Monday, May 13, 2013

AUDITIONS: Grassroots Alabama!


The Skinny on Auditions: NEW COMPANY IN BIRMINGHAM!


What you should know:
We're an original practice company--this means we're exploring producing and performing Shakespeare the way it would have been done in his day. How does this apply to our upcoming inaugural production?

CASTING
  • We Have No Director. Directors didn't show up on the scene until two hundred years after Shakespeare kicked the bucket. Our show will be produced and staged entirely through the collaborative efforts of the Company.
  • "Whoa whoa whoa! Hold on a minute--how will the show be cast?"Open auditions will seen by a current member of the Grassroots Board of Producers, who will make a preliminary determination as to who will be invited to callbacks. 
  • Callbacks: Actors invited to callbacks will have the opportunity to participate in a series of exercises designed to approximate the experience of being a member in the collaboratively staged production.
  • Voting: At the end of the callback, ballots will be distributed and each participant will be asked to nominate 10 of their peers present at the callback to join the company.
  • The Tally: The 10 actors receiving the most votes from their peers will be asked to join the new company.
  • Assigning Roles: The newly formed company will meet to conduct readings for specific role assignments in the play. The final cast list will be determined by several rounds of reading, voting, and discussion.

REHEARSALS
  • The Crunch: Historical documents indicate that renaissance companies had very little rehearsal time. In some cases, it appears that the actors opened a show without ever having rehearsed that show together before, having learned their lines independently and coming together only to run the  fights or music on the morning of the performance.
  • 8 Rehearsals: In an attempt to recreate some of the madcap frenzy of creativity and collaboration that would have existed under such conditions, we will rehearse the show in just 8 short rehearsals.
  • Con Your Lines: Actors come memorized to the first rehearsal. Casting is completed two weeks prior to allow time for learning the lines.
  • Collaborative Staging: Actors come prepared to the first rehearsal with a fully-fleshed out rough draft of their performance. Rehearsals are the time for coordinating those choices and for developing relationships as a company that will translate into performance.
  • Try it Once: All members of the company are expected to contribute to developing the show through assertive input and feedback. If one actor suggests an idea to another actor, he or she is obligated to try it at least once in rehearsal to see if it works for them. Final decisions regarding all choices are left to the individual actor. Call it 'cooperative anarchy'.
  • Actor as Artist: Actors are responsible for the creation of their own characters, including costuming. This is an opportunity for actors to express their vision of the character and their position in the unique world of the play independent of an over-arching concept or design. Costumes and props are all furnished by the actors and are often anachronistic or atypical.
PERFORMANCE
  • Touring: Before they built the Globe, Shakespeare's company performed in a variety of locations--sometimes in inn yards, or town squares. Our production will be open air and designed to perform at multiple venues. 
  • Lose the Fourth Wall: This production will be highly interactive and engaging for all members of audience, but especially for the groundlings who will be mere inches away from the action.

AUDITIONS:


Open Auditions:
Monday May 13th
7pm-9pm
UAB
Alys Stephens Center
rm. 273


Please come prepared with a one minute monologue from Shakespeare.

If you are unable to attend during the open audition, please email:
Alex@GrassrootsShakespeare.com
to schedule an appointment.


For further insights into the Grassroots Casting process, check out:
and

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Meet the Cast!

With 8 days left til we open, it's time to meet some of our talented actors! Without further ado, meet:


STEVEN POND
as Caliban and Boatswain



Once upon a time, Steven Pond saw a Grassroots show, turned to his wife, and said "I have to be in one." Three months later, he's type-cast as a creepy half-monster rapist. Be careful what you wish for.
His other theatrical credits include Topper in HCTO's "Christmas Carol", Lumiere in "Beauty and the Beast", Thenardier in "Les Mis: School Edition", and Master Ford in "Merry Wives." Thanks go out to all his friends and family coming to see the show (if you're not coming, you're not thanked), and especially to his lovely wife Christine for enduring him as a husband for the past year and a bit. Happy Christmas!

Stay tuned to meet the rest of our team.

Meet the Cast!

With 9 days left til we open, it's time to meet some of our talented actors! Without further ado, meet:

ANDY HANSEN
as Antonio and Stephano

Photo: Meet the cast! Introducing Andy Hansen as Antonio and Stephano in GSC's production of The Tempest. The play shows on Dec 28th, 29th, Jan 4th, and 5th at the Masonic Temple at 7:30. 

This is Andy Hansen's first production with Grassroots, and he couldn't be more excited! Andy has been involved in theater since he was a young beardless lad, and strives to share his passion of theater with the world!

This is Andy Hansen's first production with Grassroots, and he couldn't be more excited! Andy has been involved in theater since he was a young beardless lad, and strives to share his passion of theater with the world!

Stay tuned to meet the rest of our team.

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Tempest Tickets Now Online!



Tickets are now available for the Tempest! Click HERE to order them. It's cheaper to order online and we also offer a ticket bundle of four for twenty dollars for online orders, so take advantage of that. You don't want to miss seeing a show in this beautiful venue.


This is the Gothic Room at the Masonic Temple where we will be performing!



Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Christmas Tidings!




Some exciting things are happening for us this Christmas season at Grassroots. We have just started up our official newsletter with info on auditions, historical tidbits on Shakespeare, and much much more. For those of you who aren't on our newsletter list yet, you can sign up here

Our show this Christmas, for those of you who don't know yet is going to be:


Nothing says Christmas like this show. Magic, mystery, love, and an old bearded man who punishes the naughty and rewards the nice? Sounds mighty similar to another jolly fellow, doesn't it? We'll be performing this show at the magnificent Masonic Temple in Salt Lake and will be posting more info as it comes. 

On our newsletter we talked a little bit about Elizabethan Christmas traditions, and here on the blog we wanted to share a delicious recipe that we found from the Tudor era. This is a very adaptable recipe and can me made with milk instead of almonds, fruit instead of rose petals, or any other variations you want to try. It's impressive yet simple. So here we go!



Servings: 4

Prep time: 15-20 min plus overnight set time for jelly. Add a day if making almond milk.

This recipe can be made with milk for those with nut allergies. For those who don't have time to make the almond milk can also just add some almond extract to the milk to give it a nice almonds taste.


Almond Milk:
  • 1 cup of ground almond 
  • 1cup rice flour moistened with 2 1/3 cups of water.
Milk Jelly
  • Almond milk (or pint of full fat milk)
  • 2-3 leaves of gelatin
  • a little more than 1/4 cup of sugar
Fruit jelly
  • pint of juice, wine, or other fruity beverage
  • 1 leaf of gelatin
  • rose petals or rose water (optional)
To make Almond Milk: (Note: You need to make this the day before)

  • Cover the ground almonds with the boiling water, stand for 15 mins, rub through sieve/ cloth. Straining trough a cloth produces a smoother milk. If it is a bit thin- add rice flour and warm in a pan until it thickens.Cool and put in the fridge overnight. Almond milk goes bad quickly so don't keep this around for long.

To make the Leach:
Milk Jelly (make this first):
  1. Soak the gelatine leaves in water
  2. Warm the milk/ Almond milk ( do not boil)
  3. Add the gelatine and stir until disolved
  4. Pour into glasses and set overnight ( Putting it in the fridge helps)
Fruit Jelly:
  1. Soak the gelatine leaf
  2. Warm the juice 
  3. Disolve the gelatine in the juice
  4. Chop and add the rose petals or a teaspoon of rosewater (pieces of fruit are a good substitute if you don't like the idea of rose!)
  5. Leave to go cold
  6. Spoon the cold mixture onto the set milk pudding and return to the fridge to set
  7. Once both parts are set, decorate and serve. 
It was common to cover this dessert with gold leaf, and you can find edible gold at your local baking supply store, but for those who want something a little less flashy, raspberries are a fine garnish to pair this with. 

Happy Holidays and bon appetit!


Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Letter from London

There's nothing quite like assembling a new cast for a Grassroots production, especially when you know it's going to be comprised of actors entirely new to the Grassroots way of working! It is exciting in the way you might feel going on an adventure; you're not sure what you will get once you've launched into uncharted seas but you know it is going to be a lot of fun!

Natalie Harper (Leonata) and Daisy Ward (Hero/ Seacole)
Grassroots Shakespeare London is currently in rehearsals for a new production of 'Much Ado About Nothing'. Following three nights at the Scoop at More London and two performances on the Dell stage at the RSC in Stratford-upon-Avon in June, it was decided to give the show a longer airing. With a two week slot already booked in August for Victoria Embankment Gardens and such a buzz building around the Company, the team voted to bring 'Ado' back, but with only one member available for the second run (me!), the show had to be entirely re-cast.

And what a fantastic cast we have ended up with! I am absolutely delighted!

Everybody is just wonderful, full of enthusiasm and brimming with masses of talent and creativity. It is so exciting to make my way to rehearsals of an evening and I certainly count the hours down until I can head off to our venue to get started!

It is particularly exciting, having been in both productions, to see the brilliant new ideas people are coming up with, their solutions to blocking, their fresh readings of lines and how they are bringing their characters to life in an entirely original way. It says so much about their intelligence and huge capacities as actors.

Sophie Littler (Don John/ Sexton) & Hamza Mohsin (Borachio/ Antonio)
As an Elizabethan original practices company, we work without a director as was the tradition of the time. This is something that modern actors can find difficult to adapt to, having spent their whole lives being directed around the stage to meet somebody else's vision of a play. At Grassroots, we love to let our actors' imaginations thrive and we create a supportive environment where we help each other to direct and devise scenes. It has been fantastic to see how this cast has just taken to this style, having never worked with it before, and are so positive, encouraging and supportive. It is honestly heart-warming. As one cast member said last night, "We're just like a family", and I couldn't agree more! I feel very lucky to not only be able to get to perform with this great group but get to know everybody too. It's like being ridiculously lucky every single day.

We open on Monday 30th July at Victoria Embankment Gardens. The show starts at 7pm and we would love to see you there! I'll keep you updated with Letters from London as we go along. No plot spoilers, I promise!

Love from London,

Siobhรกn