ENTER THE REHEARSAL HALL -- WHERE THE MAGIC BEGINS!

There is something magical about sitting in an audience as the house lights dim.

The buzz in the room settles into quiet anticipation as we wait to be transported into someone else's world, someone else's story. But what we see on the stage is just the culmination of weeks, sometimes months of work behind the scenes by artists of all description: actors, directors, designers, wardrobe people, carpenters, painters, sound and light experts and others.

This blog will give you a fly-on-the-wall glimpse into that unknown world, following the rehearsal process.
This will be your guide to the hard work, fun and weirdness of putting together a play
for a professional theatre company.

You'll never watch a play in the same way again!

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Glorious! -- Days 10-15: The Sets & Costumes Come to Life

While the actors and director are hard at work in the rehearsal hall, there's a flurry of activity throughout the the theatre as production staff focus their considerable talents on bringing the beautiful set and costume designs to glorious life.

Brian Perchaluk's elegant and simple design called for an actual proscenium (that framed opening you see in a more traditional, concert hall-style theatre) to be built on PTE's more untraditional thrust-style stage. Yards and yards of gauzy fabric became curtains, and red curtains from a PTE production of My Fair Lady more than 10 years ago were repurposed (theatre people never throw anything out!).

Florence Foster Jenkins was famous for, among other things, creating her own outlandish costumes, so costume designer Tamara Kucheran had some big shoes to fill. In addition to a shepardess costume that will have the audience chortling, the very talented wardrobe staff have recreated the actual cream satin dress that Florence wore for her final concert - complete with angel wings. It's been very entertaining to see the wings journey back and forth from the shop (where the framework and mechanics are created) to the wardrobe department, where the gauzy "feathers" are applied. Several times a day, they flutter through the main office, on a seemingly never-ending loop towards perfection.

Although it sometimes seems like chaos, every detail and timeline is controlled so that by the time the actors start rehearsing on stage, everything is ready for them -- although there are always details that are perfected right through to opening night.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

GLORIOUS! -- Days 7-10: Building Characters & Sets

As the show starts to come together through the blocking, attention is turned to building the characters. The director works with the actors to ensure that there is meaning and honesty to the way that lines are delivered and the characters interact with each other.

In a comedy, especially with a character who is as bigger-than-life as Mrs. Foster Jenkins, it's easy to over-do the laughs and make the characters seem more like caricatures. It's essential to find the emotional bottom to a funny play -- it actually makes it even funnier. And the people in the play need to be real people, or you just don't care about them. Florence was more than a figure of ridicule. People loved her because of her enthusiasm and obvious joy in sharing her "gifts". In fact, this play is a bit of a love story, as her new accompanist, Cosme, learns to let go of his own world-weary cynicism and actually come to love his eccentric employer. The audience needs to be able to do the same, and that requires a lighter touch.

Meanwhile, with Where the Blood Mixes ending on the weekend, work can begin on the set in the theatre. The first step is to install the circular riser, and turn it over the talented team of scenic painters, who will be creating a beautiful inlayed wood floor out of several layers of paint. A lot of this work is done over the weekend, so that the rest of the set can be installed before the cast is scheduled to move from the rehearsal hall to the theatre.

Elsewhere, over a hundred yards of curtains are sewn up, and a pair of angel wings are taking shape from welded steel and gauzy fabric "feathers". In fact, the wardrobe staff has increased for this show by four sewers plus a "buyer" just for wardrobe. It's quite the undertaking!

Monday, April 5, 2010

GLORIOUS! -- Days 3-5: Blocking

You know you're on to something when the rest of the cast cracks up as Shelley Thompson, playing Florence Foster Jenkins, strives for that high C and misses it by a mile. Shelley's amazing at singing badly, especially since she's quite an accomplished singer in real life. That was made quite clear, as she had to run through an aria several times singing properly, so that she could go through it again and sing it badly in a believable way. Believe it or not, you actually have to KNOW a song before you can butcher it convincingly!

In the early days of rehearsal, it's all about beginning to attach the dialogue to movement around the set. The actors are still "on book" (or carrying their scripts) for a day or two, but after that, it's (mostly) committed to memory, and the focus is on inhabiting the space.

The rehearsal hall floor has been taped out by the Stage Manager, so that the edges of the stage area, the position of the set pieces, and the outline of the "revolve" are all visible to the actors. The Props Department has brought out rehearsal furniture, all very lovely but not necessarily what will be used on stage, so that the actors can learn to move around the final set, even before they get there.

Even at this early stage, you can see how funny, and how touching, this show will be when all the preparation is done -- only 23 days from now!