Tuesday, 27 July 2010

Making Pericles - Day 1 - Acting & Alienation in Poland


Above, you see the publicity picture for the production of Pericles that I am doing with the Parrabola Theatre Co. at the 14th gdansk Shakespeare festival. This is my 4th Outing with Parrabola and my 2nd year in Poland.

Keeping in mind I got married (again) on Saturday, you can imagine I'm pretty damn tired today especially as we had to get up at 6am to get to the airport. The flight was ok but the pilot got a little dramatic toeards the end and I'm not really sure why.

Anyway, we got a cab down to Dolne Miasto, which is the most degraded of Gdansks suburbs with quite a lot of issues to it's name. Not only is this where the production is happening, it's where we are staying. Below is a picture of the tennement building we are staying in.

Let's just say Basic is a fairly good word for the accomoation and I don't think my wife was quite ready for it considerin that the day before we'd woken up in one of the plushest hotel suites we'd ever been in.

We went for a walk and oh the nostalgic feeling of being stared at wherever I went came rushing back to me . I was expecting this but had forgotten that it does take a couple of days to acclimatise to it. My wife however was stunned by the amount of blatant looks and was tempted to get her boobs out to give them something else to look at. I calmed her down by saying that back in the 70's and even into the early 80's, this was standard in London.

however there was a difference this time and maybe it's to do with where we are staying. This time I felt a little...threatened - I think that's probably the worng word but it's the closest I can get to at the moment. Aparently someone came into the place we are staying last friday and got into a fight with one of the guys. This has served as a definte reminder that we are outsiders here (as if I needed reminding)

Funnily enough, it does service the needs of the play, Dolne Miasto is a bit of an excluded suburb and the main characters in Pericles find themselves in foreign places, places they don't belong and I don't doubt this is also part of my casting as well. Right now I feel like it's not going to take much to emody the feeling of alenation.

This was compounded by my first rehearsal. Keep in mind this is a community play which involve lots of local people contributing - and so in the first rehearsal I find myself in a room with 2 other English people, 8 polish people and 2 Romanians. It was fascinating being the minority as wellas the miority speaker and potentially incredibly alienating. I didn't get the jokes or follow the flow of the conversation. My jokes made no sense to the majority of peole in the room (which isn' that rare a thing actually). The 2nd rehearsal was me and 3 Polish girls, 2 of whom were incredibly fluent in English but 1 amazingly brave girl who speaks no English but is attempting to tackle Shakespeare in English. My respect and fear for those people, such as refugees who find themselves in a country in which they can't communicate with those about them has tripled over night. Why does it always take someting like this to find a bit of empathy in life.

Oh well, fo now I'll just have to console myself and be content with being surrounded by beautiful women speaking to me in East European accents.

Tuesday, 6 July 2010

Getting wet in Poland & What I'm reading


Sunday night saw a read through for my latest actig project. I'll be playing Pericles in the play Pericles by Wiliiam Shakespeare. This will be happening in the Gdansk Shakespeare Festival, whom some of you may remember I played Ariel in the Tempest last year.

Let me give you a few vague details that came out of the read through.


  • I have to learn some Polish

  • There are 10 venues in the one play

  • I have to sail up a river

  • There could be a cast of 100 people

  • Someone mentioned a fire engine

  • Pericles talks a lot

That's all I can say right now, but if you wanna see how things turn out, then keep an eye on the blog.

In other news

What I've just read: The Hugo nominated graphic novel Girl Genius Vol 9: Agatha Heterodyne and the Heirs of the Storm. Volume 8 of this series was nominated last year and this was a big surprise to me. I'd never heard of it and neither had anyone else I know. Not that that is a good reason to not be nominated. That being said I still didn't understand it's place in the Hugo's or care for it that much. This year I've found that it's really grown on me and I'm not as harsh on it as I was but I still don't understand why it's here. The art is interesting, the story is very intersting and in terms of length I think this collected web series will be good value for money; but considering it's length and the fact that there is a lot of activity the story is only inched forward, I found this to be true of vol 8 as well. also there are far too many characters for a newcomer to keep track of. it may not seem like it but I enjoyed this although I think it is very flawed.

What I'm reading now: The Hugo nominated " The City and The City " by China Mievile.


The body of a murdered woman - just another case for Inspector Borlu of the Extreme Crime Squad; until his investigations puts him and those he cares for in danger. Borlu must travel to the only metropolis on Earth as strange as his own, across a border like no other.


Enjoying it so far, a truly unique work.




The 4- Hour Work Week by Timothy Ferriss

On a journey to be more efficient and create more time by working cleverly as oppossed to working more and have more time to do the things you want. I'm not finished yet and already have noticed a difference in my working habits.

Anyway must go - lines to learn