Posts Tagged ‘helen’

Titus Andronicus

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

I auditioned for Titus Andronicus last week and got cast!

Interestingly, I auditioned for the role of Saturninus because it seemed to fit and presented me with some opportunities to develop aspects of my acting that I had already worked on like presense and authority.  Instead I got Demetrius, one of Tamora’s sons.

After the usual initial disappointment of not getting a role I had my heart set on I realised that rather unwittingly I had been presented with an opportunity that offered me more of a challenge than Saturninus and a chance to develop on the advice I had been recently given by Cynthia the director of Helen.

Rehearsals start this week, so I’ll write more about this when I’ve discussed my ideas with my director Chris.

Helen Review

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

Helen has received a great review in the local paper and it feels really terrific to receive support like this:

charlotte

Charlotte Lowey as on of the Helens

THIS is Greek tragedy for sure, but it’s more up-beat than others you can name. It’s eighty minutes without an interval but they never drag.

The protagonist Helen of Troy, re-surfaced in Egypt, is a victim of her own beauty, as were all those recently perished in a Trojan War which it turns out was futile - we are all playthings of arbitrary and capricious gods. But it is, as well, a love story with an essentially happy resolution.

Director, Cynthia Marsh, gives us an inventive studio production. Helen is played in turn by five performers, each of whom takes it in turns to don a single mask. Except, that is, right at the start, when Helen appears naturalistically but everyone else wears his/her own individualised but unrealistically grotesque mask.

Amanda Hodgson (Theonoe), Matthew Swan (Menelaos) and Chris Roberts, as a Messenger, give particularly pleasing performances: they deliver their lines with clarity, understanding and conviction.

Initial dialogue in each scene is done in Ancient Greek; elsewhere it’s a vigorous translation, much of which rhymes, sometimes deliberately comically.

After two and a half millennia this play raises contemporary concerns about pointless war-making and the distinction between private person and public persona.

ALAN GEARY (Source: Nottingham Evening Post)

For me an outcome of Helen is that our director identified a couple of areas that I could do with developing which is a prospect I find very exciting. She suggested investigating different types of movement and working on the modulation of my voice. The movement issue this has been something I have wanted to look at for some time and I think now might be the time to get studying. In regards to the issue of vocal modulation, in everyday conversation I can move my voice all over the place, but when projecting in order for an audience to hear me properly I have to pitch it at a specific tone. Manipulating my voice within this register has proved difficult. Cynthia also pointed out that I had got into the bad habit of not breathing correctly which is something I initally prided myself on and has obviously gone a bit lax recently.

As ever acting is a continual learning process and that is what is so thoroughly brilliant about it.

Euripides, Eumenides!

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Last week I successfully auditioned for a role in an intriguing take on Euripides’ Helen. It’s a modern English variation of this classic Greek drama and it will involve each of the cast members taking a crack at the principle roles. So you get several Helens and two or three Menelaus for your money. At any point I could be either Menelaus or a messenger or forming part of the chorus.

 

What I have read of the script so far is both affecting and very funny at the same time and it will be a real pleasure to perform. For me it’s another effort to engage with works other than Shakespeare.

Performances run from the 1st to the 4th of July at the Lace Market Theatre in Nottingham and will cost £9 at the most.

UPDATE:  I’ve just got back from rehearsing in Nottingham (9th May) and have found out that I am actually the only actor playing Menelaus, which is terrific as it will be my first leading role.  In this production it’s spelt Menelaos.  There will still be loads of Helens