Thursday, August 18, 2005

Suddenly the Fringe (part 2)

So there I was; had read the script before. It wasn't perfect, but it took a Robert Frost poem dead serious and was, well, odd. And odd was good. Most definitely.

Re-read the script and did a whole bunch of charts. I knew blocking a show, with little other directorial input, and without those critical one or two weeks taking the script apart together, would be a challenge. But it was going to get done.

Showed up the first night and spent, as I figured, a good 45 minutes on scene 1. A pretty short scene. Adam got nervous about time, but I reassured him if the first scene in this situation took less than two hours, we were in good shape. He was concerned we'd not get through half the script - in his mind beginning of act II - by end of the four-hour BlockFest I. I said, don't look at it that way, there are 75 pages in the script, 75 minutes onstage. Halfway was really page 35. And that was still in act I. He was reassured.

I had lots of nutty ideas to open the script up. We used commedia characters, we used weird positions onstage, we talked about burying treasure and finding it - to me the heart of comedy. We got to page 35.

It was a getting a play on its feet by the seat of its pants. But it was up, halfway, and it was working.

Monday, August 15, 2005

Suddenly the Fringe (part 1)

Well, the Fringe is pretty unfair to writers. It's unfair to everyone. Yet it's there, it's big, it's loud. And when anyone anywhere is making a big fuss over theatre, how can one not?

I'd co-produced a reading of Adam Klasfeld's Good Fences Make Good Neighbors at a Chashama space a few months ago - and to say that, really, I just helped that poor hard-working guy get space and took care of a few other assorted things. The kind of stuff I'd rather not do if *I* had a reading going up. At the time I'd offered to help him with directing but he didn't need it. He had a director already.

Adam decided to put his show into the Fringe... his director was on board. Gave my standard pre-Fringe warning. Same thing always happens, once they've decided to do it, it's going to get done.

Three weeks before show open - around the beginning of August - he called. His director was gone to England - paying work. For some crazy reason, I volunteered to block his show and get it on its feet. We had two days.