George Saulnier
  • About
  • Contact
  • Acting
  • The Monologue Project
  • Blog

Hope Regained

6/12/2014

0 Comments

 
I was too ambitious. I have decided on a new plan. I am going to post about plays here but... I am not going to force myself to one a day. I will do several a week for six months to work into the habit and then In January start again to make it a play a day. This feels like something I could work towards.

I read somewhere that you should try to do things you want to do but don't know how, and embrace the failure. Be unafraid to fail. Failure leads to learning and skill development. Well, I failed at this right away and I have learned from my failure.


I bit off way much more than I could chew, given my work schedule and my current, nearly non-existent writing habits. I am going to start again slowly, like my running. I am currently running between 4 and 10 miles a day with most runs being about 6 miles long. I did not start out that way. I started running ten minutes and a barely finished a mile. I did that for a couple weeks, then I added more time and more. Soon the amount of time I ran became less important than the distance. Now I think nothing of running 6 miles in slightly less than an hour.

I am going to apply that same logic to this blog. Start slowly. One or two plays a week and build up my stamina and skills until this is something that I will be able to do more easily. 

I am currently in Boston. I am going to my high school reunion. I have a book of plays with me and I will have a bit more time than my usual work week allows, so I will do some reading and blogging this week and weekend. When I am back in Pittsburgh I will follow the new plan. It seems that I've had a number of visitors. I hope that continues. Thank you for checking out this and wish me well with the new plan. 

Until I blog next, 
Your play reading pal, 

George
0 Comments

Hope crushed

6/7/2014

0 Comments

 
Well. I lasted one whole day. I shall not despair. I am clearly not going to have enough time to get a play a day done. But I am still planning to use this site to help me read more plays. I'm going to read as many play as I can and write about them. If I miss a day, I am not going to freak out and quit I just missed one day. There are many others.

It's late I am going to bed.
0 Comments

Damn the torpedoes!

6/5/2014

0 Comments

 
The First Play!

Poor Murderer by Pavel Kohout 
Translated by Herbert Berghof and Laurence Luckinbill.

This play has been compared to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead but I think that is unfair. Both plays borrow from Shakespeare's Hamlet which I think is responsible for the comparison, but while R&GAD uses Hamlet to ponder the nature of fiction, theatre, and mortality, Poor Murderer uses it a a device to explore madness, and none of the characters are actually drawn from Hamlet. Poor Murderer was written in the early 70's by a dissident Czech playwright, Pavel Kohout, about whom I know nothing more. The play was never produced in Czechoslovakia. The English language version was produced in New York in 1975 before moving to Broadway in 1976. 

The play is a presented as a play within a play. One has the sense that it begins in an asylum as there are many orderlies in white coats on stage. There is a stage on the stage, costumes, props and even chairs for an audience. Anton Ignatyevich Kerzhentsev, an actor who is apparently one of the inmates, is going to present a play for the head of the asylum, Professor Dezhenbitsky. This performance will prove that he is not insane and that his actions were justified. (That, by the way, is the last time I attempt to write anyone's name. One of the annoying things about this play are the Russian names all of which are too long, too hard too pronounce and everyone calls each other by nicknames anyway.)

What were Anton's actions? It takes a bit to establish this. His performance first presents his life story. We see his uncaring and abusive father, his father's lover, his discovery of his unfeeling, cold, sociopathic nature. The other characters are played by actors who have been invited to facilitate Anton's performance. Throughout the first act one has the sense that things are not as they seem and one is not mistaken. There are layers and layers of theatricality in this play that become more interesting to me the more I mull them over. 

Anton becomes a famous and accomplished actor under the tutelage of Savelyov, another famous actor who recognizes his gifts. Anton then decides to kill his mentor. Why? Because Tatyana, an actress in his company, spurned his advances and married Savelyov. This murder is the action he was trying to justify.

As I said, things are not as they seem and there are a number of plot twists that I could go into but I'd hate to ruin it for anyone who might want to try and find it and read it. Hamlet is the play being performed when the murder takes place. Anton is playing Hamlet, Savelyov playing Polonius, and Tatyana, Gertrude. This gives some allegorical weight to the play, but in my opinion, that is not where the meat of this play lies.

That meat is "Madness", and here is where the choice of Hamlet as the play wherein the murder happens, takes on greater significance. Hamlet, the character, is playing mad, his "antic disposition", but so is Anton, or is he? He is clearly manipulating someone. Who it is and who is sane and who is not are not clear at all until the very last line, which causes one to re-think everything that went on before.

I like this play. I'd like to see it produced. My biggest problem is that the female characters are shallowly written. They are there mostly to be sex objects, except Tatyana, but she has the problem of being too much of a Madonna-like character. It helps if one considers that the play takes place in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1900, a time not known for it's feminist achievements. I think this play would benefit from repeated viewings. Then one could see the the actors playing the events that are yet to be revealed. That may mean it would make a good film. 

Ok. First play done. We'll see what comes next tomorrow. 
0 Comments

First day and the plan. 

6/4/2014

0 Comments

 
Okay, so here is my blog and here is the plan. I have a lot of plays. I don't read them as often as I should. In order to help me get more play reading done I have decided to create this blog. I am going to try to read a play a day and write a little paragraph or two about the play. Share my feelings and thoughts about the play. Each post may or may not contain spoilers depending on the likelihood that you will want to read the play yourself. As I said, I have a lot of plays, Many of them in collections with titles like, "Best One Act Plays of 1953" or more cryptic titles such "More Modern Plays". Some you have likely heard of. Many you probably haven't, but you will if you read this blog.

I would also like to acknowledge a friend who made a blog that was basically exactly the same as this. Her name is Lauren Sowa and she is a very good actress living in New York. She read a play a day for a year and blogged about it. I am not sure if she still is doing that but I want to thank her for inspiring me to give a try at this difficult, possibly crazy feat.

Tomorrow will be my first day reading and posting, I think. That may change. I am trying to decide whether to go ahead and just start mid month, (damn the torpedoes!) or wait, say until the star of July and begin freshly on a new month. If you have an opinion and care to comment, please do.
0 Comments

    Archives

    March 2020
    June 2019
    May 2019
    November 2017
    October 2017
    August 2016
    July 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    December 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly