Showing posts with label Shakespeare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shakespeare. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 March 2018

A few changes are afoot...

Hello!
If you've been here before you may be a tad confused - why the name change?  What's going on?
Well, we're having a bit of a rebrand and new things are afoot.  Hell, it's a positive leg worth of material a coming.
But that's a little way off - you'll have to be patient.
More soon!

Wednesday, 27 April 2016

Shakespeare - A Complicated Relationship

The Deathday has been and gone.  I was in Stamford doing a show about the 'authorship question' and so I missed it.  My connection to the events were mostly via my phone with facebook and twitter.  The general reaction on my twitter feed was interesting, because most of the people I follow or who follow me have a similar relationship with the bard.  For example I tweeted:
"Happy n-day wishes to all the great anonymous writers of early English drama, who never get celebrated because we don't know who they are."
And this was retweeted many, many times and favourited and generally went down well - and many other people posted similar things.  I think this shows rather well the complicated relationship we all have with Shakespeare.  On the one hand, I do like his work and would happily bite off the hand that offered me a good part in any of his plays (for example, I'm currently in a production of The Tempest).  On the other hand, I'm generally disenchanted with the pure mass of Shakespeare now available.  In the last three years, from the build up of the last big anniversary to this one, from birth to death, we've had more than one complete works season, several history cycles and countless other productions.
Obviously, I have a bias.  This little project is focused on the work prior to Shakespeare, but it is also partly named after him - because I acknowledge that Shakespeare is the marketing buzz word I need to get anyone to take even a moments notice.  If I called this the Early Modern Drama Club then... well, I suspect I'd get fewer hits.
I also have to acknowledge that part of the point of my work is to illuminate the work of Shakespeare, to make the references in his work a little less strange, to give the bard some context.  Some of the long term projects I would like to get off the ground would be back to back productions of source plays and Shakespeare's rewrites.  On a smaller scale, I'm in the process of creating a storytelling show with Rosalynde by Thomas Lodge as text (touring 2017), partly because I think it'll be fun and partly because I'm directing As You Like It next year.  Once again, Shakespeare is the excuse for a widening of the repertoire and an exploration of earlier (and contemporary) work.  My work is, in a tiny way, part of a general trend in an extended interest in early English drama - there is more on offer and being produced by bigger companies too.  But still in comparison with the bard, it seems like meagre scraps
Every so often people look at the mass of Shakespeare on offer and suggest a moratorium.  'Let's not do Shakespeare for a few years,' some wag says.  I've suggested this myself.  I've also suggested that the government should order the paying of 'royalties' for Shakespeare production - all funds to be used to fund new writing and theatre production - it would balance the field a bit.  But, beyond being impossible and counter productive, it isn't really necessary.  These trends come in cycles.  Once these anniversaries are over, the major players will probably pull back a bit and look for something else - there'll still be a lot of Shakespeare out there, but maybe not quite so all encompassing.  And it's in the interest of the big players to open out the repertoire.  In basic economic terms, they need to diversify (with the emphasis perhaps on verse) or die.
The major players in the UK, the RSC and the Globe, have already opened up their programming to other writing from the period.  Certain contemporaries of Shakespeare get a look in.  A mixed season will get a Marlowe, Jew of Malta or Doctor Faustus perhaps, thrown in, or a bit of Jonson, Webster or even Ford.  And it's great.  I love it.  The only problem I have with this is the lack of follow through.
Recently The Globe released in a box set all the DVD's of productions from the past ten years or so.  They've all been released separately and many are ones also screened live in cinemas.  Of the twenty plays in the box, nineteen were Shakespeare and one was Doctor Faustus by Kit Marlowe.  The RSC has been more modest in output, so far.  But both the RSC and Globe have produced dozens of plays by other playwrights, in just the last few years, and some of those productions were very well reviewed - so why not distribute them further?
There is a good reason why not and these companies are not run by idiots.  They will only market the plays they think will sell.  I balk slight at trying to tell the Globe to try harder because they are a purely commercial outfit, but the RSC is heavily subsidised and, more importantly, I think they're missing the long term view of building interest in other writers.  The Globe has released half of the Shakespeare canon on DVD, the RSC is working on it.  Once they have released the whole canon once, maybe twice, maybe three times, where do they go?
Whilst I agree that a DVD of The Jew of Malta, say, will not sell brilliantly, it gives students and schools (and dare I say it, people generally) the same opportunities to watch rather than just read a play.  It could be sold as a two pack with The Merchant of Venice, which is a logical pairing - and something that might interest schools.  Mixing Shakespeare with his contemporaries in box sets is a really great way of mixing the interest out a bit, especially if the plays have references to each other.
Part of the reason Shakespeare has exploded in the world is due to film and television.  By releasing a play, making it more familiar, you generally make it easier to sell a new production.  The text becomes less scary and more familiar, and then productions can explore them further, open them up to a little expansion.  (There is a point of overkill, as mentioned above, but you can only reach that after general success.)
We've got Shakespeare, everyone does Shakespeare - if you don't just mix it up a bit, but actively push and sell his contemporaries and predecessors, then you risk a debt spiral of never ending repeats of Hamlet till we all lose the will to live.  If we can make these lesser known plays into as popular a ticket as Shakespeare then there's room to programme not just great other drama, but also have good houses for them.
I'm not even asking these companies to do more other work than they're already doing, just to risk showing it to more people than a few hundred a night for a few months.  I've wanted to watch all the non Shakespeare plays the Globe and RSC have produced over the last few years - well received productions mostly, but I can't get there.  Just one a year.  Maybe two.  That's all I ask.
Obviously, I would like you to do something from a bit earlier in the canon, but hey, one thing at a time.

Wednesday, 2 September 2015

The Fall of Lucifer (Chester) - Full Audio Recording

In the dim and distant past of 2013 we started a real in depth look at the Chester Plays - launching the Exploring the Chester Plays series as well as recording fuller audio productions for future release.  We've nearly caught up with ourselves.  The first five Explorings, covering plays 1 to 10, have now been archived and the first audio production has been edited.  It's not perfect, but considering how rushed the sessions were, it's turned out quite well.  Beyond a minor edit to bypass the issue of the Angels singing (sorry Mat, you ended up on the cutting room floor - we so can't do music of the period yet) it's a full recording of the text we used for Exploring in 2013 - though with more considered performances and sound to help tell the story.  It is hopefully a good introduction to the play for the student who's never seen or heard the play in full before - i.e. almost everyone on the planet.
We've recorded play two which will follow in a similar fashion, and some bits from plays 3,4 & 5 - which may be completed at a later date.
And that'll be it for a while - we're moving on from Chester for the present (though we hope to finish the Exploring sessions at some point).  We're based in East Anglia, so the N-Town play is a much more important 'cycle' to be looking at at in the future.

So, please enjoy our version of Play One of the Chester Plays - The Tanners Play covering the Fall of Lucifer.


God: Robert Crighton
Lucifer: Trevor Laver
Lightbourne: Richard Fawcett
Angels and Archangels: Helen Arbon, Neil Arbon, Adam Webster, Kevin Roychowdhury, AM Barrett, Annie Eddington.
Recorded at the Quay Theatre, Sudbury
Produced and edited by Robert Crighton

Music and Sound Effects all come from the lovely people of freesfx - http://www.freesfx.co.uk

Thursday, 15 August 2013

Our Mission

Going Beyond Shakespeare – A (Revised) Mission Statement

Beyond Shakespeare there was a lot of stuff going on in the British Isles during the old days.  (For arbitrary neatness we have decided that the old days ended in 1642, when the theatres were closed.)  Apart from a few noble exceptions these plays are often passed over, ignored or simply unknown.  Much is simply lost.  This is a mouthpiece/online placeholder for the work of the Beyond Shakespeare Company, an holistic theatre company, who specialise in the repertory beyond Shakespeare, about the plays, fragmentary and extant, that shaped the theatrical world and our dramatic history – it will explore this world through the words and the sounds of those words.  Though these plays do get performed occasionally, they are often not recorded, they disappear from sight in a way that Shakespeare does not.  So, we are here to create, share, archive, and lobby for recordings of Not Shakespeare.  To put Shakespeare in his proper place - IN CONTEXT!

Accompanying these recordings will be additional material, discussion and talks on the plays and anything else that comes to mind at the time.  We’ll hopefully be joined by other actors, directors, academics, to help create new recordings and feed your interest.  We hope that others will join in, creating their own versions and sharing them for the world to hear - for anyone who’s interested in what isn't Shakespeare.
We're not rejecting Shakespeare totally either.  We do love his work, but he is eclipsing.  So much so that the only way to draw attention to his predecessors and contemporaries is to conjure up his name.  Shakespeare is a colossus, but that doesn’t render his co-workers pygmies.  We invoke his name so as to pull other playwrights from underneath his long shadow.
We are unapologetic in recording extracts or spending time on plays that are very obscure.  There are two reasons for this - 1. There is so very little material surviving from the medieval and early Tudor periods that every scrap is precious.  2.  Other people have or are already doing the obvious Not Shakespeare, so we don't need to.  You want a version of Doctor Faustus - try searching on Amazon, that'll get you where you need to go.
There's a whole heap of other stuff happening online and this blog may struggle to keep up - the best place to get up to speed will probably be our twitter feed @BeyondShakes
The Podcast can be found here.
Our Patreon can be found here.
You can make a one off donation to our work here.