BOOK REVIEWS - Delta Publishing
Transcription
BOOK REVIEWS - Delta Publishing
BOOK REVIEWS in the patina of inanimate objects. What would the students’ familiar classrooms have been like ten years or thirty years in the past? What stories might their family homes have to tell? Who lived there before them? What was there before their house was built? I recommend this play both as a powerful stimulus for creative drama work and as an eminently performable script. I’m looking forward to exploring both aspects myself very soon. Burying Your Brother in the Pavement Jack Thorne Same Deborah Bruce The Wardrobe Sam Holcroft Originally published as part of National Theatre Connections these three plays have now been published as single volumes. They are written to be performed by young people and although they are quite different in style they explore similar themes: secrets, and the human condition. Deborah Bruce explores this very effectively in Same. This play considers the extent to which we are all the ‘same’ and our experiences of youth are similar, regardless of when we were born, by comparing the reaction of a group of children to the death of their grandmother with that of her friends in an old people’s home. It is static, but deliberately so; the old people trapped by their infirmity, the young by their addiction to technology. The current concerns of the young are not trivialised but seen to be just as valid as the reminiscences of the older characters. As Timberlake Wertenbaker forces us to consider the differences and similarities between convict and officer through the use of doubling in Our Country’s Good, so Bruce uses the same technique to explore the shared humanity of the characters. The final act reveals something else that is shared; that our relationships are as valid as our forebears’ and indeed as fragile. This would be a challenging play for young people to perform due to its reliance on conversation over action. As well as this, it is vital that the commonality is well-expressed but Bruce states her belief that this can be achieved if the young performers don’t resort to ‘old person’ acting. I was intrigued by the prospect of reading Jack Thorne’s Burying Your Brother in the Pavement having greatly enjoyed his BBC3 series The Fades. This play shares some stylistic similarities with that show that would be exciting and challenging for the young performer. The play is part murder 46 Drama Magazine Spring 2015 mystery, part surreal comedy and part social commentary. It concerns Tom’s journey to lay his brother to rest following his unexplained death on the street. Tom takes up residence there, planning to bury his brother where he died and finds out some key truths about his brother over the week that follows. The hallucinatory style recalls Kafka with council bureaucrats, strangely behaving policemen, and frightened funeral directors played in a heightened style. It uses flashbacks and a flippant and sarcastic narration from Tom that recalls the very funny video diaries of the hero of The Fades. Tom’s journey to understanding his brother and reconciling himself to his lifestyle is well handled and would appeal to teachers trying to tackle homophobia without preaching or brow beating. This is a witty, complex and lively play, tinged with a sadness that would invite the audience to contemplate the tragedies that may occur when we keep secrets from each other. The third of these three plays is a wonderful read and would be immensely rewarding to perform. The Wardrobe by Sam Holcroft is a portmanteau piece, exploring the lives of children over four centuries. Like Same it explores our commonality. The entire play is set inside a wardrobe, with the action reflecting the concerns of different time periods while weaving historical and thematic links between the characters. The script blends monologues, duologues and group pieces that are variously tinged with darkness, tragedy and sympathy as the children hiding in the wardrobe are rarely doing so as part of a game. The conceit of this play would be great fun to explore in a drama classroom, particularly as it demands that space is deliberately limited by the confines of the cupboard which is almost a character in its own right. Holcroft’s use of language is deft, clearly delineating the changes in period without sacrificing empathy for the characters. The use of the wardrobe as a stimulus for dramatic action could be used to inspire students to create their own pieces based on the stories that might be embedded Chris Lambert Burying Your Brother in the Pavement Jack Thorne Nick Hern Books ISBN 978 1 84842 416 6 Same Deborah Bruce Nick Hern Books ISBN 978 1 84842 408 1 The Wardrobe Sam Holcroft Nick Hern Books ISBN 978 1 84842 409 8 Creative Shakespeare: The Globe Education Guide to Practical Shakespeare Fiona Banks I should declare at the outset that I am a big fan of Shakespeare’s Globe. Plays that I have previously struggled to engage with have suddenly made sense in that physically tight yet culturally diverse wooden O. I know from personal experience that children and teenagers, so often uninspired by their school experiences, have realised on just one visit why the plays are so revered, so enduring and such fun. Moreover, I have witnessed how the work of Globe Education has given thousands of young people access to Shakespeare and helped them master his work in practice. The promise implicit in the title was that what actors, directors and academics had learnt from performing in that special space would be transferred into work that could be undertaken in school as an antidote to those arseachingly boring approaches that still, surprisingly and disappointingly, exist in too many English classrooms. In Chapter One, ‘Key Principles and ideas for Creative Shakespeare’, Fiona Banks, creator of Globe Education’s wide array of training programmes, points out that Shakespeare is taught in 65% of the world’s countries while in the UK, English teachers are more likely to teach Shakespeare than any other single author. This alone is a powerful argument for making that teaching as creative and enjoyable as possible. The chapter is brief but serves as a solid philosophical bedrock upon which the book to come is built. Chapter Two, again quite brief, outlines the particular context of the Globe as a performance space and, as I had hoped, gives some insight into what was discovered (or perhaps re-discovered) about the relationship between the three A’s: Actor, Audience and Architecture. There are snippets of theatre history here along with new realisations about the way some of Shakespeare’s lines acknowledged the stage for which they were written. The notion of treating the audience as another actor is an especially powerful one as anyone who has seen a production there will doubtless recognise. For teachers wanting to inspire their pupils, the ‘core approaches’ delineated in Chapter Three will represent the heart of this book. The keynote is that Shakespeare’s plays are not sacred and advice is offered on why and how to cut the text rather than risk the dreaded ‘plodding through’ that has killed so much of his work stone dead for so many for so long. This is, appropriately the longest chapter and offers a rich mixture of discussion, activities, teaching tips, extracts of text, and commentaries from the Globe Education practitioners. Giving these practitioners a voice provides some interesting insights into their preferred practices but I began to find these insertions, rather misleadingly subheaded ‘Tips’, annoyingly democratic in that I couldn’t see how giving all of them the chance to comment on each topic would help teachers in their classroom work. The inclusion of edited extracts and resources such as the ‘story pictures’ sequence for A Midsummer Night’s Dream are a boon for the busy teacher but there will still be quite a lot for them to do in deciding which activities would be appropriate for different age/ability groups. I was perplexed by the apparently random organisation of the activities: if some sort of rationale had been given it would have saved me time and effort Books fruitlessly looking for one! A particular strength of the book is the chapter entitled ‘Language: Inside Out’. Here, the thoughts of Globe Associate (Text) Giles Block (whose book ‘Speaking the Speech’ was reviewed in the Spring 2014 edition of this magazine) and practitioner Yolande Vazquez offer a convincing rationale for tackling Shakespeare’s language head on. Here again, brief extracts are well chosen in order to illustrate the effects of different metres, line endings and other language features. Things do get a bit technical here but the practical approaches are described quite clearly. No doubt some of the activities in the book as a whole will be familiar to many teachers but for those wanting to try out the creative approaches for the first time the detailed explanations should prove helpful. Having said that, I found some of the explanations of activities in the chapter ‘Actor, Stage and Audience’ too wordy to follow. Separating the description from commentary by, for example, bullet pointing the stages of the exercise then offering italicised comments might have made them more accessible. The chapter on ‘Performance’ goes on to discuss the way Globe Education sets about organising their annual ‘Our Theatre’ project, how to prepare for a visit to the theatre and using filmed versions of the plays. While this illuminates the work of the company it doesn’t add much to what I perceived the thrust of the book to be, that is, how to teach Shakespeare creatively. The last chapter, ‘Learning Through Shakespeare’ offers case studies of work undertaken in a hospital school and one for children with complex learning difficulties. These fed my personal interest in drama and special educational needs but I’m not sure how relevant other teachers will find this chapter and wondered if this book was the right place for these case studies. I was disconcerted to spot myself in one of the photographs but don’t let that put you off because despite the reservations outlined above this is a very useful and interesting adjunct to the exciting and influential practical work that Globe Education does so well. Andy Kempe Creative Shakespeare: The Globe Education Guide to Practical Shakespeare Fiona Banks Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 4081 5684 1 Reviews Sweet William: A User’s Guide to Shakespeare Michael Pennington Twenty years ago, there seemed to be little new to say about Shakespeare. His work having been analysed exhaustively from a variety of perspectives. Aspiring academics would still seek to enhance their CVs by converting their Ph.D. theses into books but Shakespearian studies had clearly run its course - hadn’t it? Such assumptions have been demolished in the last two decades. A spate of superb books, have ushered in a new golden age of Shakespeare criticism. Books such as Michael Wood’s In Search of Shakespeare, Stephen Greenblatt’s Will in the World, Jonathan Bate’s Soul of the Age and James Shapiro’s 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare adopted a largely biographical approach to Shakespeare with a refreshing absence of critical jargon and ‘isms’. Michael Pennington’s Sweet William follows in the footsteps of these ‘biographers’. The way Shakespeare’s growing maturity is reflected in his development as a dramatist forms a loose structural model for the book but never becomes a straitjacket. At times Pennington jumps through time to compare early plays with late and, faced with the paucity of verifiable information about Shakespeare’s life, engages in some speculative detective work. It’s a task he obviously relishes, and one for which he’s well qualified. I’ve long admired Pennington as an actor but was unfamiliar with his writing. His acting and directorial experience yield illuminating insights into the plays in performance but I confess to being surprised by the breadth and depth of his scholarship and quality of his writing. He uses contemporary cultural references to make a point about Shakespeare’s stagecraft and language. For example, likening him to ‘an uncanny young musician starting with Dixieland before discovering free-form jazz’ and describing the ‘obnoxious’ little Princes in Richard III as the kind of kids that would turn you into Miss Trunchball. Pennington’s blend of scholarship and practical experience gives him an edge over critics with a purely academic knowledge. One of the strongest sections of the book is the analysis of the Henry IV plays and Falstaff’s relationship with Hal. Is it friendship or love that binds the men together? It often feels, he says, like the love between a surrogate father and his chosen son which gives Hal what he clearly seeks but never receives from his real father. Just occasionally I found his interpretation unconvincing. The claim, for instance, that the ‘love scene’ between Henry V and Katherine affords a glimpse of a human being with a potential for love which allows us ‘to feel something for Henry’ ignores the bawdy exchanges between Henry and Burgundy. This crude, misogynistic conversation is carried on in front of Katherine, her parents, and the entire French court (though the scene is often omitted in modern productions!) Mid-way through, Pennington interrupts his chronological narrative for an ‘Interval’ chapter devoted to a fascinating discussion, subtitled ‘The State We’re In (Part One)’, of changing styles of acting and speaking Shakespeare’s verse. The concluding chapter (Part Two) focuses on the revamping of the Royal Shakespeare Theatres, current debates about theatrical design, and the contentious issue of funding. As you’d expect from the co-founder of the English Shakespeare Company, Pennington is an outspoken critic of the government’s recent savage cuts to regional theatres. One of the many pleasures afforded by Sweet William is the way it invites a dialogue with the writer. It’s like chatting to an immensely knowledgeable and entertaining actor in The Dirty Duck at Stratford: a raconteur full of theatrical anecdotes, waspish asides, and provocative insights. He acknowledges that he’s constantly changing his mind about Shakespeare’s plays, citing Much Ado as an example; a play largely dismissed in his discussion of the romantic comedies where he clearly regards some of the comic scenes as laboured. However, Marianne Elliott’s ‘brilliant’ production has recently ‘completely reconciled’ him to the play. Much Ado has always been one of my favourite comedies; Pennington’s late conversion has quashed any lingering reservations I might have had and moved me closer to becoming a theatrical ‘luvvie’, gushing with praise for Sweet William. Dudley Jones Sweet William: A User’s Guide to Shakespeare Michael Pennington ISBN 978 1 854 59568 3 The Complete Brecht Toolkit Stephen Unwin This is the second Complete Toolkit produced by Nick Hern Books; the first being on Stanislavsky by Bella Merlin published in 2007 and reprinted twice. It is probably no accident that this longer volume emerged first. In theatre and drama education there is still some sense that Stanislavsky has pre-eminence and that his work has a greater complexity and potential for exploring a subtlety in relation to the human condition that is less evident in Brecht. Both the author of the work under review here and indeed Brecht himself acknowledge a debt to Stanislavsky. In Brecht’s famous 1952 essay entitled Some of the Things that can be Learned from Stanislavsky he makes eight essential points about theatre, all of which may be seen in evidence in his own work. They include: the sense of responsibility to society; the importance of the broad conception and of details; truthfulness as a duty; and the representation of reality as full of contradictions. It is thus important to emphasise that there is no radical break between the Brecht and Stanislavski in that they are both parts of the Modernist movement in theatre, striving to fulfill a newly realised ambition for it. At numerous points, Stephen Unwin stresses this, not least to provide a stimulus for the teaching and studying of modern theatre. Nick Hern Books Spring 2015 Drama Magazine 47 Reviews Books have, admirably, provided us with two companion volumes that really do support each other in so many ways. Although some may look askance at the very idea of a toolkit for work in theatre we should remind ourselves that there is nothing new in this in relation to thinking about the arts. Toolkits can be refined while also being accessible and friendly. At their very best they want to be at your side to help you clarify your intentions and show you how to fulfill them. This is certainly the major and brilliant achievement of this book. Although the library shelves are lined with works by or on Brecht, it can be quite a daunting task to develop an advanced sense of what he was about. He not only wrote some of the masterpieces of 20-century theatre and an extraordinary number of poems but considered it an essential parallel task to think about education and learning. Perhaps the most important work that represents this task is John Willett’s 1964 collection of essays Brecht on Theatre subtitled ‘the development of an aesthetic’. Every one of the 55 essays in that collection has an important relationship to thinking about the theatre and education and constantly encourages a willingness to renew one’s own practice. This book must similarly be commended for its exemplary clarity and concision thus following Brechtian principles in itself. The structure of the book has been very carefully thought through. After a sparkling and committed introduction there are five sections. The first two are necessary and basic introductions to Brecht as a person and to the theatre context in which his work developed from the pre-dominant form of naturalism and early modernism, through the paradoxes of the Weimar Republic and thence to the fascist revolution that followed. The subsequent sections become ever more useful though I should point out that each continually looks back at the key principles laid out earlier. In this sense they are not strictly separate sections but rather the building blocks in a move towards understanding Brecht’s most notable work at all levels. Sections 2 and 3 focus in turn on theory and practice but Unwin constantly reminds us of the vital interplay between these two sometimes woefully separated discourses. Section 4 interestingly and usefully lays out for the reader the author’s own experience of working with Brechtian principles in his practice as a director. The book ends with 50 exercises. These have been prefigured earlier 48 Drama Magazine Spring 2015 in the book and relate directly to the issues raised throughout. Each exercise begins with a clear statement as to the purpose and intention of it, followed by a full description of how it might work. The Complete Brecht Toolkit is an extremely enjoyable read in itself. This is due both to the commitment of the authors and their perception of the need to clarify but not simplify. In this, they honour the complexity of Brecht while providing a valuable addition to the literature aimed at exploring and explaining this key figure. I highly recommend this book to you but nonetheless think that it would be best combined with John Willett’s seminal work and Brecht’s collected poems. I wonder when Methuen will get around to reprinting them? A new copy can go for up to £370 while even a second-hand copy is likely to cost around £25. Gold dust! It’s worth also mentioning here that there is a new biography of Brecht by Steven Parker which has just been published by Bloomsbury Press Mike Stevenson The Complete Brecht Toolkit Stephen Unwin Nick Hern Books ISBN 978 1 85459 550 8 The best of the rest King Charles III Mike Bartlett This Flesh is Mine Brian Woolland ‘The queen is dead, long live the king.’ Set in the presumably not too distant future, Mike Bartlett’s play is a politically sharp, extremely funny, and slightly alarming dissection of the fragility (or is it the unassailable endurability?) of the established order. In a nutshell, Charles ascends the throne but before the coronation he makes it clear that he intends to break with convention by refusing to give royal assent to a bill designed to restrict the freedom of the press. Given the way the press has frequently treated Charles this may seem ironic but the conceit sets an intriguing conundrum: do we want an unelected monarch albeit one who, in this case, puts principles before his own constitutional safety, or will we settle for a parliament that uses its elected status as a means of limiting what we are allowed to see and hear? While some of the domestic scenes are like a parodic soap opera, beyond the palace gates civil disturbances escalate as the constitutional crisis deepens. What makes this play especially interesting is its use of blank verse and structural mimicry of Shakespeare’s histories. There are parallels to be drawn between Harry and his rakish fifteenth century namesake, while William’s manipulation of the situation (ably abetted by a Kate who has a touch of Lady Macbeth about her) has overtones of Lear’s less charming daughters. There’s even a ghost from Charles’ past stalking the corridors of the struggle for power! Uneasy indeed lies the head that doesn’t yet wear the crown. If King Charles III is a history play set in the future, This Flesh is Mine is a Greek tragedy which moves from the world of The Iliad to a present day that, while fictional, is resonant of the tensions and oppressions in Palestine where the play was developed and first performed. This is a poetic yet harrowing exploration of the personal and public tragedy of war and the grief it brings. As the title suggests, it’s about bodies and who owns them, alive or dead. Like King Charles III it draws on the forms and themes of dramas past to create a lens through which to review the present and question the implications for the future. Both plays would thus complement a number of set texts very well by stimulating discussion on the relationship between form, content and political and historical context. Andy Kempe King Charles III Mike Bartlett Nick Hern Books ISBN 978 1 848 42 397 8 This Flesh is Mine Brian Woolland Oberon ISBN 978 1 78319 138 3 Pronoun Evan Placey Home Nadia Falls Pronoun follows 18-year-old Dean through the typical traumas of a teenager: romance on the brink, parent/child tensions, testing friendships, and the stress of A-levels. Oh, and did I mention that Dean used to be Isabella? This topical new play challenges preconceptions of gender in order to spotlight archetypes and labels that should have no place in today’s diverse society. But while this appears to be Placey’s overarching message, he avoids labouring the point. It’s a play about love, friendship and loyalty, punctuated by quirky appearances from James Dean, who lives in a poster on Dean’s wall and on whom he models his ‘new look’. The real highlights of the play for me were the choral episodes from the school’s senior management team which reveal a deep-routed fear of how Dean’s decision to change gender might impact their next Ofsted inspection. In Home the characters are experiencing transition of a different kind. Fall’s play gives us startling insight into what it is to be homeless in today’s Britain through verbatim accounts, beat boxing and R&B songs. Bullet, Tattoo Boy and Young Mum, amongst others, offer up stories of their quests to find a sense of security in a world that is lonely, challenging and often frightening. The ghost of one young resident who was stabbed to death hangs over the play, adding to the urgency of its central message. Both of these plays are essentially about identity and the desire to belong and represent powerful additions to the age 16+ repertoire. Lucy Brassell Pronoun Evan Placey Nick Hern Books ISBN 978 1 84842 391 6 Home Nadia Falls Nick Hern Books ISBN 978 1 84842 355 8 Books Storytelling With Our Students David Heathfield Heathfield may not be familiar to UK drama teachers but is well known abroad as an accomplished storyteller, an expert at passing on his extensive treasury of tales from around the world with an inspiring warmth and generosity. What he also does, with clinical precision, is deconstruct the techniques he uses to apply the stories to a range of educational objectives. His work focuses in particular on using stories to enhance language learning but this book has a broader brief and deserves attention for a number of reasons. It is the most clearly written manual on how to choose, learn, tell and work with a story that I have ever come across. Each of the forty tales reflects a different culture and each is used as an exemplar of a different purpose or storytelling strategy. In this, the book becomes a powerful means of developing the drama teacher’s own classroom practice while offering a rich and entertaining multi-cultural resource. The first scholarly yet accessible and short section of this book offers an informative context on storytelling as a fundamental human activity and its importance in teaching. The advice offered is complemented by a set of epigrams that wouldn’t be out of place on the drama studio wall. The stories themselves are grouped under three headings: The teacher as storyteller; Creative ways into and out of storytelling; and The students as storyteller. Suggested activities include ways of telling, presenting and discussing stories as well as idea for improvisations around characters and themes. These may not seem revolutionary to a trained drama teacher but they are clearly explained and purposeful. The last section of the book offers an extensive list of resources related to storytelling. Many of these are readily available on YouTube and would serve well as stimuli for drama lesson across the key stages. Heathfield’s 2005 book Spontaneous Speaking (Delta Publishing ISBN 978 1 900783 92 7) is also worth checking out. Sub-titled ‘Drama activities for confidence and fluency’, it’s a lively collection of ideas for improvisations and scenarios pitched at developing oracy that would serve well as warm Reviews up activities and could certainly be utilised to support students for whom English is an additional language. Andy Kempe Storytelling With Our Students David Heathfield Delta Publishing ISBN 978 1 905085 87 3 Visit: http://www.nationaldrama.org.uk/membership/ Spring 2015 Drama Magazine 49