off

by Michael Frayn
April 4 - 22, 2012

PRC2 Season

A Number
by Caryl Churchill
September 7 - 11, 2011

TBA
January 11 - 15, 2012

Penelope
written and performed by Ellen McLaughlin
music composed by Sarah Kirkland Snider
April 25 - 29, 2012

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

"Journeyed forth to - LONDON!"

I head out to North Carolina Tuesday to start rehearsal for Midsummer with the Summer Youth Conservatory.  Am coming out a week early to hunker down with Joe and get many hours of planning in on NicNic.  Cast list just went up, and I’m chomping at the bit.  I believe the final cast that went up was “Casting Version 10.” The breakdown costumes sent back was color coded much like the homeland security codes at the airport.  Orange alert – character has one line for this change change. (Yup – should be fun!) Red alert – this actor plays two characters in this scene. (Oops, time to recast the Dotheboys Hall boys.)  As with traveling these days, there just doesn’t seem like any chance of seeing blue or green on the board. Fantastic cast and brilliant designers – I can’t wait.  Anne Bogart once said in a class in grad school that the director’s job is to strew rocks in the path of the artists around you. Overcoming obstacles is the road to great work.  I guess that means in one sense this job is easy.  6+ hours of play, 25 actors playing 150+ characters – we won’t be able to throw a rock without hitting a … rock.


The most exciting part of this whole thing is the opportunity to work with the entire company. This will be my sixth show on the Paul Green stage, but this one is special.  The large-scale shows I have done have been the most important and life altering.  I grew up in Minneapolis a block away from the Guthrie Theatre, and had worked there on and off for four years when we put Richard II, Henry IV and Henry V on together in rep.  It was an incredible exercise in company building, and I left those productions with lifelong friendships.  It is where I met Joe!   The chance here to work with pretty much everyone in the Center For Dramatic Art – guys like David Adamson whose office I’ve walked by a hundred times but never really met – excellent.



Need to be exceptionally productive in this pre-production phase. Among the tricky issues: which scenes can rehearse simultaneously?  How exactly does the set work?  Co-directing – GO.  We will keep as much open as possible, but if Joe is staging Ralph’s office in Part One, and I’m staging a scene in his office in Part Two, we’d better know where the door is before we begin…
Busy several months ahead.  In two months I get married, (hi Wallis!) in four months we’ll be in rehearsal, and in six months I’ll be back in Los Angeles and Nicholas will be running in Chapel Hill.  Here we go!