to the Learning Pack for The Colby
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to the Learning Pack for The Colby
The Colby Sisters of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Background Pack Written by Harry Mackrill Tricycle Creative Learning The Tricycle’s Creative Learning programme works to develop the imaginations, aspirations and potential of children and young people in the diverse community of Brent and beyond. Collaborating with schools and young people, we use theatre, drama and film, to bring unheard young voices into the mainstream; creating work that engages the emotions and provokes debate. Whether as audiences, writers, performers or producers of new work at the theatre, young people are at the Tricycle’s heart. About this Background Resource Pack This document is designed to give an insight into the research and rehearsal of the Tricycle’s 2014 production of The Colby Sisters of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania by Adam Bock, directed by Tripp Cullman. Contents The Tricycle Theatre Production p3 Character Biographies p4 New York Society p6 Assistant Director’s rehearsal diary p8 Interview with Adam Bock and Trip Cullman p13 The Tricycle Theatre 2014 Production of The Colby Sisters of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania By Adam Bock The Production opened at the Tricycle Theatre Kilburn, on Wednesday 25 June 2014. The Company Heather India Willow Gemma Garden Mouse Ronke Adekoluejo Isabella Calthorpe Claire Forlani Charlotte Parry Patricia Potter Alice Sanders Director Designer Lighting Designer Sound Designer Assistant Director Costume Supervisor Casting Director Accent and Dialect Coach Trip Cullman Richard Kent Oliver Fenwick Emma Laxton Harry Mackrill Natasha Ward Briony Barnett Richard Ryder Charlotte Parry, Isabella Calthorpe, Claire Forlani, Ronke Adekoluejo, Alice Sanders, Patricia Potter Photo credit: Mark Douet CHARACTER BIOGRAPHIES The Colbys are a wealthy family from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The five Colby sisters have all relocated to New York, where most have married wealthy and powerful men and became the toast of New York High Society. They are the trend setters of the upper classes and regularly feature in magazines such as Vanity Fair, and on page six of the New York Post (see New York Society section of this pack for more information). WILLOW MARSHALL The eldest of the Colby sisters, Willow is often the most downtrodden. She lives with her husband, Robert – an architect who is finding it difficult to secure a job – and her two children, Silas and Jenny. Willow left Pittsburgh as a young woman after she married Robert and they live in a comfortable Brownstone on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. INDIA GIBSON Second eldest of the Colby Sisters is India, who studied at Brown University. She is married to a famous artist, Joe. The two of them share a glamorous lifestyle and, while based in New York, they often travel the world for Joe’s work. India is the most reserved of the sisters and is also the most loved. Isabella Calthorpe (India), Patricia Potter (Garden), Charlotte Parry (Gemma), Claire Forlani (Willow) Photo credit: Mark Douet GEMMA BYRON Gemma, the eldest twin, is the most socially powerful of the Colby sisters and uses her influence within the family dynamic and also in New York Society. She is married to a billionaire, Jeremy, and spends her time organising Galas and fundraisers for New York socialites. GARDEN STANLEY-MYERS Garden, the youngest of the twins, is most like the Colby Sisters’ mother. She is a solid unit with Gemma, but when she becomes unhappy, she is easily dominated by her twin sister. Ronke Adekoluejo (Heather) Photo credit: Mark Douet DIANA “MOUSE” COLBY The baby of the family, ‘Mouse’ lives in a neighbourhood – which might be SoHo – that was once edgy, but is now yet another domain of the New York elite. She inhabits a slightly different world from the rest of her sisters. She is looked after by all of them, but ultimately is a free spirit who explores the world without inhibition or a sense of the society ‘rules’ that govern her sisters. HEATHER LEE Heather is Gemma’s faithful personal assistant. From a large family herself, she understands the family dynamic and is willing to look after Gemma and the sisters as best she can. Isabella Calthorpe (India), Alice Sanders (Mouse) Photo credit: Mark Douet NEW YORK SOCIETY The Colby Sisters is a play about family dynamics, more specifically the relationships between siblings. It also interrogates the social constructs of New York High Society and how the upper classes in America interact. Adam Bock was initially inspired to write The Colby Sisters by a famous Vanity Fair cover featuring the Miller family, three American society sisters. The Colby Sisters inhabit a very specific part of New York society. For us as a company to understand the social dynamics of the world of the sisters – and how this feeds into the drama of the play – we had to research the social constructs and conventions that constrain them. The Miller sisters, clockwise from left: Pia Getty, Alexandra von Fürstenberg, and Marie-Chantal, Crown Princess of Greece; Vanity Fair, June 1995. Photo: David Seidner www.vanityfair.com “American aristocracy was defined by inherited wealth. There were no complicated grades of nobility and confusing courtesy titles to contend with. The equation was, and remains, a simple one – the older the money, the grander the bloodline.” Nick Foulkes, High Society The social systems of New York descend from the wealthy Dutch settlers of the 17th Century, who prospered from the fur and tobacco trade for which America would become renowned. In the 1660s, the colony shuttled back and forth between British and Dutch rule – but the prominent families of this time have become the bedrock of American High Society. Like London and other large cities, New York became a favourite haunt of the “social” classes in the early 19th Century. Theatres and hotels were built and there was an increasing importance placed on being seen in the ‘right’ places. Henry Sands Brooks opened a men’s tailor in 1818 and served sherry to customers, turning shopping into a social event. New York also blossomed thanks to the canal built between the Hudson River and the Great Lakes: it was an engineering marvel and allowed trade and tourism to boom. The ‘Gilded Age’ of New York High Society was the turn of the 20th Century, which is famously recorded by writers F. Scott Fitzgerald (The Great Gatsby and The Beautiful and the Damned) and Edith Wharton (The House of Mirth and The Age of Innocence). This social boom ended with the Wall Street Crash in 1929, but the social structure remained, and was maintained through America’s growth throughout the 20th Century. As US power grew, and Wall Street re-emerged as a centre of the Western capitalism, New York Society developed. By the 1970s and 80s (when the Colby sisters would have been born) opulence was back in fashion. As Nick Foulkes says in his book High Society: “It looked like the values of the gilded age were making another comeback. For the first time in what seemed like ages, it was socially acceptable to have money – and to show it.” General interest in High Society was consolidated by the development and power of the media, especially following the birth of the internet. Gossip columns became powerful ways to sell newspapers, and to be seen by the rest of society, bringing us to the world in which the Colby Sisters know and live in today. High Society in American Media Page Six, the New York Post: A famous gossip column in the NY Post, regularly featuring socialites and celebrities. The column runs photos of galas and events similar to the one in Scene Two of the play. New York Social Diary: A website that publishes a calendar of events for socialites, and the photographs taken during them. It originally appeared in 1993 as a monthly column in Quest magazine. The Social Register Association: A directory of names of the prominent families who form America’s social elite. The first New York Social Register was published in 1886 by Louis Keller, who had the idea of consolidating the names of the important and influential people of New York on one list. The publication of names in the Social Register is governed by an advisory committee. ASSISTANT DIRECTOR’S REHEARSAL DIARY Week One It is 9:30am on Monday morning, and the cast and creative team of The Colby Sisters, along with the full Tricycle Theatre team, have assembled in the bar downstairs for the ‘meet and greet’. This is where every member of the large team comes together for the first time and introduces themselves. Artistic Director Indhu Rubasingham welcomes the team and speaks of seeing an early rehearsed reading of the script and how she immediately knew she wanted to produce the play. Following the welcome, the cast, stage management and creative team (along with the Marketing and Artistic departments of the theatre) venture into the rehearsal room for the first read-through of the play. The read-through is a nerve wracking experience for all involved, but is a vital first step in the journey of rehearsing a play. It is the first time we all hear the play out loud, with the voices of the actors who have been cast. Happily for everyone involved, the first read of The Colby Sisters is very moving and very, very funny. When rehearsing a piece of new writing, it is useful for the playwright to be in the room throughout the process to hone and edit the text. During our first reading, playwright Adam Bock is busy scribbling away, making notes and annotating his script. When the play is read out loud, the playwright and director can hear every detail that is missing or line that is superfluous. Ronke Adekoluejo Photo credit: Mark Douet The rest of Week One is dedicated to ‘table work’; the work done prior to getting the play up on its feet. It is usually a detailed mining of the text, where the ensemble dissect the play and begin to find answers to the questions that arose during their preparation. As The Colby Sisters is the story of a family, it is important that we are all share a very precise image of the history of the sisters. Claire Forlani, who plays the eldest sister Willow, starts us off by asking what their mother would have been like, and we soon create a very vivid portrait which incorporates each of the actors’ initial thoughts. Over the next few days we detail each aspect of the sisters’ lives; Charlotte Parry (playing the elder twin, Gemma) is keen to understand the age gap between each of them, whilst Isabella Calthorpe talks at length about her character India’s relationship to the family, and why she is able to act as a mediator between the siblings. The play also looks at themes such as fame and high society in New York. Trip Cullman, the director, and Adam become invaluable tools for the actors, as they both live in New York and have first-hand experience of the world the Colbys inhabit. Trip immediately clarifies the type of celebrity that the sisters have: ‘Page 6’ of the New York Post. They are not ‘reality’ television stars; they are famous because of money and the power it brings. Week One ends with individual design meetings between the designer Richard Kent, Trip and each of the actresses. Image is everything for the Colbys and Richard’s design will tell us a lot about each of the characters just by looking at them. Each actor comes to the meeting with lots of ideas and contributions, and it is apparent that each element of making theatre is a collaborative process. Week Two Having spent the first week of rehearsals discussing the characters, researching their world and investigating each moment of the text, we start Week Two by finding the physical space inhabited by the Colby sisters. The stage management team mark the dimensions of the stage onto the rehearsal room floor and we start to block the play, which involves making decisions about where the actors, set and props should be at all times. Adam has written a very Claire Forlani, Charlotte Parry Photo credit: Mark Douet specific opening image which he and Trip are keen to replicate as accurately as possible. The image is one of India sitting very still on the sofa of a photographer’s studio, but despite her stillness she has several thoughts running through her mind. We take care to mark these physical moments out as we would do if they were spoken text, creating each individual beat, or thought, and then working together to find India’s objectives. We continue this slow and detailed work throughout the play, and as we do we discover new moments which need further clarification through rewrites. The world of New York is vital to the play, but because it was originally performed as a rehearsed reading at the Sundance Theater Lab in America, it was assumed that the audience already had an awareness of the geography of the city. Trip and Adam realise that a British audience would need greater clarification, especially around names such as ‘Bergdorf’s’ (New York’s equivalent of Liberty or Harvey Nichols) and ‘Park Slope’ (a suburb of Brooklyn). This specificity of location was aided by the rewrites, but Trip also encouraged the actors to articulate each phrase – and what each place means to the sisters – with clarity and purpose. The actors are aided in this process by the dialect coach, Richard Ryder. He comes in early during the second week to watch rehearsals progress and listen to how the actors’ voices naturally fit the upper class American accent. This observation is then followed by individual workshops with each actor to help tailor their own voice to that of their characters. As the dialogue of the play is so fast and has a staccato rhythm, Richard also creates a warm-up for the group to release their voices before rehearsals and help them work together as an ensemble. Week Three The work with the acting company continues in earnest throughout Week Three of rehearsals, but slowly the creative and technical elements of the production also enter the process. Adam has written a play with five vastly contrasting settings: we see a photographer’s studio, at an exclusive New York gala, Gemma’s apartment, a tennis court(!), and the lobby of a Brooklyn restaurant. Isabella Calthorpe, Patricia Potter Photo credit: Mark Douet Richard’s design incorporates the concept of image and photography by using 4 large photo frames. These frames will move around the stage (by our stage management and crew) in order to create the different spaces. Early on in Week Three the creative team meet in order to start planning each scene change: several charts are presented so that we all know what props will need to be removed from the stage and how the new ones will be brought on. It is a complex process and all the logistics need to be clear and well-rehearsed. Trip decides that the character of Gemma’s assistant, Heather (played by Ronke Adekoluejo), should be seen ‘working’ throughout the play so that the audience understand, in contrast, how privileged each of the sisters are. From this we decide that she can help set each scene, and that the scene changes should be a distinctive and integral part of the play. Oliver Fenwick, the lighting designer, and Emma Laxton, sound designer, will aid the story telling by contributing to the very specific world in each scene change. We end the week with a stagger through of the play. This is the first time we put each scene together and hear the whole story from start to finish. The acting company handle the journey really well and the story telling is clear and succinct. It is interesting to watch how the scenes connect to one another and how the drama crescendos. The actors understand for the first time how to tell the complete story of their characters, instead of working on each individual scene in isolation. The intensity of the play allows the emotion to build and several moments which have been difficult for us to navigate suddenly unlock. A good end to the week before we head into our final week in the rehearsal room! Week Four Alice Sanders, Ronke Adekoluejo Photo credit: Mark Douet In the final moment of Scene One, an unseen photographer comes and takes the Colby sisters’ portrait - which will develop before our eyes and be projected onto one of Richard Kent’s frames for the duration of Scene Two. In preparation for this moment we have our very own photo shoot in order to capture the image that will be projected. In addition to the photograph being used for the production, the Marketing Department at the Tricycle will also use the image for promotion of the play. Happily, what is a production and marketing necessity becomes the perfect acting exercise for the company! The actors are dressed in the ball gowns which Richard Kent has designed and made (with Costume Supervisor, Natasha Ward and a team of makers) following the costume discussions in Week One, and there is a makeup and hair artist on hand to make them look as glamorous as possible! The actors are, for one morning on the Kilburn High Road, experiencing the life that the Colby sisters would on a daily basis. With the photograph taken, we get back to rehearsals. The rest of the week is based around detailed scene work and full runs of the play. Each member of the creative team, along with stage management and technicians, watches the runs. It is important for Emma (Sound Designer) and Oliver (Lighting Designer) to understand the shape and movement of Trip’s direction, so that they can tailor the sound and lighting to it. We also set the sound equipment up in the rehearsal room, and develop the soundscape for the gala and (perhaps most importantly) the tennis match before we go into the theatre for the technical rehearsal. We end our time in the rehearsal room with one final run of the play. The actors say good bye to the room and stage management pack all the props away before we move into the theatre. All the work that has been achieved through rehearsal now has time to settle during the technical rehearsals before we run the play in full again – next time, in front of an audience! Week Five Over the weekend, the set is moved from the workshop to the Tricycle and the stage is prepared for Monday’s first tech session. Before the actors arrive, Trip and Richard walk through the screen movements, marking each scene for Oliver to then light, whilst Leo – our video consultant – works alongside them to fit the image of the photograph and a short film used for the beginning of Scene Three onto the screens. The technical rehearsals of any play are a slow and detailed process – it is a time when the actors work on stage, but do not need to pitch their physicality or emotion at performance levels. Instead, it is a time for the creative team to work and help enhance all the work the company are doing on stage. As well as the intricate scene changes, there are also many costume changes – usually very fast ones, from elaborate ball gowns into day wear or tennis gear. It takes time to get the timings of these changes down and Rosie, our wardrobe assistant, works hard to get the actors changed as quickly and efficiently as possible. By Wednesday evening we have gone through the technical elements of the full play and can finally piece everything together in a dress rehearsal. This is the first time since the rehearsal room that the actors perform the play in its entirety, but this time they have to fill the auditorium of the Tricycle Theatre, whilst retaining the intimate relationships and moments they took so long to create in rehearsal. Finally, on Thursday evening, we put the final piece of the jigsaw together when we perform in front of an audience for the first time. It is a thrilling experience; telling the story that we all know so well to strangers, and it is exciting to hear to what lines get the strongest reactions –throughout the night there are huge laughs and gasps of terror. Through the following week we listen to the audiences’ reactions and make sure we are telling the story as clearly and effectively as we can. Trip and Adam, and the entire creative team, watch each preview performance and then join together the next day to work through the notes. With each show the production becomes more technically efficient and impressive. Now, all that is left is Press Night, where the critics come to review the work, and then the run of the show. Over the next six weeks, the actors will continue to fine tune each moment and work to react spontaneously and naturally to moments they perform 8 times a week. It is exciting to see how far we have already come, and I am eager to see how far the copmpany move forward from here... Isabella Calthorpe, Alice Sanders Photo credit: Mark Douet INTERVIEW WITH ADAM BOCK AND TRIP CULLMAN How did working together on The Colby Sisters come about? ADAM. We met each other when I was writing The Thugs at SoHo Writer/Director lab, and we were both working with someone else, but then we decided to work together. That was about 12 years ago. And as soon as I wrote The Colby Sisters I showed it to Trip and asked if he wanted to do it, so we workshopped it at New Dramatists, a collection of 50 playwrights, and then we applied to Sundance and spent 3 weeks last summer workshopping the play we a company of actors at the Sundance Theatre Lab. TRIP. This is our fifth production together so we have quite a long history of collaborating. The first play we did was a play of Adam's called Swimming in the Shallows, which is about a boy who falls in love with a shark in an aquarium, and then they go on a date... at the beach... [much laughter], and then a play called The Drunken City, followed by The Follows and A Small Fire. Each show was in New York except for The Flowers, which we produced in Chicago. How did the Tricycle bag the world premiere of this show? TRIP. I met Indhu about 3 years ago at Sundance Theatre Lab, at Banff in Canada and we hit it off really well. When she came to Sundance last year as a respondant, and her job was to respond to each project that was being developed at the Lab. She really liked The Colby Sisters and it was then she decided to programme the play over here at the Tricycle. Talk a bit about your director/writer relationship? What works between the two of you? TRIP. I think we share an aesthetic sensibility, and we have a long history of working together so no longer have to be careful around one another - we can cut through the bullshit, which is useful in the rehearsal room ADAM. We have the same sense of humour TRIP. We do! But I think The Colby Sisters is a little different because in the past Adam had presented work to be produced that was closer to a completed state than when we started working on The Colby Sisters together, so it feels like this is much more of a piece in which my input into the development of the script itself - not in terms of writing, but in terms of thinking about the story and themes and how they Adam Bock and Harry Mackrill Photo credit: Mark Douet developed - had a more present impact upon the way in which Adam decided to go about writing it. ADAM. I had just started to work on musicals, which is much more of a collaborative process because you are writing alongside the person working on the score, and it is sort of great to come in and not know what to do next, because you have someone else to feed you ideas. So when I went to Sundance, I said to Trip and the group, as a kind of joke, that this time I was going to listen to what Trip said about Colby. And then when we had our first rehearsal he made quite a big suggestion and I realised he was right - and I had to go away and rewrite the play as a result. Another thing I really like working with Trip is that sometimes the director doesn't like the playwright to talk to the actors, it all has to go through the director, and I think "well, I wrote the thing, I'd quite like to be involved" Trip Cullman - and Trip doesn't mind that which is quite Photo credit: Mark Douet nice to me. So it felt fair that I would let him have something to say about my writing, since I always have something to say about what he is doing! Where did initial inspiration come for The Colby Sisters? ADAM. It came from a couple of places. What I tell people is that the first one is that usually in a play you'll have one or two actresses, and one of them MIGHT be blonde, so I thought to myself: "What if the actors were ALL actresses and they're all blonde?" I thought that would be funny, because usually when you have a blonde actress one stage she is playing a certain TYPE, but we could have five different blondes on stage... So then I remembered a picture I had seen a long time ago, of the Miller sisters in Vanity Fair. The Miller sisters were famous 'society girls'. And it made me realise that there is a history of celebrity sisters who become famous as a group - you know we've had the Hiltons in the States, and the Mitford's over here in the UK, and there used to be the Langford sisters in Canada, who were very famous in the 1950s. So I thought, I'm going to write about these five society sisters. TRIP. In all of Adam’s work, he works from metaphor, and I think in The Colby Sisters there is a metaphor about these society girls and the pressure that builds on them, and really what the play is trying to explore is inter-personal dynamics between family members, and especially between primary family members. And I think there is a glossy, glittery surface of the ‘society’, but I think what is underneath that is a play about family. ADAM. I write about social systems that are bound tight. And then something happens which challenges that system – so will systems return or will change happen? Often, it feels like a system tries to keep itself a system, and that people get caught in that. And I don’t like that – as a gay man, I feel that the system doesn’t work for me so I am always interested in how the system changes. What are the differences between working here and at home? ADAM. Well we don't have tea breaks! TRIP. I think there is a big challenge in that I'm used to working with actors I know, and these are all actors I've never worked with before. So I had to figure out if my way of working would fit a group of people who were strangers to my process. Trip Cullman, Charlotte Parry, Isabella Calthorpe, Patricia Potter Photo credit: Mark Douet ADAM. It feels like there is a lot more THEATRE over here. You know, back home I live right in the middle of Broadway, but over here it feels like there is just more... TRIP. I think because there is subsidised theatre here, it feels that there is less of a responsibility over here for the visiting director to help gain patronage from private monies. So that’s a huge relief because it means when I’m working on a show, I can simply concentrate on that. How do you think British audiences will react to the show? TRIP. That’s a big question mark. I have no idea. I’m excited to see. Which Colby Sister are you? ADAM. I’m like India because she’s the pretty one... TRIP. And I’m like Gemma. Because I’m a director and I like to control things, and Gemma does too.