Present: Dale, Marc, Dan, Greg, Jeff B., Kevin, and introducing Philip
Dale suggested that since we were losing an hour or so of our 10:00-2:00 time slot to lunch, that we go from 10:00-1:00 without lunch, but with snacks, perhaps, and get more work done. That was preferred to a 9:00-12:00 solution.
Marc started with breathing/vocal instruction so that we all have a chance of being heard in the amphitheatre without injuring our vocal cords.
Then we started working on Act I. Philip took on the role of Cominius. We worked the opening scene a couple of times, although we’re putting the actual choreography of the pantomimic opening off until we have staves for everyone. (Dale promises to have them for next Wednesday.)
Points of exploration: the constant tug-of-war for, as Marc has put it, the control of perception, first between First Citizen and Second Citizen, and then between First Citizen and Menenius.
After running through I.2 (the Volscian council scene) once, Marc asked us to play it again and make Aufidius a little more of a loose cannon, so that his irritation with the sloppy organization of the Senate becomes noticeable and they’re a little afraid of him. Jeff asked to see more valediction in Aufidius’s last line to the Senate.
We skipped I.3 until we get a firm Virgilia, we’ve nominated Jeff Allen for the role.
We skimmed I.4 through I.8, trying to get a firm grasp on the flow. We realized as we launched into the Battle Ballet proper that many of us had not been there the day we conceptualized that scene, so we had to catch those people up in concept. That’s going to take a whole day’s worth of choreography to get under our belts. Again, everybody’s got to have a pole.
Good work today, and at least we’re under way.
For Wednesday, we’re going to look at I.9 and I.10 and go back and look at some of the other battle scenes.