MaryLynn here. I really must apologize for the lag in updates–I am not a blogger at all, so I completely slipped up on updating this thing.
But we have been working quite hard! For our second production, Baby with the Bathwater by Christopher Durang, which I’m directing, we decided to branch out. We started this company with our closest friends and colleagues in mind, and we certainly intend to stay within that circle. But, we also want to invite in new people and introduce ourselves to the Twin Cities theatre community. So! For this production, we held auditions, and I cast several professional actors from around the cities–some who I’d met before and others who were fresh faces.
It’s a different feel this time around because the cast is not made up of exclusively college chums
, but regardless, I am having a BLAST. My cast is absolutely fantastic–they’ve given so much in rehearsals–taking my ideas to new levels and polishing my visions in brilliant ways. There’s been just a great collaboration of giving and taking ideas, and I walk away from each rehearsal feeling like we got a lot of work done and that I’m so blessed to work with these creative souls. It’s been great.
We began rehearsals on April 24, and since then have blocked the show and really dug into character work, relationships between characters, comedy “bits,” physical comedy…etc.
I’m not a laugh out loud gal, and more than once I have been hyperventilating from laughing to hard at what these actors are coming up with.
There’s a scene in the play where two characters spring a trick jar on another character–he opens it, and out pops a snake on a spring, and the two characters burst out laughing. Well, we were playing around with this scene, and I asked each actor to play around with their laughs–for whatever reason, awkward, strange laughter just makes me laugh. Haha, soo…this commenced about two minutes of continuous laughter, snarks, guffaws, brays, giggles, chortles, titters, you name it. All the while, the third character keeps a straight face. Tammy (my stage manager) and I were laughing so hard during all of this. Then the actors sort of died down in their laughter, and once they’d settled, I couldn’t resist, so I said, “Ok, burst out laughing again,” to which they responded “BAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!” and then another two minutes of constant laughing. Goodness gracious, it was hilarious. These actors go all out.
This play is so bizarre–absurdly, wickedly funny, and at the same time very revealing and at times you end up with an unexpected cold feeling by just how sad some circumstances are. But then, after barely blinking, you’re back into outrageous comedy.
I’m so blessed to have such a fantastic team of actors at my disposal, and I feel very confident and excited about the direction I’m leading them and that they take me in return. We still have over a month to play around, and I am so excited to see the new heights we take this to. Like in Eurydice, we have a music/sound dude in the corner adding to the storytelling as well–I’m very excited to add him in to the process as well. Our designers are coming up with some hilarious costumes and props to add to the absurdity as well. I just know that there will be lots of opportunities for fun there, too.
It’s gonna be a great show.