A Tender Thing playbill

4
PLAYBILL A TENDER THING approximate running time: 1 hour & 20 minutes. there will be no intermission BEN POWER A TENDER THING }{ ARTIST NOTE: NANCY PALK We’ve been having such a wonderful time here working on A Tender Thing. Michael and Joe have known each other since their Stratford days, in the 1980s, and Joe and I have been married for... oh I can’t remember. We met in first year at the National Theatre School, and fell in love while doing the balcony scene from Romeo and Juliet! (The balcony I stood on was a table!). How wonder- ful and strange that now, some 35 years later, we’re saying those words again, telling a different story, but still the same words, buried deep inside us. And come on! The two of us dancing and singing? We couldn’t be happier! The story of A Tender Thing is different from the story of Romeo and Juliet, but what they have in common is the pro- found love the characters feel for each other. We feel lucky that we get to do this play together, and that we can share it with you. Cheers! TIDBITS Ben Power isn't finished with his explorations of Romeo and Juliet. He is reported to be hard at work on a version of the play designed for elementary school children. A Tender Thing has been produced in theatres across England, and in Australia and Ireland. Its Canadian premiere was at the Belfry Theatre in Victoria last fall, directed by Peter Hinton featuring Claire Coulter and Peter Anderson. NANCY PALK, Juliet in A Tender Thing

description

Playbill for Soulpepper's 2014 production of Ben Power's A Tender Thing. Directed by Michael Shamata

Transcript of A Tender Thing playbill

Page 1: A Tender Thing playbill

P L A Y B I L LA TENDER THING

approximate running time: 1 hour & 20 minutes. there will be no intermission

BEN POWER

A TENDERTHING

}{

ARTIST NOTE: NANCY PALK

We’ve been having such a wonderful time here working on A Tender Thing. Michael and Joe have known each other since their Stratford days, in the 1980s, and Joe and I have been married for... oh I can’t remember. We met in first year at the National Theatre School, and fell in love while doing the balcony scene from Romeo and Juliet! (The balcony I stood on was a table!). How wonder- ful and strange that now, some 35 years later, we’re saying those words again, telling a different story, but still the same words, buried deep inside us. And come on! The two of us dancing and singing? We couldn’t be happier! The story of A Tender Thing is different from the story of Romeo and Juliet, but what they have in common is the pro-found love the characters feel for each other. We feel lucky that we get to do this play together, and that we can share it with you.

Cheers!

TIDBITS

• Ben Power isn't finished with his explorations of Romeo and Juliet. He is reported to be hard at work on a version of the play designed for elementary school children.

• A Tender Thing has been produced in theatres across England, and in Australia and Ireland. Its Canadian premiere was at the Belfry Theatre in Victoria last fall, directed by Peter Hinton featuring Claire Coulter and Peter Anderson.

NANCY PALK,

Juliet in A Tender Thing

Page 2: A Tender Thing playbill

CREATIVE TEAM A TENDER THING

i llust r at ion: t h e h e a ds of stat e

Nancy PalkJuliet

Joseph ZieglerRomeo

Michael Shamata Director

Shawn Kerwin Set & Costume Designer

Michael Walton Lighting Designer

Richard Lam Sound Designer

Mike Ross Composer

Monica Dotter Choreographer

Kelly McEvenue Alexander Coach

Maria Costa Stage Manager

Arwen MacDonell Stage Manager

Emily Mewett Assistant Stage Manager

PRODuC T ION

Jacqueline Robertson CullWigs Running, Head of Hair & Makeup

Erika Connor Lead Wardrobe Coordinator

Joanne LambertonCutter

Barbara Nowakowski First Hand

Natalie SwierczWardrobe Coordinator

Emma ZulkoskeyDresser

Lisa SummersPaul BoddumScenic Painters

Will SuttonCarpenter

Tracy TaylorProps Buyer

Greg ChambersProps Builder

Ellie FurtneyWardrobe Intern

SOuLPEPPER PRODuC T ION

CAS T

spe ci a l t h a n ks: f i n a m acdon ell .

Page 3: A Tender Thing playbill

Tidbits & Background Notes by 2014 Soulpepper Resident Artist Paula Wing

BACKGROuND NOTES

“P arting is such sweet sorrow,” says teenaged Juliet Capulet to her lover, teenaged Romeo

Montague. This famous line comes after they’ve met and fallen passionately in love, when they must tear themselves away from each other at the end of their explosive first meeting. She won’t see him until the next day and already she cannot bear the thought of their being separated even for 24 hours. We know their fateful coming together is destined to end in tragedy. But what if they somehow escaped their fate? What if they lived into adulthood, had a family, celebrated an unbroken string of wedding anniversaries and were only forced to part when they had arrived at full old age?

That idea inspired writer Ben Power to create A Tender Thing, a work he calls a remix of Shakespeare. He had a novel writing method: he threw all of Shakespeare’s lines from Romeo and Juliet – as well as a few other bits and pieces from the canon – into the air and rearranged them to portray two lovers in a radically diff-erent situation. Where Romeo and Juliet grappled with their newly discovered feelings and defied their parents’ constraints, the couple here grapple with the constraints of old age and try to defy its indignities with the strength of their affection and will to continue. The parting these two must confront will not be sweetened by the hope of reunion.

It’s a fascinating feat of literary alchemy: the words that created one of the most vivid and time- less portraits of young love ever written are equally powerful and poignant in this examination of what remains of the initial passion – or how it transforms – in a long relationship. Vows that were only broken by death in the original are now strained by adult disappointments, long familiarity and the implacability of age. A completely diff-erent but no less haunting poetry is revealed. And underneath, we always feel the original pulsing, like subtext, like an old familiar melody, a song we can almost recall.

What makes the experience of this production even more extraordinary is the presence of Nancy Palk and Joseph Ziegler. They met at theatre school, married, raised three sons, and have performed – together and apart – at all the major theatres in

this country. They co-founded, and have graced the Soulpepper stage – as both actors and directors – many times. Their rich personal history brings an added depth, complexity and pleasure to the play and to us, who in our turn have had a long and intimate theatrical relationship with them. If any- one can prove Juliet right and make parting a sweet sorrow, it is surely these two greatly loved long time lovers.

PL AY WRIGHT BIOGR APH Y

“The more we can get the barriers down between different types of theatre and different types of audiences, the richer

theatre will become for everybody”

Ben Power was born in 1986. He studied English at Cambridge University, and dreamed of becoming a dramaturge. He’s worked with some of the most innovative theatre makers in Great Britain. Preferring to adapt rather than invent, Power is interested in finding new forms for old tales and revamping classic plays by inserting modern debate into them. He began his rewriting career at Headlong Theatre, where he was Literary Associate from 2006 to 2010. His adaptations there included Milton’s Paradise Lost, Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus, and Pirandello’s Six Characters in Search of an Author (which he set in a reality TV studio). In 2009 the Royal Shakespeare Company commissioned him to re-imagine Romeo and Juliet. The result, called A Tender Thing, has played around the world. In 2010 he was made an Associate Director at the National Theatre, put in charge specifically of “making things more exciting.” He programs their smallest space, The Shed, where he stages genre-bending immersive theatre experiences that experiment often – but not exclusively – with sound. His most recent remix of a classic is a 45-minute version of Medea that is onstage at the National until the end of September.

Page 4: A Tender Thing playbill

Do stay in touch, and please pass the pepper!

416 866 8666SOuLPEPPER.CA

YOuNG CENTRE fOR THEPERfORMING ARTSTORONTO DISTILLERY HISTORIC DISTRICT

THANK YOu fOR AT TENDING!

Soulpepper is an active member of the Professional Association of Canadian Theatres (pact), the Toronto Alliance for the Performing Arts (tapa) and Theatre Ontario, and engages, under the terms of the Canadian Theatre Agreement, professional artists who are members of Canadian Actors’ Equity Association. Scenic Artists and Set Decorators employed by Soulpepper are represented by Local 828 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees.