No one’s too young for a play

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

At Assitej, the 16th World Congress and Performing Arts Festival for Young People taking place in Adelaide, visiting companies include the Makhampon Theatre Group from Thailand, which is happy to hear itself described as a form of family, community, university and even food centre. They are performing a Buddhist tale about perseverance. Australian group Zeal Theatre, is collaborating with the South African performers Ellis and Bheki to create a comic show about nationalism and sport.

From Israel, “this crazy country”, as director Norman Issa calls it, comes the Arab-Hebrew Theatre of Jaffa, which, as its name suggests, is determined to defy that country’s political divide.

“We’re not the Christian-Jewish theatre company, or the Muslim-Jewish,” Issa says. “We deal in languages, not religions. We’re a very new idea and the only theatre working like this in Israel, and while we don’t have many sponsors, and are very small, people love this place. We have many friends.”

Issa’s Arab-Hebrew Theatre of Jaffa has brought a two-hander called Ach Ach Boom Traach to Adelaide for the Assitej festival. He co-wrote the hour-long piece with Yoav Barlev and both men perform in it. The fact that he is Jewish and Barlev a Muslim, Issa says, is not the issue (although that’s one of the first things he says about the play). The issue is how any two people, whose languages distance them from each other, can find common ground.

The production is pitched at children as young as three, but it’s also suitable for people in their late teens, the top-end of the age spectrum covered in Assitej’s broad program. Issa reckons it’s for everyone. “This play is very simple, and very difficult,” he says. “Everyone finds their own level within this play.”

Its premise is that the two actors represent brothers who play together, quarrel, then make up, and quarrel again. “The balance of power swings back and forth.”

As their history unfolds in scenes spoken in what sounds to the audience like jibberish (Issa says it’s the “language of Jesus”, Aramaic), one thing remains constant: a prettily coloured box that dangles enticingly above their heads. This appears to be the prize they constantly fight over, as their bitter feuding becomes ever more violent and hurtful. Finally, when they have “settled down to an uneasy truce, the box opens up by itself”. Ach Ach Boom Traach poses the question to the audience: “What are the brothers fighting for?”

Issa is unapologetic when he calls his theatre political, even though he has his critics because of that. “Most people here (in Israel) don’t like political stories, they look, maybe make a noise about the political situation, and then nothing happens. Most people here, they look, and do nothing.”

That’s why he believes children are the hope for the future and theatre for children is his way of turning this hope into action.

“I love children,” he says. “If we can change children, maybe we can reach out for peace. These children in the Jewish community, many years on they will become soldiers and maybe they will be different people because of what they’ve seen. I believe in that. This is my fighting, here in this crazy country.”

The company is in its 12th year, and Ach Ach Boom Traach has been in development for several years, already touring to a long list of countries, including Uzbekistan, Armenia, South Korea and Japan. “It’s very interesting,” Issa says, “that children all over the world react at the same moments during the play. It’s amazing. The inner child is a child wherever you go.”

The key to touching that inner child is to make the experience live, and Issa is animated in his denunciation of the kind of education children are receiving by way of television.

“It has to be live,” he says. “The theatre is life itself, and you can smell it, the actors, the props. It’s not in a box, in your salon (lounge room). In the theatre, the magic is that you see the story happening now, right before you, not edited so you only see the best takes.”

He describes what happens to people who lose touch with the theatre, those who sit in front of the TV screen with a beer and a sandwich as a process of “becoming heavy”, physically and mentally. Issa’s Arab-Hebrew Theatre of Jaffa uses a minimalist set, lots of brightly coloured props, and the energies of its two actors to capture the attention and imagination of its audiences.

According to a growing number of specialists in theatre for children, there is no reason to draw the line there: performances can be directed effectively to babes in arms.

In the Assitej festival, the highly respected Adelaide company, Windmill, has two shows, Cat and Green Sheep, both directed by Cate Fowler, which are pitched to audience members as young as one, but according to Suzanne Oster, theatre can be effective for even younger babies.

Oster is the artistic director of Unga Klara, a division within the Stockholm City Theatre created in 1975 to cater for children and young people. She is attending the Assitej congress, with the support of PlayWriting Australia, to talk about just how young an audience theatre can, and should, target.

The ideal audience, she says, is, in fact, a baby: “Present. Here and now. Not concerned with what it’s having for dinner, doing tomorrow or said yesterday. Free from conventions. Hasn’t read the reviews. Receptive without bias or prejudice.”

Oster’s showcase production, which is not part of the festival but which she will be discussing with delegates at the congress, is Babydrama, designed to present to children as young as six months.

It tells the story of the journey from conception to birth, through to the moment of “meeting their parents and their own will”.

“As far as we know,” Oster says, “text-based performances of this calibre have not been done for such young audiences,” although a Norwegian project has been evaluating the success of dance, mime and puppet theatre for babies from birth to three years old.

That evaluation was so positive, Oster says, there is now a project called Glitterbird, involving the collaboration of several European countries, developing theatre for the newly born. “The more elaborate the productions were, the more alert, concentrated and carefree the child seemed to be.”

Unga Klara works with test audiences, and documents the reactions on film, in order to build knowledge about what works best.

“The fact that one cannot speak,” Oster says, “does not mean that one cannot understand what is said. Experience has shown that the capacity for understanding and assessing situations is present at a very early age. Creating full-scale theatre to the youngest children with all our know-how and passion is a cultural policy statement.

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Blackhawks earn split with NIACC

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

By SUSAN DENK

sdenksdenk

The first home game of the season. The first Iowa Community College Athletic Conference contest.

It was all a bit too much for the Southeastern Community College baseball team. There was just too much adrenaline, too many thoughts of getting off to a good start in the league. Once the Blackhawks settled down, though, things improved and the squad salvaged a split against North Iowa Area Community College.

After the Trojans won 8-0, SCC held on for a 1-0 triumph in the second game at Wagner Athletic Complex.

The split moved the Blackhawks’ record to 11-6 overall, 1-1 in the ICCAC. NIACC is now 9-3, 1-1.

The Trojans controlled the first game from the start, using a pair of singles for a 1-0 lead after the first inning. NIACC exploded for five runs in the second inning, more than enough as Chuck Lukanen held the Blackhawks to just two hits. The left-hander worked 5 2/3 innings of no-hit ball before Melvin Morales broke through with a single.

SCC coach Justin Schulte tried to reinforce his philosophy to his players between games.

“I really felt we came out the first game and were too keyed up about it being conference,” said Schulte. “I told them, ‘Guys, I don’t care if we win the conference. I want you to approach the ball park every day the same and winning will take care of itself.’

“Hopefully they understood. I thought they were not as keyed up the second game.”

The second game was a pitchers’ duel — Jose Mangual against NIACC’s Russ Jiskra.

Dean Molitor led off the game with a single. It turned out to be the Trojans’ only hit until the fourth inning when Erik Smith smashed his third double of the day. Mangual got himself out of the jam on the next batter. Andy Beck singled back to the mound and Mangual threw home, getting Smith out at the plate.

The normally offensive Blackhawks were again held to just two hits, but this time made one of them count.

Ben Stanbury overcame a foul ball off his foot to single to short. He advanced to third and then scored on a Cristobal Rodriguez bunt.

NIACC threatened to score in the top of the seventh when a single and a walk put runners on first and second.

Closer Luis Castrodad came in for Mangual. He struck out Jason Hunt looking, then got pinch hitter Zack Welter swinging to end the game and pick up his fifth save.

“I like the pressure. I prepare for this, and I like it,” said Castrodad.

The Blackhawks and Trojans play another doubleheader today in West Burlington.

Schulte is hoping for a better offensive showing.

“We’re a good hitting team,” Schulte said. “NIACC did a great job pitching to us. Hopefully we’ll get some things done in the cage in the morning, regroup and hit a little better (today).”

FIRST GAME

NIACC 140 120 0 – 8 8 0

SCC 000 000 0 – 0 2 3

WP–Chuck Lukanen. LP–Esteban Cancel (4-1). Leading hitters–NIACC: John Lee 2-3, Erik Smith 3-4. 2B–Smith 2, Jason Hunt (N). RBI–Smith 4, Shayden Bertagnolli, Andy Beck 2.

SECOND GAME

NIACC 000 000 0 – 0 4 0

SCC 001 000 x – 1 2 1

WP–Jose Mangual (2-0). LP–Russ Jiskra. Leading hitters–NIACC: Beck 2-2. 2B–Smith. RBI–Cristobal Rodriguez.

Records: NIACC 9-3 (1-1), Southeastern 11-6 (1-1).

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Sports digest

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

Big Ten accolades

The Hawk Eye

Former Southeastern Community College pitcher Brock Alberts earned co-Big Ten Pitcher of the Week honors with Minnesota hurler Phil Isaksson.

Alberts, a senior right-hander, made his season debut last week in a come-from-behind victory over Xavier. Alberts threw 5 1/3 innings of no-hit ball. He scattered five hits, struck out a career-high 10 and did not walk a batter in picking up the win.

Bees looking

for housing

The Hawk Eye

The Burlington Bees are looking for housing for players and coaches for the 2008 season.

Bees players and coaches will be arriving in Burlington in late March and will be in town until the season ends in September.

Anyone with housing or apartment availability is asked to contact Chuck Brockett at 319-754-5705 or chuck@gobees.com

Blazers take second

The Hawk Eye

The Burlington Blazers seventh-grade boys basketball team finished second in the Mediapolis tournament this past weekend.

The Blazers defeated Mediapolis 46-40, West Central (Illinois) 41-35, and Notre Dame, 38-31, to advance to the championship game. There the Blazers lost 41-33 to the Iowa Inferno.

The members of the team are Austin Anderson, Ian O’Dear, Justin Randall, Zach Patterson, Joe Gates, Blaise Wellington, Adam Roy, Joe George, and Zach Libben. The team is coached by George Randall and Bob Roy.

Bees NASCAR pool Week 3 results

The Hawk Eye

The winning tickets in the Friends of Community Field NASCAR contest for week #3:

First place (tie) — 270 points; Ticket #20080329 and #20081111

Third place (tie) — 265 points; Ticket #20080958 and #20080249.

Commission overturns penalty against Wallace

The Associated Press

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A NASCAR appeals committee on Monday overturned all the penalties levied against Rusty Wallace Racing for an infraction discovered on David Stremme’s car before the season-opening Nationwide Series race.

Stremme was docked 25 points, car owner Ed Rensi was docked 25 points and crew chief Steve Darne was suspended six races and fined $15,000 because NASCAR said the cover on the oil tank was not securely fastened following qualifying at Daytona.

Wallace appealed, and the three-member National Stock Car Racing Commission ruled that the cover was indeed fastened.

“All bolts appeared to be fully engaged,” the panel wrote in its 2-1 decision. “The slight deflection at one corner of the cover which gave rise to the penalty was arguable, given the overall design of the oil tank reservoir encasement.”

It was a rare reversal by a panel that usually upholds most NASCAR penalties. In the 96 hearings held over the past eight years, the commission upheld 66 decisions. In two instances, the original penalty was increased.

Correction

The Associated Press

DES MOINES — In a March 1 story about the girls Class 4A title game between Iowa City High and Cedar Rapids Washington, The Associated Press incorrectly reported the name of the last Washington coach to win the state title. The coach was Paul James and not Stacy Frese, who was a player on that 1995 team. Also, the story incorrectly stated Stacy Frese is now coach at Maryland. Her sister, Brenda Frese coaches at Maryland.

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In cinemas this weekend

Sunday, January 20th, 2008

Interview (15) (Steve Buscemi, 2007, US) Steve Buscemi, Sienna Miller. 84 mins.Jaded reporter vs kooky celebrity in this intriguing two-hander, which develops into a drunken night of soul searching, confrontation, reconciliation and other actorly workouts. It’s implausible but watchable.30 Days Of Night (15) (David Slade, 2007, NZ/US) Josh Hartnett, Melissa George. 113 mins.Squeezing the last drops of blood out the vampire genre, this unleashes hell on an Alaskan town in deep winter, when the perpetual darkness brings out the bloodsuckers, and Hartnett must rally some resistance. A decent budget makes up for the predictable story.Death At A Funeral (15) (Frank Oz, 2007, Ger/UK/US) Matthew Mcfadyen, Rupert Graves. 90 mins.You could hardly fail to generate laughs with the subject of a stiff British family in mourning. This farce is broad but effective, involving closeted gayness, corpse mix-ups and mistaken hallucinogen ingestion.In The Shadow Of The Moon (U) (David Sington, 2007, UK/US) 100 mins.A skilful documentary provoking the desired excitement and nostalgia as it looks back on the moon landings, and reminds us they’re still the pinnacle of space exploration.The Lookout (15) (Scott Frank, 2007, US) Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Jeff Daniels, Matthew Goode. 99 mins.Echoes of Memento as a teen’s damaged long-term memory makes him the perfect stooge for a bank heist, but this stands up for itself as a credible thriller.Heima (NC) (Dean DeBlois, 2007, Iceland) 97 mins.Sigur Ros unleash their epic rock soundscapes around appropriate spots in their native Iceland, making for a different class of concert/ landscape movie.I Do (15) (Eric Lartigau, 2006, Fra) Alain Chabat, Charlotte Gainsbourg. 90 mins.A bachelor constructs a sham engagement to please his family in this accessible French comedy, which takes its premise admirably far.Brothers Solomon (15) (Bob Odenkirk, 2007, US) Will Arnett, Will Forte, Kristen Wiig. 91 mins.Dumb And Dumber-style comedy as two brothers attempt to sire a son for their dying dad, hindered by their extreme cluelessness.Man Of The Year (12A) (Barry Levinson, 2006, US) Robin Williams. 115 mins.Messy, ineffectual political satire that sees Williams’ TV comedian running for president, and winning.Dracula (12A) (Terence Fisher, 1958, UK) Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing. 82 mins.The Hammer favourite restored to its full gory glory for Halloween, although it’s more camp and less shocking than it must have seemed 50 years ago.Never Apologise (15) (Mike Kaplan, 2007, UK) 112 mins.Filmed version of Malcolm McDowell’s stage tribute to his friend and mentor, Lindsay Anderson.Out from fridayA Crude Awakening Sobering documentary on the world’s oil addiction.Lions For Lambs Robert Redford takes on Iraq.Into The Wild Sean Penn’s tale of a man who turned his back on society.Planet Terror Robert Rodriguez’s old-school zombie-invasion flick.Air Guitar Nation Affectionate documentary on the art of rock-miming.Ex Drummer Sleazy Belgian movie following a “handicapped” punk band.The Band’s Visit Gentle politics via an Egyptian band stranded in Israel.Good Luck Chuck Comedy about a cursed womaniser.Silk Japan-set romance starring Keira Knightley.Om Shanti Om Indian epic led by Shahrukh Khan.Saawariya Dreamy Bollywood romance.In Memory Of Me Spiritual drama set in a Catholic seminary.Coming soonIn two weeks… Russell Crowe vs Denzel Washington in American Gangster… Ray Winstone leads an animated 3D version of Beowulf…In three weeks… Wes Anderson’s The Darjeeling Limited… Eye-opening religious documentary Jesus Camp…In a month… Brad Pitt in The Assassination Of Jesse James…

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Leading lady

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

In 1995, the director Ted Craig invited the STC to stage Michael Gow’s Sweet Phoebe at the Warehouse, Croydon. It was a teasing two-hander about the break-up of a yuppie couple. What most of us remember is a shining performance from Cate Blanchett. Her co-star, meanwhile, got respectful but less glowing notices. His name? Colin Moody. One can’t help wondering, as Mr Moody sees his one-time colleague returning to Sydney wreathed in Hollywood glory, if his high-minded resignation is warmed by what Zelda Fitzgerald called “the boiling oil of sour grapes”.However, rumbles about Blanchett’s appointment are not confined to Moody. Sydney friends tell me there was dismay at the way the post of director of the STC was never advertised. Against that, one can point to the fact that the Blanchett-Upton duo have come up with a cracking first year’s programme. Blanchett will direct Joan Didion’s The Year of Magical Thinking, and will play Queen Margaret in Shakespeare’s The Wars of the Roses. Along with four new Australian plays, there will also be Sydney premieres of Stoppard’s Rock’n'Roll, Hare’s The Vertical Hour and Harrower’s Blackbird. Visiting directors include Philip Seymour Hoffman and our own Max Stafford-Clark and Annabel Arden. A lip-smacking prospect, I’d have thought. But not enough to appease Australia.But behind the Blanchett brouhaha lies a bigger question: who are the people best equipped to run major theatres? Actors, dramatists or directors? In Britain, with the growth of subsidy, the tendency has been for directors to run the show. They, the argument goes, have a wider knowledge of world drama and are more likely to possess the artistic and political skills the job requires. Actors often rail against the “directocracy”. But postwar British theatre has been largely shaped by the vision of people such as Peter Hall, George Devine and Joan Littlewood - founders, respectively, of the RSC, the Royal Court and Theatre Workshop - who were, or are, directors first and foremost.It would be absurd to elevate a pragmatic principle into dogma and deny the right of actors or dramatists to take command. The most obvious example is Laurence Olivier, who, in 1963, became the first director of the National Theatre company. Olivier had all the attributes for the job: glamour, tenacity and prodigious all-round skills. People often forget that our greatest actor also directed, in Uncle Vanya, the finest Chekhov production of his lifetime. As for those who argue that Olivier was jealous of his coevals such as Richardson or Gielgud, I could point to several directors who smile through gritted teeth when their colleagues enjoy a major triumph.But the most potent parallel with Blanchett is Kevin Spacey. Like Blanchett, Spacey is a theatre animal who brings Hollywood clout to running a prestigious building - in his case, the Old Vic. Whatever qualms I had about Spacey’s first season, it is time we faced a blunt truth: that London is lucky to have him and that, without his glittering presence, the unsubsidised Old Vic would probably be shut. Far from hogging the limelight - though he gave fine performances in Richard II and A Moon for the Misbegotten - Spacey has also been hospitable to other talents. He handed the lead role in The Entertainer, by which he himself might have been tempted, to Robert Lindsay. And I’ve just heard that the Old Vic is to host Peter Hall’s superb production of Pygmalion, so signally shunned by other West End producers.Alongside Spacey, one could point to many other successful actor-producers. Ian McDiarmid and Jonathan Kent (both ex-thesps) made a big hit at the Almeida. It was the charisma of Mark Rylance, as well the lure of the building, that drew the crowds to Shakespeare’s Globe in its first decade. Sam West, in his all-too-brief reign at Sheffield Crucible, put down a valuable marker. And to find a dramatist who can stamp his identity on a theatre while promoting younger talent, one need look no further than Alan Ayckbourn in Scarborough.All this, however, could change. The word on the street is that the Arts Council favours the idea of chief executives running our theatres - that is the mad notion being mooted for the trouble-fraught Bristol Old Vic. We need to shout from the rooftops that theatre is far too serious a business to be left to the “suits”; it should be in the hands of the artists, be they actors, directors or dramatists.What is good for Britain is equally good for Australia, which is why I welcome the imaginative appointment of Blanchett and Upton in Sydney. I only hope she will one day be able to look back and say, like Elizabeth I, “I have reigned with your loves” - even if that doesn’t include Mr Moody.

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Sports digest

Saturday, January 12th, 2008

The Hawk Eye

The junior varsity girls basketball game between Notre Dame and West Burlington high schools today at West Burlington has been canceled. The teams will play a tripleheader, beginning with the JV boys game at 4:30 p.m. The varsity girls and boys games will follow.

Panthers to play

at U.S. Cellular Center

The Hawk Eye

The Mount Pleasant High School boys basketball team will play Marion Jan. 26 at the U.S. Cellular Center in Cedar Rapids as part of Rivalry Saturday.

The Panthers will play the fifth game of the day at 7 p.m.

The junior varsity squads will play at 2 p.m. at Marion High School.

Herring earns Old Spice nomination

The Hawk Eye

Burlington High School senior Jarred Herring has been nominated as an Old Spice Red Zone Player of the Year.

Herring, a standout on the football field and the track, is elgible to be named one of the 50 national Players of the Year.

Mount Pleasant schedule changes

The Hawk Eye

The following sporting events have been changed for Mount Pleasant High School:

* The junior varsity/varsity wrestling doubleheader scheduled for Jan. 31 will now start a 6 p.m. The event is now a double dual with Marion and Pleasant Valley.

* The ninth grade girls basketball game against Fort Madison scheduled for Jan. 25 has been cancelled.

Steelers’ Hines Ward has right knee surgery

The Associated Press

PITTSBURGH — Steelers wide receiver Hines Ward underwent surgery to repair a partially torn meniscus in his right knee and will need about six weeks of recovery time before beginning offseason workouts.

The surgery was done Wednesday, but was not disclosed until coach Mike Tomlin’s season-ending news conference Thursday.

Ward missed three games this season because of the injury, including the Dec. 30 game at Baltimore. He returned to make a game-high 10 catches for 135 yards in the Steelers’ 31-29 AFC playoff loss to Jacksonville on Saturday.

Tomlin said Pro Bowl safety Troy Polamalu may need surgery on his right knee, but will wait to see if rest cures the problem.

Royals’ Jacob Rodriguez suspended

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Kansas City Royals pitcher Jacob Rodriguez was suspended for 50 games Thursday under baseball’s minor league drug program for failing to take a test.

A 19-year-old right-hander from Whittier, Calif., Rodriguez was signed last August and is on the roster of the Surprise Royals of the Arizona Rookie League. He will serve the penalty at the start of the season.

Rodriguez became the first player suspended this year under baseball’s minor league program. There were 30 suspensions last year under the minor league program and eight under the major league plan.

Cardinals, Phelps agree to contract

The Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — First baseman Josh Phelps and the Cardinals agreed to a minor league contract Thursday, adding depth to St. Louis’ bench.

The 29-year-old Phelps will have a chance to make the major league club in spring training, Cardinals spokesman Brian Bartow said. Phelps has also appeared at catcher in 12 big league games.

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Cate set to shine for STC

Monday, December 10th, 2007

THE directorial debut of Cate Blanchett at the Sydney Theatre Company today will come under intense scrutiny.

It’s probably a wise move for the Oscar winner and very tall poppy to start with a small, albeit perfectly formed, Harold Pinter play.

A Kind of Alaska is a three-hander based on Oliver Sacks’s book Awakenings, about a woman who wakes from a long post-encephalitic coma to find herself a child trapped in the body of a mature woman. At just 40 minutes, it shouldn’t be too much of a stretch for Blanchett. Her playwright husband, Andrew Upton, also making his directorial debut, will make up the double bill with David Mamet’s Reunion.

%26quot;Andrew and I are not seeking to reinvent ourselves as directors,%26quot; Blanchett said at a press conference to announce their appointment as joint artistic directors of STC from 2008. %26quot;We come to the company first and foremost as an actor and as a writer.%26quot;

Blanchett needn’t protest too much: her move from actress to director is a well-travelled theatrical path.

Hayes Gordon and George Ogilvie, both great performers turned innovative directors, dragged Australia, kicking and screaming, into a new age of theatre in the 1950s, putting local plays and local accents centre stage.

Gordon, who died in 1999, was a Broadway musical star in the ’40s, with leading roles in Brigadoon, Oklahoma! and Show Boat. Because of the anti-communist attitudes prevailing in the US, the Left-leaning actor decided to try his luck in Australia in 1952. He moved to Sydney and introduced actors and audiences to the Method, and in 1957 he and 13 other actors established the Ensemble Theatre in Sydney.

Ogilvie, 75, is one of our most acclaimed directors and teachers of performance in theatre, opera, ballet and film. He learned his craft as an actor with a Welsh touring troupe and in 1955 joined the Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust’s first theatre company.

He studied in Paris, worked as a French mime and an English comedian, then joined John Sumner in 1965 to form the Melbourne Theatre Company. In the ’70s he was the director of South Australia’s state theatre company, before moving into film and television.

When eminent actors successfully turn their hand to directing, it is generally acknowledged that something special happens. They can communicate intimate knowledge of performing methods and empathise with the actors and the nerves, doubts and fears that beset them. But it is not always an easy transition.

%26quot;To begin with I knew nothing about directing,%26quot; says Ogilvie. %26quot;I only knew what an actor was. It took me a while to understand that the director’s was a much wider job: knowing the play, the background and all the rest of it, you know?%26quot;

He made some dreadful mistakes: %26quot;All I could do as an actor was to demonstrate, and actors loathe being demonstrated to: they don’t like the demonstration because they want to do their own thing. So I had to find another way of doing it.%26quot;

Ogilvie solved the problem when he saw what actors wanted from their director.

%26quot;I soon began to realise I had to think about myself as an actor and what did you want from the director. That helped me a great deal in being a better director, because I understood actors.

%26quot;Over the years when I’ve talked to directors who have never been actors they’ve always felt slightly distant from the actors, because they don’t think in the sameway.

%26quot;So the difference between a director who was an actor and a director who was not an actor was fairly vast, I have to say.%26quot;

Those terribly mellifluous English gentlemen Laurence Olivier and Ralph Richardson achieved fame in both roles, as have the equally well-spoken Kenneth Branagh and the multitalented American Orson Welles.

These days many Hollywood actors spend more time in live theatre as actor-directors than they do on film sets, including Tim Robbins, Sam Shepard, Ed Harris and Kevin Spacey, although Spacey’s contribution as artistic director of London’s esteemed Old Vic Theatre has had mixed success.

Most of these actors followed the actor-manager model, setting up their own theatre companies because they were dissatisfied with what other companies offered, just as John Bell did in 1990 with his Bell Shakespeare Company.

The list of Australian actor-directors includes many famous names: Graeme Blundell, Jeremy Sims, Geoffrey Rush and Richard Roxburgh.

Robyn Nevin, the present artistic director of STC, was one of the first students at the National Institute of Dramatic Arts, in 1959. She became a director in 1983, after a successful stage and film career. She still juggles the two roles: this year Nevin appeared in The Cherry Orchard and directed the debut of STC’s Actors Company in Mother Courage and Her Children.

Nevin was instrumental in bringing another superlative actor, Judy Davis, back to the stage. Davis made her directorial debut with STC in Barrymore. She directed Howard Barker’s Victory in 2004, a tour de force which also marked her return to stage acting for the first time in many years.

Lindy Davies, the long-time head of the Victorian College of the Arts’ School of Drama, began her life in theatre in the ’70s at Melbourne’s experimental space, La Mama, then at the Pram Factory, where the collaborative practice gave everyone a chance at all roles. Among her many directorial stints, she directed Blanchett in a 1992 NIDA production of Electra.

%26quot;I sometimes think I can’t imagine how people can direct without having been actors,%26quot; says Davies, who is retiring from the VCA at the end of this year. %26quot;But then you get the problem where they want the actors to do it the way they’d do it. I think when an actor is a fine director, it’s because they intuitively understand the actor’s process, but at the same time they can keep the vision. That is the wonderful thing.

%26quot;One of the dangers of actors directing is that they can’t drop their actor’s persona: they are filtering the piece through themselves. One of the wonderful pluses if an actor is truly working as a director is that they are in an egoless state and can truly tune in to the creative life of the piece.%26quot;

Ogilvie flipped between actor and director for several years, but settled on directing as the more fulfilling role.

%26quot;You get to know the author and the work in a much wider sense: I soon stopped doing acting,%26quot; he says. %26quot;It’s very difficult, especially as an actor if you had a director you disagreed with: that could be very painful. You learn to accept it, of course, because you have to place yourself in the position of the actor, you are part of a whole.%26quot;

Davies agrees that for an actor to become a good director, he or she must let go of their ego.

%26quot;Essentially, an actor is working from an altered state,%26quot; she says. %26quot;And to get the best work from an actor you need to go into that state yourself, and some wonderful directors can do that.

%26quot;They don’t necessarily have to have been actors, but it’s a psychoempathetic state that can be engendered if you have been a actor, working in an egoless way.%26quot;

Next year Blanchett will direct her first full-length work at the STC, Blackbird, by David Harrower.

Both Ogilvie and Davies have every confidence in her: %26quot;She’s such a wonderful actress, and so intelligent and has a lot to offer,%26quot; says Ogilvie. %26quot;My feeling is very strong that she will make a very fine director. She appreciates the actor, and knows what they have to do. What she’s going to have to learn is how not to demonstrate!%26quot;

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