Sunday, December 30, 2012

Mauritius


Back in August I wrote about an upcoming play, Mauritius by Theresa Rebeck, and that I was going to be working on and that I was going to be the Philatelic Advisor.
For a play about stamps it offered a number of unusual challenges.
Stamp collecting is not a young person’s hobby and I was not surprised that few of those working I play had any knowledge about stamps.
I met with both the actors and design team to educate then a bit about the stamps mentioned in the play, the world of stamp collecting and what a stamp shop might look like.
When I joined my local stamp club back in 1989 I was the youngest member and now over twenty years later I still am.
 

The director did a good job researching the stamps that “Star” in the play and gave that information to the actors, but I wanted to give the actors a bit more.
I wanted those who were suppose to be stamp experts look like they knew what they were doing.
I spent time with the actors giving them a basic history of the stamps in the play and showing them examples of them.
 I also introduced them to the basics of stamp collecting and worked one-on-one with the actor who played the stamp dealer to give him a little more instruction on how to handle stamps.
 

The scene designer did a good job designing a stamp shop and I provided many of the stamps and related material used to dress the set.
In addition the stamp shop there was a house set that sat side-by-side to the stamp shop on the stage.
The house set extended over to the side stage area and the designer fit the box door openings into the design.
 

My students worked hard and did a good job building the two large and detailed sets.
Perhaps my biggest surprise on this production was just how smoothly everything went.
I planned out the work schedule and it went well, we were finished on time and I even got to go out for dinner on opening night; a feat that I rarely get to do.

There were a few mess ups, some the students fault, some mine, but nothing too bad.
When we were painting the walls I found out that we forgot to build one flat and another was the wrong size, but it did not take too long to fix things and get things back on schedule.
The success that I have on each production is a result of the mixture of the number of students that I have, their skill level and most importantly their attitude.
If the students do not want to work on the play there is very little I can do.
I have found that it is best if I am honest with the students, I let them know what we are doing and why and try to mix up the fun work with the shit work.
There is always a need to clean up the shop, stage and/or the storage areas and moving heavy things from here to there.
If we need to move curtains and mop the floor for a music concert and then move the curtains back the next day to get ready for the next event I just let them know it has to be done and not make it seem I am punishing them.
I always give the students as much credit as I can for it is really them who build most of the sets.
Unlike when I worked on my first plays at Brockport when I did much of the work myself, I quickly learned that the students need to do it even if I could do it faster.
Once the students develop an ownership of a project they work better and harder.
The best example of that is when we do any metal work.
When we did A Midsummer’s Night Dream a few years ago I had a team of students who worked many extra hours outside of the regular shop hours on welding the frames needed for the show.
To get the students excited about the special projects is not too hard to do; the real trick is to get them excited about the importance of the regular work.
 

A group of eight people came from my stamp club to see the play and I gave them a tour of the stage after the show was over.
They were kind and said that they enjoyed the play; even though they found the language a bit rough and were a bit shocked by the fight scenes.
Although the play had very rare stamps as part of the plot, it was really greed and the money that the stamps could bring that drove the action of the play.
Mauritius "Post Office" Stamps
 
 
When I started my Blog I thought I was going to re-tell my life from the earliest plays to the newest, but as I have done several times already, stories of my current work just seem to come up and I want to share them with you.
I want my readers to know what is keeping my busy when there is a gap in my Blog postings.

Saturday, December 22, 2012

West Side Story


In the summer of 1986 we did only one play instead of the two shows we had done my first three years at Brockport.
Our musical that year was West Side Story.
I had worked on the same show ten years before at Gateway Playhouse but I was eager to work on it again as I like the story and enjoy the music.
Although we did only one play we also had performance of Garth Fagan’s Dance Company that summer after the musical was over.
I had a good group of student workers and the set offered some interesting challenges.
 
Chain Link Fences.
Putting up a chain link fence is not too hard once you learn the basics, but when you cannot dig a hole and support the posts with concert that you need to come up with other solutions.
We welded up some diagonal supports with flanges that we could bolt to the floor.
Like many other good set pieces I have talked about in this Blog I still have some of them and use them from time to time.
Upstage of the main chain link fence was a structure that represented a bridge with fake “I” beams and steel girders in force perspective to make them look taller than they really were.
 
They were hard to put up but looked good once they were in.
There were small rolling platforms for the Dress Shop, Maria’s bedroom and Doc’s Soda Shop.
I large flying wall came in to cover the fence for the dance at the Gym.
In place of the main curtain there was also a flying fence section that played at three different heights depending on the scene.
For the big rumble scene the front fence was all the way to the ground and the audience had to look through it.
 
The fire escape platform and Maria’s window unit was built into the stage right box closest.
I do believe that I still have some part of that set unit but I know some of it was modified for other productions.
I am sure that there must have been some other set pieces but I do not remember them.
Many in the cast were Theatre or Dance students from Brockport but a few others were mixed in.

A young 16 year old kid from Buffalo was in the show, Jesse L Martin.
He went on to star in Rent on Broadway and then spent ten years on TV’s Law and Order.
More about him can be found at: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0552509/
Other members of the cast also went on to work in “Professional” world; Jesse had the biggest success, so far.

After the play was over and while working on the dance concert I somehow found the time to buy a new car.
It was my first really new car, a black 1986 Ford Escort GT.


I liked it, it got 40 miles to the gallon on the highway and I had it until 1993 when I traded it in for a new white1993 Ford Escort GT.
Although the Escorts were small they had more room to move things for work than my 1977 Camaro.