updates connected to the book Idylls for a Bare Stage
& to performances of the Idylls
& other initiatives related to the Art of the Poetic Monologue
2011-2016
Showing posts with label Sue Struve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sue Struve. Show all posts

Friday, December 14, 2012

Poetry in Community vid featuring Idylls on a Baltimore sidewalk

 

Check out this video on Baltimore-based Poetry in the Community.

PiC was one of the hosts of the 7th Annuel Cruellest Month Poetry and Performance Festival (CruMoPoPerFest) last spring.

As you'll find in the April archives, scenes from the idylls were performed as part of the wrap-up celebration of poetry month in Baltimore.  Idylls actors Stephen Mead, Genna Davidson, and Sue Struve performed in front of the Waverly branch of the Enoch Pratt Free Library on Saturday, April 28th, 2012.

All three of them show up in this video, created by Evan Bartos.






Stephen Mead is there at the start, in the midst of his rendition of  "A Street-Merchant Imagines his Riches to Come" from Idylls for a Bare Stage.

Sue Struve is seen in action doing "A Native Chief's Captive Woman Guards One Freshly Caught" beginning at :38.

And you can see and hear a moment of Genna Davidson's Antigone at :50.

More glimpses of each of them throughout...



Join Poetry in Community on Facebook here 


 My daughter Hero Magnus is in the video as well, beatboxing and singing at the open mic (she's in a black and white striped shirt);  you can hear her voice early on, and my own - I had a chance to mention how performance can create that temporary community of audience and artist (as driven by a shared imagining).

Overall, you might get some hint from this video of what an idylls performance is like live, on the street, and certainly it provides striking glimpses of the intensity and excellence Stephen, Genna, and Sue bring to their performances.

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Slideshow for April 28th, CruMoPoPerFest in Waverly neighborhood, Balto

The links below can give you a feel for the course of the whole day in Waverly: Idylls with Stephen Mead, Sue Struve, and Genna Davidson; beatboxing with Max Bent; open mic poetry and music; plus sidewalk and side-of-building chalk drawing and writing. (My daughter Hero shows up frequently throughout the day, on the mic, and with the chalk).




Documentation by Douglas Mowbray, publisher of twentythreebooks, publisher of Idylls for a Bare Stage.



 

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Laurel Arts Festival Photos

Idylls in Action at the C Street Arts Festival in Laurel, Maryland              
June 9th, 2012


              The following are pics by Lew Lorton Photography, taken during the midday Idylls Sequence featuring Stephen Mead and Sue Struve.

Stephen Mead in "A Bandit Plots a Murder by the Road"
Sue Struve in "A Native Chief's Captive Woman Guards One Freshly Caught" 
(vide Jorge Luis Borges)
Stephen Mead in "A Reveler Walks Home to his Family by Moonlight"

              On that Saturday, I had the somewhat strange pleasure of being two places at once, for the first time.  In the flesh, in Philly, doing a reading for Furniture Press, publisher of my Heraclitean Pride and the forthcoming book-length poem, The Re-echoes.  Also, here at the Laurel C Street Arts Festival, in spirit, and through the presence of wonderful performers who've given great time and energy towards mastering the idylls form.


Sue Struve

                Sue introduced the set;  with a copy of Idylls for a Bare Stage in hand, she conveyed to the Theatre Tent audience her experience of the book, the theatrical piece, and the overall concept of the idyll as a form, and as an approach to acting and theatre.



Stephen Mead as the Bandit


Since I wasn't there,  I can only extrapolate based on rehearsals and the suggestion of the gesture, and his facial expressions, where Stephen might be in the piece.  I'd say, near to hearing the screech of an owl. Or, somewhere within the delivery of lines such as "Other people's money.  They'd have me slave and scrape for it all my life's worth, when I can steal it with self-respect."


"...with that dumb, complacent smirk of contentment I loathe - that type deserves to be victimized."
? Maybe?


And then, Sue Struve as the Captive Woman...


"I'm recovering them, these dream words..." perhaps?

"Don't be so scared!"


                Stephen also performed earlier in the day, and Harlie Sponaugle did "A Mother Feels her Estranged Daughter's Labor Pains" (vide Colette) later that afternoon.  Here's a shot of Harlie from one of the many outdoor rehearsals we did along the way.  Photo by Jeanne Cherner.


Harlie Sponaugle

Friday, June 1, 2012

Coming June 9th: Idylls at the C Street Arts Festival in Laurel

Weekend after this!
The Inaugural C Street Arts Festival
 (on C Street, in Laurel, Maryland 20707)


Laurel's new street festival includes a theatre tent, along with artists' exhibitions, music, food, and poetry.


Several Idylls will be presented throughout the day:


11:15 am.    Stephen Mead
in "A Street-Merchant Imagines his Riches to Come" 
(after an anonymous author of The Arabian Nights)
1:30 pm Idylls Sequence
Stephen Mead in "A Bandit Plots a Murder by the Road"
Sue Struve in "A Native Chief's Captive Woman Guards One Freshly Caught" 
(vide Jorge Luis Borges)
Stephen Mead in "A Reveler Walks Home to his Family by Moonlight"


 3:30 pm.  Harlie Sponaugle
in "A Mother Feels Her Estranged Daughter's Labor Pains"
(vide Colette)


Deborah Randall, founder of Venus Theatre, runs the Theatre Tent for this event;  many thanks to Deb for including the idylls in the line-up!

Monday, May 7, 2012

More Proof in Concept

On the one hand, my intentions with this project are artistic.

On the other, my artistic intentions overall refuse to make a distinction between the work and life - it all has to do with life, daily life as much as anything else, as much as anything highlighted or set off as "work," the art has to be inseparable from living, or what's the point...

Life, daily life, also Lifetime/the Aion, as it was formulated (with reference to Heraclitus) in my book Heraclitean Pride.

This is related to the idea of the idylls being able to be done anywhere;  the work can be done anywhere, suitable for proscenium or the street, in an embrace of the interplay of text, subtext, and context.

text (the work as its written)
subtext (meanings spoken and unspoken, tacit and explicit, while part of the role of performance is to engage and activate certain subtleties, ambivalences, and undercuttings here)
context (where art interacts with life, the surroundings, the moment, with potential to explode the given)

Anyways, Saturday (weekend before last, April 28th) was a wild ride.
That was the wrap up of CruMoPoPerFest in front of Waverly library in Baltimore, and Idylls performers had to contend with a number of truly exciting challenges, among them: threatening rain; loud drumming from the grassy median right across from them, where a local high school marching band raised money by holding buckets out to cars lined up at the traffic light; and, during what was almost a mellow period of the afternoon, a belligerent, incoherent, clearly mentally ill man shouting and trying to interfere with the performances.

Nevertheless, each performer was imperturbable, and even during the loudest part of the drumming, an inner circle of "performer-created performance space" held its own, the audience hanging in there, intent on the proceedings.  The day as a whole had a satisfying sense of rhythm to it.  Proof in concept, thanks to the skills, powers of concentration, and bare-stage presences of Genna Davidson, Sue Struve, and Stephen Mead.

I'll post pics, recordings, vids from the event, when they come in - I think we'll be receiving all three.

There was a phrase that jingled back and forth between Christophe Casamassima (as co-founder of Poetry in Community, one of the organizers of CruMoPoPerFest) and my 12-yr-old daughter, Hero.
(Hero was an active participant, learning beatboxing with Max Bent, and singing pop songs during open mic sessions, including - ! - Kelly Clarkson's treatment of the Nietzsche quote, "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger").   I'll pass along what Christophe repeated back to me by email last week...

This Saturday,

It may not have be
An Ideal environment
But it certainly was
An Idyll environment

So much fun. And sheer anxiety! Hope the actors had fun too.

Derived from street and marketplace theatre in ancient Greece, the idyll form creates its own ideal theatrical space; added to that, recently came across Guy Davenport's statement in his essay collection, Every Force Evolves a Form, that not only was this sort of theatre done in street, agora, and private homes (salons) - but also in what he describes as "wine shops"...  a relevant idea somehow, to keep in mind for another time  - wine and idylls...



 
As intriguing as Saturday was, the day before - a cold blustery Friday - Genna and I rehearsed her Antigone on the National Mall - this was Genna's intrepid idea, and it was incredibly instructive and favorable of possibility.  We were near the Smithsonian metro stop, in front of the Castle.  She did not perform, but rehearsed, and yet somehow that fact was communicated to passers-by - the issue of subtext and context again.  What were the cues that so unmistakably distinguished performance from rehearsal?  ...for further inquiry, intimately connected with the idylls theory and practice of performance, and spillage of art into life.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

CruMoPoPerFest this Saturday in Baltimore - Idylls Line-Up

Exciting to be a part of this event:
7th Annual Cruellest Month Poetry and Performance Festival (CruMoPoPerFest)

Saturday, April 28th 11am-4pm
Baltimore's National Poetry Month Celebration wraps up
at the Waverly branch of the Enoch Pratt Free Library
400 East 33rd Street, Baltimore Maryland 21218  
410-396-6053

Scenes from Idylls for a Bare Stage will be interspersed with open mic sets and a special performance by Outside the Box, an interactive exploration of the Elements of Music through beatboxing, led by Max Bent, Waverly resident and Young Audiences of Maryland Teaching Artist.

Performers Stephen Mead, Sue Struve, Harlie Sponaugle, and Genna Davidson (each profiled elsewhere in this blog - please check out the archives) present individual Idylls throughout the day.  Here's their schedule...


Idylls Line-Up

11:00 am. Stephen Mead
in "A Street-Merchant Imagines his Riches to Come" 
(after an anonymous author of The Arabian Nights)


Stephen Mead






12 noon. Idylls Sequence
Stephen Mead in "A Bandit Plots a Murder by the Road"
Sue Struve in "A Native Chief's Captive Woman Guards One Freshly Caught" 
(vide Jorge Luis Borges)
Stephen Mead in "A Reveler Walks Home to his Family by Moonlight"


Sue Struve



1:45 pm.  Harlie Sponaugle
in "A Mother Feels Her Estranged Daughter's Labor Pains"
(vide Colette)

Harlie Sponaugle




 2:30 pm. Genna Davidson 
in "Antigone Buries Her Brother's Body Against Orders of the King"
(after Sophocles)

Genna Davidson





Here's the complete schedule, with Idylls, Open Mic (sign-ups available throughout the day), and Max Bent's Outside the Box:


Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Upcoming, April in Baltimore: CruMoPoPerFest

Several Idylls will be performed outdoors in Baltimore for the 7th Annual Cruellest Month Poetry and Performance Festival (CruMoPoPerFest).  Please Check out all the events for this festival in the announcement below.

Meanwhile, my gracious neighbors, Helga and Allan Abramson, gave a "salon" in their home for Idylls last weekend.  It was great fun, guests regaled by our hosts with delicious sweets and expertly brewed teas.  I look forward to posting what pics come in, of the party and of the performance.

Sue Struve performed "A Native Chief's Captive Woman Guards One Freshly Caught." (Please check out her profile and photos of her in action elsewhere in this blog).

Sue Struve

The form of the Idyll is versatile, intended to be so, in that it can be performed anywhere, congruent with its ancient history:  theatre easily done on the street, in the marketplace, and in private homes.  So it was proved this weekend, with regards to in-home performances! - thanks to Sue in her masterful rendering of the Captive Woman, and thanks to Helga and Allan in their hosting.  (And we'll have our shot at street and sidewalk in the Waverly neighborhood of Baltimore next month.)  The intimate setting of the Abramson's living room brought everyone into a circle of intensity generated by Sue's performance.  There was something particularly resonant with this piece in that setting.  Here was an indoor, quiet, quite civilized gathering - game enough to enter into a shared imagining of this savage wild Mindscape, an idyll concluding with, "Pretty soon you won't ever again be able to live within hard walls."

Saturday, February 11, 2012

In Others' Words: Idylls as Book, and as Approach to Acting

Now that Idylls for a Bare Stage is out, a definite shift has occurred with regard to "releasing" the work:  from creating and doing performances off a manuscript, and towards the publication of the book, to... the book itself, vehicle for the Idyll idea and form, both on the page and in its activation off the page for performance.

Here's how others - interactive with the project along the way - have taken the work...


On the book itself:

Magnus has performed his versions of Heraclitus as multi-voiced, choral readings improvised from texts by performers and audience, as texts to be read with musicians, and as philosophy in his book Heraclitean Pride.   In this volume, he presents “Idylls”, a form originated by the Greek poet Theocritus.   These are not idylls as pastoral, rustic poems, but, as Magnus describes in his introduction:  “street theater for daily life, skits done anywhere, solo performers and small groups of actors as part of the activity of the marketplace.  Scenes of daily life, in daily life.”   These idylls, versions of Theocritus, Sophocles and St. Francis, and stories inspired by Whitman, Colette, and Borges, can be read as poems, or performed as dramatic monologues.    M. brings a poet’s feeling for the texture of language to these dramatic works so that each character speaking a monologue uses a unique vocabulary and unique speech rhythms.   He opens with a sorceress and ends with the mythical inventor of the alphabet, taking us from magic incantations to the magic of writing.   Magnus has given us rich, evocative texts, ripe for private reading or public performance.
                                           - Chris Mason, author of Hum Who Hiccup, member of TheTinklers, Old Songs, and Coo Coo Rockin' Time


And on the Idylls as theatre, along with specific acting approaches tailored for the form and useful for any poetically-charged performances, as described and theorized in the book's introduction, and as developed in hands-on workshops by the author (the performers quoted engaged the workshop techniques with me, and went on to perform the pieces in contexts described earlier in this blog):

The words that Magus has crafted into idylls are so rich and joyous to speak that there are endless possibilities for experiencing their inherent power.
It has been invaluable for me to work without an end in sight and to work so deeply and one-on-one with this text, with Magus, and with myself. It's freeing for me to have a consistent practice and continuous work. Now I'm not just working when I land a job or for the next audition, but towards infinite opportunity to stand-up and perform a poetic monologue for anyone who might be available to watch and listen.
The concept of monologue as performance, not just performance within a larger script or as something to use at an audition, but as self-contained artwork gives me confidence as an actress. I'm not sure I can explain the significance of this idea, but I see sunlight when I think about it. Perhaps reasserting the monologue as performance gives me a sense of creative control over a form of acting that is often termed loathsome, annoying, arduous, and impossible to wrangle.
The technique's emphasis on being present with everyone and everything in the performance space has been supremely important to me.  In my experience "stage presence" is theater vocabulary often given short shrift when learning how to act. It is tricky for the actor to both completely imbibe the surroundings, allowing impulses to enter and leave without blocking, altering or suspending them, and then simultaneously craft a visceral experience fully manifest in a different time & place. A shameless spirit of imagination must takeover and pull the actor from moment to moment without hesitation. And every step of the way, the imagination is fed by the power of the words which given freedom to move will work magic on their audience.
                                                               -Genna Davidson, actress/musician/puppeteer


Working with Magus on his idyll, "A Mother Feels her Estranged Daughter's Labor Pains," has been a revelation for me. Numerous directors have told me that I don't need to "do" so much when I'm on stage, but they never really explained what they meant. Using Magus' approach of focusing on the power and expressive potential of the words, and working with his beautifully crafted poetic monologue, I've learned how to immerse myself in the river of words and let them carry me through a thoroughly honest and moving performance. I've used an excerpt from the idyll for several auditions, and each performance has evoked a thoughtful response from the auditors beyond the usual "thank you."
                                                                               - Harlie Sponaugle, Actress/Singer


  As an actor, working with Magus has opened my eyes to the raw power inherent in the text. When I focus on the sound of the words, I bring life to their meaning. Playing with pace, volume, and emphasis frees up my voice and moves me away from dry analysis. His body and voice exercises calm me and prepare me to genuinely embrace my surroundings and the audience. I find that as the text begins to breathe, my imagination is released and I become open to discoveries about my character. Magus has developed an approach that has transformed the way I work on a role. It will infuse energy and power into any performer's work.
                                                                                         - Sue Struve, D.C.-area Actor


This approach to acting has been incredibly empowering.  The ideas of embracing the audience and embracing yourself as a performer free you from worrying about naturalism and lets you savor the poetry of powerful language, giving you and the audience a heightened sense of what's possible.  As an actor you can feel the audiences imaginations feeding you and letting you take a fresh journey with the material each time.   So often we want to shut out the reality of the performance, but by embracing it, we are empowered to actually create a greater reality on stage and an exuberant experience for audience and performer.  It has freed me as an actor more than any exercise or method I have ever tried.
                                                                                         - Rachel Morrissey, actress/storyteller
 



Thursday, December 1, 2011

Highlights from the Idylls Show, November 20th Launch

All photos by Douglas Mowbray.

Entry into the Athenaeum

 



Opening the Show:  Sue Struve
"A Native Chief's Captive Woman Guards One Freshly Caught"

Sue Struve - "Captive Woman" in Idylls


 "Welcome.  This is your introduction to the wilderness and barbaric life."


 Kimberly Mikec 
"A Sorceress Casts a Spell on her Faithless Lover"

"...and all I'll do is run my fingers over his strong chest."

Kimberly Mikec - "Sorceress" in Idylls


Rachel Morrissey
Anne Ashbaugh's "Leda" and more...   (as in, "More, more, more, more!")

 "Great Car!  Great Car!" (in homage to Richard Foreman)

Rachel Morrissey - "Leda" in Anne Ashbaugh's soliloquy


Harlie Sponaugle
"A Mother Feels Her Estranged Daughter's Labor Pains"
  
Harlie Sponaugle - A "Mother" in Idylls

"Is that your cry?"


Genna Davidson
"Antigone Buries her Brother's Body Against Orders of the King"
  
Genna Davidson - "Antigone" in Idylls
  

"I feel I've gone the uttermost limit of daring..."


Interlude:  Old Songs
Songs of Hipponax


Old Songs - L to R: Rebby Sharp, Mark Jickling, Chris Mason, and David Brumbaugh


"Hermes, blissful Hermes
You  know how to wake the sleeper"


Carol McCaffrey
"A Saint Preaches to the Birds"

"so that you may fill the pure air with song..."


Carol McCaffrey - "A Saint" in Idylls


Margaret Anthony
reading Kharms

Margaret Anthony, reading Daniil Kharms' "An Optical Illusion"

"...showing him his fist!"


Paul Morton
"Palamedes, Inventor of Numbers, Alphabets, and Lighthouses, Muses Upon his Accomplishments"

Paul Morton - "Palamedes" in Idylls

"No more than a seafarer in soul am I..."


The Cast




And so there you have it, the show, this iteration of Idylls, this incarnation of it, November 20th 2011...

and here I am - hosting and welcoming then, and welcoming now and soon to come, next iterations, incarnations...

Magus Magnus

For a look at the full set of photos, click
http://www.flickr.com/photos/buddhakowski/sets/72157628162249269/with/6392465665/

- - -
Don't forget to order the book, Idylls for a Bare Stage 
(http://twentythreebooks.com )
for its three-part offering:  poetry on the page, poetic monologues for the stage, and - through the book's introduction - an old-new theory and practice for Acting and Theatre (with a chewy set of monologues for the actor)...

Through the reinvented form of the Idyll, affirmation of the actor as an independent artist, the audition monologue turned on its head into theatre itself, theatre that can be done almost anywhere.

And please check out my other books as well:   
Heraclitean Pride http://furniturepressbooks.com/books/magnuspride/  
and Verb Sap http://narrow-house.blogspot.com/

Both Heraclitean Pride and Verb Sap can be ordered from SPD Books
http://www.spdbooks.org/Search/Default.aspx?AuthorName=Magus+Magnus

Many thanks from M.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Performer Profile: Sue Struve

 Sue Struve in "A Native Chief's Captive Woman Guards One Freshly Caught"

Sue Struve - "Captive Woman" in Idylls

     The incident in this idyll has its source in the writings of Jorge Luis Borges, and corresponds to his fascination with real stories of people who chose so-called savage life, over civilization. (Noting how here, and in the profile just previously, the form of the Idyll is conducive to the presentation of incidents, as is this approach to acting - why we'll also present a reading of pieces by Stalin-era Soviet poet Daniil Kharms on November 20th, about which more on another post, writings somewhere between prose poems and stories, forms nicely translated from the Russian sluchai as "incidents," or sometimes "incidences").

     The "poetic" has always tended to ally itself with the wild, with wildness, with conscious decision to choose the wild over the tame: a tame poetry isn't poetry at all.  So too, for the Idylls, it has been my intention to create an acting technique for the poetic;  this is to keep the performance untamed, to free up the performer and allow entry into a script with immediacy, beyond the conventions of getting into character as if character were a logical and analyzable framework of motivations rather than the running stream of an irreducible consciousness.  Sue's work on this piece involves her recurrent eschewing the imposition of a logical framework to her character, and allowing herself to be taken forward moment to moment by the currents of language, the words of her character's thoughts.

     Poetry naturally gives itself over to this wildness, whether in form or content or both (getting to what reality lies beneath or in the interstices of sanctioned appearance/conventional psychosocial coherence): this, through its orientation to the true nature of our words as access points to aliveness, powers, and awareness.  In giving oneself over to the power of words in each moment - as writer, reader, actor, or audience - the subtleties tell, as does the sense, and shadings and shadow have their play; without our imposing an overriding, simplified interpretation, it's much more real.
       
     There's a shadow sense to Sue's piece, and fierce risk-taking in her performance;  the danger is you'll breathe in the wilderness with her, and - although caught between her and her captive - start to find indoor air stale.

     Sue Struve has appeared in Six Degrees of Separation (Ouisa), The Shadow Box (Agnes), Permanent Collection (Gillian), Electra (Clytemnestra), Rebecca (Beatrice), and Harvey (Betty Chumley), among other roles, at Bay Theatre Company, Dignity Players, Colonial Players of Annapolis, and elsewhere in the D.C. area. She has also performed at the Baltimore Playwrights Festival, The Actors' Center, and the Capital Fringe Festival. She is grateful to Magus for sharing his approach to acting poetic text, which has transformed the way she approaches a role.

---
Gratitude right back to Sue (after that end note to the bio she sent), for all the work and intensity she brings to the role, and for her engagement with the Idylls approach;  she'll be kicking off the show November 20th.

The issue above regarding the irreducibility of poetry to logic reminds me of what became the tagline for Yockadot Poetics Theatre Project, (2005-2010);  Richard Foreman's dictum,"Understand - it ALWAYS makes sense.  Sense can't be avoided.  If it first seems to be non-sense, wait:  roots will reveal themselves."

And of course, I can't pass up an opportunity to quote Heraclitus:  "The unapparent connection is stronger than the apparent one";  stronger is the word, or better - a wilder strength in the poetic leaps and juxtapositions.