All,
Generally speaking, I was quite pleased with the run last night. Despite a lot on your plates you continue to explore and find moments to sharpen and clarify. Plus it was really fun to watch!
Please read these notes and incorporate them into Sunday's run.
Grazie'
Fred/Roxie. Try to keep a majority of your bodies covered with the odd limb poking out
Amos. Your lines which are underscored need to be a bit louder.
Cell Block. The monologues were quite good ladies. Remember- keep them ACTIVE
There's a reason you're telling the story, and it's not to relive the past. It's so
that you can sway the jury
Velma. "the most me and Veronica ever made..." explore ways to share this out to us
Mama. Hair and Makeup - go for a severe look, hair pulled back, darker eyebrows.
Don't let Mama look glamorous.
Mama. Explore just how naive it is of Roxie not to already know Billy. Enjoy
making fun of her naïveté
Tyler. Try not to be directly upstage of Rox on "...a tap dance"
Billy/Amos. Take the air out of the first 1/2 of your first scene. If Billy keeps the urgency to
the scene and Amos tries to keep up with the info, it should help.
Billy. "Reached for the..." You still need to be on a slight diag. facing right so she's not
covering you.
Reporters after Roxie. Great energy here everyone, it was like you got shot out of a cannon to
get your headline out.
Jenna. " Cancelled, down the drain, out ", don't let the energy drop, keep building.
The active part here is to show Velma you're as angry as she is
Velma. Instead of being sweet to her as your trying to get Rox to join the sister act,
Try enticing her with the fun of a conspiracy.
Mary Sun. As you exit with the reporters on stage right, keep up with them, don't linger back.
Billy/Amos. "Step down Daddy". When you get the other cigar from props, stick this one in his
mouth, just after the line.
All in 2:6. Excellent work. The scene is clean and tight. Don't change a thing.
Jenna. Great baby
David. We talked about a lower register for Mary Sun's speaking voice. Try that on
Sunday
Amos. " My exit music please"...step down, as if its a pronouncement. Then, not
getting the music is even worse.
David. "Ladies and Gentlemen"- the lights are waiting for you.
Rox. Don't knit in the last scene
Rox. React to the set being unceremoniously taken away from you.
Vel. X in front of the MC
Tyler. Try: "And now, the Bigfork Summer Playhouse, Montana's home for quality
family entertainment..." instead of the Vickers' Theatre line. Just be prepared
to change it back.
Vel/Rox. After Hot Honey..., get through the initial
"Thank you's" much faster
All- I won't have too many more chances to thank you for your work, which I have found to be very professional and inspiring. I'll try to make the most of our time together by letting you know how much I appreciate your efforts.
KPK
Friday, June 7, 2013
Friday, May 31, 2013
Saturday's Rehearsal
Billy & all ladies in All I Care About
( with fans )
2:10 - 2:20: Mary Sunshine's disrobing
-
1:50 - 2:00: Roxie's on stage costume change
All in Reached For The Gun
2:00 - 2:10: Amos' on stage costume change
Amos, Shelby, and Mary Kate
2:10 - 2:20: Mary Sunshine's disrobing
Mary and Billy
2:20 - 4:30: Full Cast ( fix problem areas )
DINNER
6:30 - 7:30: Velma and Roxie (Choreography)
7:30- 10:00: To Be Announced- check the blog
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Wednesday's Schedule
Please make arrangements to be in your assigned shops when possible...
Wednesday 5/29
6:30 - Vocals When Velma Takes The Stand
6:40 - Vocals Me And My Baby
6:50 - Vocals Roxie
7:05 - Vocals Razzle Dazzle / Courtroom
7:25 - Vocals Finale
7:35 - 8:35 Choreography clean and fix (all)
8:40 - Staging Act 2 Scene 6
9:00 - Staging Act 1 Scenes 12 and 13
9:10 - Staging When Velma Takes The Stand - quartet only
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Mallory's Sunday Evening Optional Dance Rehearsal
Mallory has organized the following times for an optional Sunday night rehearsal:
REHEARSAL HALL
REHEARSAL HALL
10-10:30pm
fan dance/cell block
10:30-11pm
all that jazz/reach for the gun
11-11:30pm
Roxie with boys
Thanks Mallory!
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Bert Williams - Taylor, this is for you
Taylor,
Here's a clip from a documentary about Black performers in Vaudeville; it begins on the Bert Williams section.
http://youtu.be/mcpmHvZ_IaA?t=5m5s
Here's a clip from a documentary about Black performers in Vaudeville; it begins on the Bert Williams section.
http://youtu.be/mcpmHvZ_IaA?t=5m5s
Friday, May 10, 2013
COSTUMING RESEARCH - provided by Nicole
I'm not sure when she's had the time, but Nicole has pulled together several pieces of pictorial research, which I'd like to share with everyone.
Please notice that Nicole is not only thinking about our time period, but has paid attention to the the style and feel of the Vaudeville/Burlesque performer. She's also helped us with a few pieces that show a reversal of gender stereotypes.
Nicole has been playing with a theme about which all of your creative team - designers, director, choreographer, music director - have been thinking:
This 'aint realism - it's a vaudeville. Don't hide the fact that everyone's performing...
Please notice that Nicole is not only thinking about our time period, but has paid attention to the the style and feel of the Vaudeville/Burlesque performer. She's also helped us with a few pieces that show a reversal of gender stereotypes.
Nicole has been playing with a theme about which all of your creative team - designers, director, choreographer, music director - have been thinking:
This 'aint realism - it's a vaudeville. Don't hide the fact that everyone's performing...
Monday, April 15, 2013
EVERYONE LOVES A GOOD TRAIN WRECK...
CHICAGO the Musical, much like Maurine Dallas Watkins' CHICAGO is - in no small part - an indictment of the media and their role in creating celebrities out of people who don't really deserve to be celebrities. But the media would argue that they simply give the public what it clamors for:
Got the bubbleheaded bleach-blonde, comes on at five
She can tell you 'bout the plane crash with a gleam in her eye.
It's interesting when people die - give us dirty laundry
Don Henley - Dirty Laundry
For some, it was seeing Louisville's point guard Kevin Ware who fell and broke his leg in two places - on national TV. The networks had to stop showing the gruesome injury, but YouTube exploded with traffic as the curious watched the scene over and over.
For others, it was the 9/11 coverage. Who could be torn away from the TV that day as the networks played the horrific footage of the planes crashing into the Twin Towers?
For me - and I may be showing my age here - it was that God forsaken slow speed chase with OJ Simpson and AC Cowlings. It was my birthday, and friends wanted to take me out to dinner, but I declined, citing an illness. In reality, I was glued to my TV set watching a white Ford Bronco moving up Interstate 405 in my hometown of Los Angeles. Maybe it was because I felt like I knew OJ - I really didn't - or maybe it was because I couldn't conceive someone being able to drive on the 405 at 5pm and not hit gridlock. Whatever the reason, I was fixated.
I'm reading a book now from a Wake Forest English professor, Eric Wilson called Everyone Loves a Good Train Wreck: Why We Can’t Look Away. He interviews such subjects as a man who sold the art of serial killers and an obituary collector. he follows what he calls the “dark tourism industry” that exists in places like the 9th Ward of New Orleans, destroyed by Hurricane Katrina.
“There’s actually a lot of reasons, ranging from expressions of what is worst in us to what is best in us,” he said. “Our heart rate goes up, our body releases chemicals. We really do get a sick thrill, a cheap titillation,”
But often, the thrill is closely followed by the not-so-moral reasons: relief it wasn’t you in a car accident or a feeling you are better than Charlie Sheen, Lindsey Lohan or one of the Kardashians.
“I think it kind of makes us feel a little better about ourselves when the mighty fall down,” he said.
As we move forward with CHICAGO, think about the dynamic between the media and the public; its almost a Chicken and the Egg conundrum.
Do they cover what we care about, or do we care about what they cover? The characters in CHICAGO play the media to varying degree of success; consider where you fit into the world...
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Cicero, Illinois 60804
"If you smell gunpowder, then you're in Cicero"
Cicero, Illinois - the place where Velma, her sister Veronica, and husband Charlie were "boozin' and having a few laughs" on the night that Velma "blacked out" probably serves as a good focal point for a look at Chicago's colorful history circa 1926.
Remember, we're in the middle of Prohibition, the constitutional amendment banning the sale, production, and transportation of alcohol. Speakeasies, Jazz Clubs, and alcohol made in upstairs bathtubs (hence the name "bathtub Gin") were popular and proliferated during this time.
Headquarters of "Al" Capone 1926
Cicero Illinois became a hotbed for corruption in the early 1920's; it had been "invaded" by the Capone / Torrio gang from Brooklyn, New York who more or less ruled the town. There was nominally a mayor, but he was largely under the control of Al Capone who publicly humiliated Klenha by slapping on the steps of town hall.
Chicago crime boss Alphonse "Al" Capone made Cicero his home. When his brother Frank was killed by police, the local speakeasies closed for one day as a sign of respect.
1926, the year CHICAGO by Maurine Dallas Watkins was written, and (more or less) the year our production is set was quite a year in Cicero. In April of '26 100 machine-guns riddle a Cicero beauty shop in an attempt to murder gangster James Sammon.
Later that month, Assistant State Prosecutor William McSwiggin is killed by machine-gun fire in front of Harry Madigan's Pony Inn on Roosevelt St in Cicero. Al Capone is rumored to have been brandishing the weapon that killed McSwiggin.
In September of that same year, over 1000 rounds of ammunition pour into the Hawthorne Hotel, in an attempt to assassinate Al Capone, who escapes death with help from his bodyguard Frank Rio.
In November of 1926, gangster William Raggio is murdered with a single bullet to the head and is left in a remote part of Cicero.
What Does This Mean For Us?
Consider that most of the characters in CHICAGO would be familiar with this world, and these people. The stories of corruption, strong-arming, and murder would be daily topics of discussion and fascination, not unlike the way we follow court trials today. But as opposed to something that happens 2000 miles away, these events and these people would be much more familiar to you.
There's always been a fascination with gangsters. Think of The Sopranos, Bugsy, Scarface, and the like. As we move through the rehearsal process, consider your familiarity and relationship to these people and events.
with much thanks to
Mario Gomes
"Myalcaponemuseum.com"
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Millie DeLeon "The Woman In Blue"
To be sure, there are many names from Burlesque that pop up while researching the form, but perhaps none quite so interesting - and relevant to our purposes - as "The Girl in Blue" Millie DeLeon. The lion's share of this information comes from an excellent article by Anne Fliotsos in The Journal Of American Culture (Winter 1998)
"Gotta Get A Gimmick: The Burlesque Career of Millie DeLeon". Its a fascinating look at not only Millie the individual, but the culture of public scandal and celebrity of which Mille DeLeon was a willing participant.
Arrested numerous times from 1903 to 1915, Mlle. De Leon was a master of stirring public scandal and thereby gaining free publicity at a time when newspapers were clamoring for sensational stories. Over seventy-five newspaper clippings at the Theatre Collection of the New York Public Library (NYPL) chronicle De Leon's success at attracting both the press and an audience with her controversial behavior inside and outside of the theatre.
Fliotsos, Anne
The Journal of American Culture
Interestingly enough, Ms. DeLeon, who frequently used the title Mademoiselle DeLeon, appears to have undergone a reinvention in her career. Early publicity pictures show her fully dressed to her ankle and looking quite demure. Apparently this look wasn't good for the box office, and sometime around 1908 her pictures started showing bare midriffs and legs thrusting toward the camera. (Oy!) Also around this time she began to finish her act by throwing her garters into the audience - provocative indeed in 1908. A recounting of one of many of Ms. DeLeon's arrests states:
...an officer "arrested Mlle. De Leon in a spectacular manner, rushing from the wings on to the stage, grabbing her by the neck and dragging her off stage" just before she threw her garters to the audience, a maneuver that was to become her decadent trademark.
It was during this time that Millie DeLeon hit the peak of her fame. Its worth noting for our purposes just how efficiently scandal and controversy propelled her career, and how completely Millie played her part as the "Scandaleuse", determined to keep her name in the papers. Clearly CHICAGO is much less a work of fiction than we can imagine.
One of many Theatres where Millie DeLeon was arrested for public indecency.
Surprisingly well-spoken, Millie was quoted in the New York Telegraph as saying:
Aren't we Americans just a little inconsistent about our morals? Don't you think our modern standards of good and bad values possess a smattering of the "false gods" idea? Can every self-appointed censor determine just what is moral and immoral for his fellow man?
Millie DeLeon - 1908
In the concluding section of her article, Anne Fliotsos suggests why Millie DeLeon and her mastery of the press deserves a place in our consciousness as we begin to rehearse CHICAGO:
....but there was one thing that Millie De Leon clearly was: a shrewd business woman who used gimmicks, such as her famous garters, to entice men to the stage to take part in her vice. By employing gimmicks within her act, she got arrested, thereby insuring the ultimate gimmick: free press, and plenty of it.
Anne Fliotsos (ibid)
Monday, April 8, 2013
CHICAGO...and Vaudeville / Burlesque
My father said, "Don't go to a burlesque show,
You'll see things you shouldn't see."
And he was right,
For the very next night,
I saw Father in the row in front of me.
When the musical version of Watkins play was created, an additional element was incorporated into the story: Vaudeville. John Kander (composer), Fredd Ebb (lyricist) and Bob Fosse (director) intentionally created songs and dance numbers meant to invoke the past legends of Vaudeville and Burlesque as the vehicle to tell this seedy story of murder and glitz.
In CHICAGO, the vaudeville is a metaphor for the American justice system in which the best performance wins over the press and the jury. The ...concept was perfectly wedded to the theme of CHICAGO. Vaudeville producers willfully featured notorious, even criminal figures and freak acts. By superimposing a vaudeville framework onto Watkin's comedy, Ebb implicitly linked showbiz to the tawdry...practices of the press and the corruption of the American justice system.
James Leve
Depending on which biography you read, there are differing opinions on the degree which Ebb and Fosse each contributed to the Vaudeville concept. Ebb had tried it before with 70, GIRLS, 70 so he was no stranger to the milieu. One thing that is undeniable, however, is Fosse's familiarity with the seedier side of Vaudeville - Burlesque, and how that relationship would shape CHICAGO the musical.
(At 16) Bob had already developed a healthy enthusiasm for striptease dancers and would regularly sneak into Minsky's Burlesque. It was at Minsky's that he discovered a lower type of comedy act and broader performance values, the pratfalls and and slapstick of burlesque routines.
Martin Gottfried
ALL HIS JAZZ
While I certainly don't want you to do impressions of any of the old vaudeville performers, I do think its interesting and contextually helpful to see and hear the original routines / songs upon which the musical numbers in CHICAGO are based.
Here are a few, with links...
1. FUNNY HONEY - Helen Morgan's rendition of "Bill" from SHOWBOAT
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3HeasqkO1Ko
2. MR CELLOPHANE - Black Vaudeville star Bert William's signature song "Nobody"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cruhh2ikw4A
This is a contemporary performer doing an impression of Bert - the song starts at 1:293. WHEN YOU'RE GOOD TO MOMMA - Sophie Tucker's "You Got To See Momma Every Night"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4Nhy5tIpPM
4. ALL I CARE ABOUT - Bandleader Ted Lewis "Is Everybody Happy?"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WADhw1temyM
The song starts at .48. This one's kinda fun - inexplicably, there's a full big band in tuxedos on a
Pirate ship.
5. Fan Dance - Sally Rand
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QTEIWK9CaEs
6. A LITTLE BIT OF GOOD - Drag Burlesque star Julian Eltinge
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L4e-n_BI8os
7. ME AND MY BABY - Eddie Cantor "My Baby Says Yes Yes!"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L8LVjm36RNs
CHICAGO - it's origins
"Gin and guns—either one is bad enough, but together
they get you in a dickens of a mess, don't they."
Accused murderer Belva Gaertner, 1924
In 1926, Maurine Dallas Watkins, a
journalist for the Chicago Tribune, crafted a play from articles she had
written while covering the sensational murder trials of Beulah Annan and Belva
Gaertner in Chicago in the early 1920’s. Entitled simply CHICAGO, the play not only dealt with the murders, but also the
underlying theme of the cult of celebrity that follows criminals.
Watkins was not new to the idea of the sensational trial and how the media can be used to create sympathy, celebrity, empathy, and even an acquittal. It’s this dynamic that forms the
foundation of the musical version of CHICAGO. As we craft the play through the
rehearsal process, consider the connection between crime, celebrity, and
sensationalism.
Thomas H. Pauly, in the introduction to his book Chicago (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University, 1997) wrote, “Watkins’ play offers a bracing reminder that lurid crimes were as aggressively commercialized seventy years ago as they are today."
Both Watkins' play and the Kander/Ebb musical examines the sensationalism of crime and criminals. Fortunately for us, this allows us to explore URGENCY, and its effect on the pace of the show. Think of the hurried race to break the latest trial news and scoop the competition in today's 24 hour news cycle, musical promos that bracket the news coverage of the latest high profile shooting, reporters who quickly clamor for interviews with anyone related to the story. This is not to suggest that everything is breathlessly fast, least of all the choreography. But it can create an interesting juxtaposition with the languid, sensual world of Burlesque that can be explored in the dance numbers.
Empowerment seems to be an evident theme as well, with the original playwright being an early example of a woman in a traditionally male role. Watkins of course played a legit role: that of a reporter covering crime stories which was more often than not reserved for just men.. Velma and Roxie (and the other women in Cook County Jail) take on traditionally masculine roles as well - Murderers. As you move forward in creating these characters, pay special attention to when characters slip out of and back into the traditional archetypes / stereotypes based on gender.
...her comic depiction of a woman groping towards liberation and the future foregrounds pressures women still face, but it is downright uncanny in its anticipation of today’s news-as-entertainment culture. (Pauly)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)