After Saturday's fairly succesful run through things were in full swing again. On Tuesday we were not able to rehearse due to dramatic edge's wonderful launch night, which I had the pleasure of attending. During the course of the night Louise gave several wonderful and encouraging speeches (LOUISE ROCKS) and we were given a sneak preview of 'Oliver Twist', involving Oliver's escape to London accompanied by the Artful Dodger. This was an especially magical performance because our usual Dodger (Matt P) had to be replaced by another member of the cast, Matt R, who is playing Bill Sikes, as Matt P had another part to play in the performances that night. Despite having to replace Dodger and giving Matt R only a week to learn the lines for that scene (essentialy a 3 page monologue for Dodger) the performance went brilliantly, and I'm sure it gave a positve impression to all the potential audience memebers viewing it that night. I'd also like to congratulate Matt P on his performance that night in an extract from Alan Ayckbourn's 'Round and Round the Garden'. It was done well and I'm sure your final GCSE piece will be great.
On Thursday we started powering through blocking for Act 2. As Louise worked through blocking in the studio, scene by scene, I took the people who were not needed for the scene away and worked through physical character with them. I tried to get them to think about each character they played, no matter how small, and give them a definitive physical stance, something that I think would help alot, especially with the crowd scenes. The finished products were very useful, giving each charcter a distinctive shape. Even bystander 2 had a charcter now, and you could tell the difference between them all. After that a flood of people arrived so they worked sparately on ther own little scenes, and I tried to get round to them all and offer help if needed. They all got on quite well running lines and walking through there scenes. I got the chance to stand in for Oliver in a fairly tense scene betweeen Nancy and Bill, which ended up being quite scary, but good. Just gald I don't have to be Oliver for real (poor Tommy). Our new Rose also arrived midway and settled in quite quickly. She started running through some scenes and became up to scratch with the blocking and charcter fairly quickly, which was useful.
On Saturday we continued with the blocking. Due to public transport being rubbish I arrived a bit late and when I walked in everyone was standing around in pairs counting to 3 between them. I thought Louise had decided to give them a basic maths lesson but soon realised that it was just another warm up game. After a few more games we cracked on with the blocking. That day I went through people's lines and focused on their speech making sure everyone was happy with how they were saying things and encouraged them to say the lines in different ways to see what suited the line best. I also got them to try and focus on the style of writing and the punctuation. One excercise I went through involved them walking round the space, picking a short line of theirs and asking them to try saying it in different volumes, ways and speeds, such as opera style and rap (that one was just for my amusemet). This all seemed to help.
At present everything seems to be going well and I think we have a brilliant production on our hands!