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Tuesday, 2 September 2014


CHARACTER
STUDIES

Recently I had a request from someone who was planning to audition for a part in one of my pantomimes. She was actually interested in two specific female characters, and asked if I could supply “character descriptions”, adding, “There does not seem to be any indication of how to present or sound like the characters. She wanted an idea of “...outstanding features… mannerisms..." and to know, "...if either might have… an accent.”

Are these hypertheatrical questions?

It’s true that I don’t describe the characters in any great detail. Shakespeare offers even less.

On the Internet Movie Database, one of their members lists the “Best Hamlet Performance in movies and on stage.” They are, in order… Laurence Olivier, Ethan Hawke, Kenneth Branagh, John Gielgud, Jonathan Pryce, Mark Rylance, Simon Russell Beale, David Warner, Innokenti Smoktunovsky, and Jude Law. I have seen some of these film performance, and there is no question, they differ considerably… even though they are all using the same words.

I suggest an age range for each of the roles I write, but I qualify this with the general… “The ages are preferred, but not fixed.” 

Perhaps I could be more descriptive, but some people might take the suggestions too literally, when there is obviously scope for variations. It can often depend on the actor’s age, physique, physicality, experience, and talent, since there is more than one way to flay a feline.

Back in the 1990s, I played Judge Brack in a professional production of ‘Hedda Gabler’.The sister of an Oscar-winning actor played the title role…no, I’m not dropping the name... and she had an exercise book full of notes about Hedda’s character, her strengths, her weaknesses, her foibles etc. Horses for courses, but that’s not my style. I have always believed that the character is in the script. If it ain’t there, it’s nowhere. There is a story that J.M. Barrie once told an anxious actor who was seeking help in interpreting his part… “I should like you to convey when you are acting it that the man you portray has a brother in Shropshire who drinks port.” Well, bust my buttons!

Often, there is a speech which is the key to a character. Many moons ago, as the crow flies, I played the part of Leonard in an amateur production of ‘Time and Time Again’, by Alan Ayckbourn. Half way through the four week rehearsal period I was really struggling to find the character, I considered playing him with a limp, a hunchback, a strong regional accent… or maybe all three. Then one rehearsal... eureka! As I remember it, there is a speech where the character looks out over some municipal playing fields and contemplates the changing seasons… putting up the goal posts during autumn, taking them down in spring, and mowing the cricket pitches... and so on and so on, ad infinitum. It’s quite philosophical, and I realised that this was very close to my own outlook, which meant that I didn’t really need to act at all… just play myself. The reviews were glowing. One stated, “The cast of five were superb. It was one of the smoothest first night performances I have seen.” So it must have worked.

Accents are something I use sparingly, because I reckon must scripts should be able to be played anywhere in the English-speaking world, without too much difficulty. I am a Yorkshireman born and bred, consequently, the rhythms of speech and some of the phrases probably shout that fact from the rooftops. Often when I am printing off scripts for groups north of the border, I find myself reading the lines with a Scottish accent. I must say, Dames’ dialogue seems to work well with a Caledonian cadence.

Here are some quotes about performing comedy, by and about people who are far more experienced than me…

“Perhaps my definition of comedy is at odds with current trends, but I just believe that to gain the sympathy of the audience for your character, you have to maintain a sense of reality, no matter how fantastical the situation becomes.” Kenneth Williams quoted in - ‘Carry On Laughing’ Adrian Rigelsford: Virgin Books 1996

Frothy as her image may be, Barbara Windsor is much admired by her fellow professionals for the truthfulness with which she plays her pantomime characters. ‘Plays And Players’ December 1977

In the evolution of a (pantomime dame) performance… (Stanley Baxter) doesn’t think about where he’ll get laughs until a very late stage. The early work is concentrated on those dramatic high points that he regards as keys to his character’s development.‘ Plays And Players’ December 1977

…in my impersonations, for example, I seriously study the person I wish to imitate and rehearse the impersonation many times in the serious vein, before I even attempt to give it a humorous twist. Then I try to insert the humour while still in the character of the person I am portraying. Thus, the basis of actuality is given to the impersonation." Comedian Willie Howard, regarded as one of the giants of American Vaudeville.

Acting is all about honesty and if you can fake that, you've got it made. George Burns

Tuesday, 26 August 2014


CHORUS LINES

In his hilarious and indispensable book, ‘The Art of Coarse Acting’, in Chapter 4, ‘A Coarse Actor Performs’, Michael Green offers some advice to help the coarse actor get noticed when he or she enters in a crowd, and even steal a scene when they haven’t any words to say. I remember seeing him present his talk on coarse acting, and with the help of some shawls, stout sticks and staffs, he quickly created a coarse crowd from volunteer members of the audience. Very funny… in the right context.

More and more, since I started writing pantomimes, I have tried to ensure that the chorus, as I generally call them, have some worthwhile lines, and significant involvement in the action. In my scripts I list ‘CHORUS #1,#2,#3, & #4’ against the lines, but state in the Production Notes, “Whilst the lines in the script are allocated to just 4 chorus members, they can be shared out as you wish, to more or less… depending on your preference, and the talents of your company.”

During my recent efforts to inform amateur drama and musical theatre groups about my latest script… ‘Sleeping Beauty’… I have visited quite a few of their websites, and seen a good number of photographs from their pantomime productions old and new. What is often very noticeable is the chorus, standing around like the stolid spectators on the ‘Antiques Roadshow’. Even worse is where they are talking to each other at the back of the stage, whilst the principals are acting their knickers off at the front.

I am not apportioning all the blame to those valuable people, the members of the chorus. Maybe they have never been told what to do, or perhaps there has been an instruction to “Just act naturally”. Well… acting ain’t natural, and a director should know it, and guide the chorus where necessary. Of course, the script may not help, and that is why I am trying my best to provide worthwhile involvement for the ‘extras’.

I remember seeing a video of a pantomime produced somewhere in Scotland, where the stage was absolutely jam-packed with extras, in a scene reminiscent of the opening day of a New Year sale at an Oxford Street store. There were even youngsters sat on steps at each side of the stage, from where they couldn’t possibly involve themselves in the action. The answer to this must surely be that the number on stage has to be limited, but offset the reduced number of appearances with worthwhile participation. Again, the script can help.



Friday, 2 May 2014

SLEEPING BEAUTY
Breaking… or even ‘waking’ news!

Now there are nineteen… scripts that is… in the G. Wizz Promotions catalogue. The latest addition is a version of the Charles Perrault classic, ‘Sleeping Beauty’. And once again… (CUE FANFARE), we have beaten Hollywood to the punch. Their twist on the tale, ‘Malificent’, doesn’t hit the screens until the 30th of May. Someone ought to give them a wake-up call! Hotcha, hotcha, hotcha!

Everyone should follow their dream… unless it's the one where you're at work in your underwear during a fire drill. 

Monday, 6 January 2014

THE IDIOTS’ LANTERN
The other day, I came across this quote from American comedy writer, Robert Orben… “What bothers me about television is that it takes our minds off our minds.” It was written well before 12 million people recently tuned in to watch the launch of the 13th series of ‘I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!”.

Which brings me to the question that has been puzzling me of for some time… why do amateur drama/operatic groups do their best to get people out of their homes to experience live entertainment, and then pack their pantomimes with references to the banality that’s on the goggle box? Seems a bit lit running a Chinese restaurant and serving up bangers and mash!

I very rarely read scripts by other writers, and generally when I do, I often struggle to get past the first couple of pages, but even such a swift squint can reveal repeated references to the television soaps, sitcoms, and the so-called reality shows, plus copious contrived catchphrases.

Only three months or so ago, actor Ray Winstone hit out at the number of cookery and reality television programmes being shown on television, claiming they are being commissioned at the expense of new dramas. Well, Raymond, I would add antique shows, property-buying binges, and the many medical melodramas, both fictional and factual.

It is my belief that today television is in the main, what you can get away with, and often, it is a case of … to paraphrase Monty Python… “And now for something completely the same.”

In the year 2009 I slogged through a sorry saga involving an amateur theatre group who had decided to present my version of ‘Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs’. I received e-mail messages stating, “We very much liked the script and are looking forward to our next successful production.”, and “We look forward to performing your version of Snow White. It will be a refreshing change from our usual style of pantomime.” Ten weeks later, they informed me about “…amendments we have made to the script.” They wanted to change the title to ‘Snow White and the Eleven Hoodies’. The whole of the second half had been practically rewritten, by someone snitching stuff straight from ‘Little Britain’, and ‘The Catherine Tate Show’… if you’ll pardon the expressions. Phone calls, and e-mail messages flew back and forth, but the end result was that I told them not Pygmalion likely, and I pulled the plug.

They informed me that one of the reasons why they changed it was that having dwarfs in the show offended some of their members who were social workers. I informed them that the term ‘social workers’ offended me, but I grin and bear it.

I make no claims for my scripts whatsoever. They are what they are. Amazingly, my version of ‘Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs’ is about a girl called Snow White who comes into contact with seven dwarfs, and I’m sure it didn’t metamorphose into something else during the ten weeks it was in the group’s possession.

I pointed out to them that a dwarf is a creature from Germanic mythology, and not particularly common in the British Isles, although there are many small fairies that might be called dwarfs, they generally have names of their own. The Cornish mine spirits are called Knockers, Blue-caps and Dunters. The Duergars are a race of ugly dwarfs from Northumberland, and the Redcaps are murderous dwarfs who dwell in the border country between England and Scotland. (ASSUMES MICHAEL CAINE ACCENT) Not a lot of people know that!

I also puzzle over why amateur groups are presenting television comedy shows on stage, and trying their best to look and act like the thesps who played the parts on the small screen. We have actors pretending to be Gorden Kaye, pretending to be René François Artois, in ‘Allo ‘Allo’, or pretending to be John Cleese pretending to be Basil Fawlty in ‘Fawlty Towers’, or pretending to be Su Pollard pretending to be Peggy Ollerenshaw in ‘Hi-de-Hi’… etc. I find this really quite bizarre. Should everyone playing Richard III do an Olivier? Should all the Stanley Kowalskis be Brando? Should all the Lady Bracknells ditto Dame Edith Evans? “It is better to fail in originality than to succeed in imitation.” Herman Melville

Many moons ago, when I did a spell as a lecturer, I was asked to take a group of students to see a professional production of the musical ‘Sugar’, which is based on my favourite film… ‘Some Like It Hot’. Now, the girl playing the female lead… Sugar Kane… has got a real problem. Either she tries to play it like Marilyn Monroe, as per the film, in which case, despite the best blonde wig available, she will fall well short, or she decides to do it her own way, and the punters who have seen the film will say, “She wasn’t a patch on Marilyn Monroe, was she?” It would be best to avoid that role entirely, but then parts can sometimes be few and far between for working actors, and there are bills to pay, so I suppose you just give it your best shot, and move on

For those who do believe that imitation is the best form of flattery, The Los Angeles-based ‘Sock Puppet Sitcom Theater’ is presenting some classic TV sitcoms performed solely (ha-ha!) by socks, with the addition of googly eyes and pipe cleaners. Their repertoire includes, ‘I Love Lucy’, ‘Hogan's Heroes’, ‘Three's Company’, ‘Cheers’, ‘The Golden Girls’, ‘Roseanne’, ‘Absolutely Fabulous’, and ‘Friends’.

Recently, they refashioned ‘Cinderella’ into a sock puppet sitcom-style extravaganza, complete with laugh tracks, foley artist, and commercial breaks. Now that, I would go and see! I reckon it’s rather appropriate that a sock Cinders would have a slipper. Should be one way of keeping audience members of all ages in stitches… hotcha, hotcha, hotcha!



Wednesday, 1 January 2014







to all our reader!


At this time of the year, here is an appropriate quote from Marilyn Monroe…
“I've been on a calendar, but never on time.”

The nonpareil Norma Jeane stars in my favourite film, ‘Some Like It Hot’, as Sugar Kane… “I changed it. It used to be Sugar Kowalczyk.”


Here’s the trailer...




Friday, 27 December 2013

As of 25.12.2013, Wikifonia, the on-line publisher of sheet music which combined a Music
XML-based technology in a wiki system, with copyright clearance, is a thing of the past. If one
brings up the site, there is a message, “Wikifonia is not available anymore. Find sheet music
on musescore.com.”

So… it is no more!  It has ceased to be!  It is now 'istory! It has run down the curtain.  IT IS AN EX-SITE!

Ah well, it was good while it lasted… as the soprano said to the sexton!

I have removed the blog ‘SPOTS BEFORE YOUR EYES’, where I gave information about Wikifonia.

It’s the Araby sandwich syndrome! Let me explain… when I was a whippersnapper, one of my
favourite biscuits was called “Araby sandwich”, which comprised a date filling, in a sealed sandwich of softish biscuit. I believe they were made by Fox’s of Batley, but I could be wrong on that count, and a search on the worldwide web has produced zippo. However, whoever made them stopped making them, and never started again. I used to like kidney soup, which was available in tins, but this appears to have disappeared off the face of the planet. Parkinson’s Doncaster butterscotch went missing, then had a revival a few years back, but that appears to have been short lived. And there’s more…

Having had a look at musescore.com site , I reckon it doesn’t really compare with Wikifonia. Someone has recommended chordmusic.com, which might be a better bet.


Websites listed are offered not as recommendations, but purely for information.

Tuesday, 3 December 2013

HM IN PANTO


Have a look at – bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-25202454 – for some wonderful photographs of Lilibet and her sister strutting their stuff in pantos performed at Windsor between 1940 and 1944. A passable pair of pins too ma’am!


If the Queen wrote pantomimes, would she get royalties?