Showing posts with label paper zoo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paper zoo. Show all posts

17 September, 2009

New photos from Animal Farm



You've seen the cast of Animal Farm rehearsing in their everyday clothes; now, over at our Flickr page, you can see them all dirtied up for the play proper. (The photos are from the final dress rehearsal -- each actual performance sees just 30 people gather in Gallery One and sit a whisker away from the actors, making things far too intimate for me to barge in with my camera.)

We've had one successful performance so far, and as I write Paper Zoo are getting in touch with their animal sides for tonight's second show. Tickets are unfortunately sold out for all three shows -- but I'm hoping to bring you a video Q&A with the cast in a week or two's time, and the company will be taking Animal Farm on tour around West Yorkshire in October and November.

More about Animal Farm

07 August, 2009

Animal Farm rehearsals are under way

Note from Mark: In September, Paper Zoo Theatre Company are bringing their production of George Orwell's Animal Farm to the Museum (following their successful staging of 1984 in June). It's an exciting one because it's actually being staged inside Gallery One, where our Animalism exhibition is currently held. Here's a rehearsal report from Ben Eagle, who plays Napoelon. (By the way, the woolly hats signify sheep.)

It’s full steam ahead with rehearsals for us at the moment, and we’re having a real ball. The play is full to brim with nastiness, tension, sorrow and humour, and we’re really playing around with all of these elements.

Having staged the play last year, we’re very familiar with the characters and plot, but we've recently recruited four new actors who have fitted in very well – despite the fact that Animal Farm isn’t the easiest play to throw yourself into. Acting with animal mannerisms – and within such an important and influential play – is a challenge for any theatre company or individual actor.

I play Napoleon (above); the ultimate villain. It really is a great part and one that I’m relishing. Having played the part in our 2008 tour, I'm finding new things in the character and really playing up to the challenge of the ‘baddie’. David Peel, who plays Squealer, and myself were described in a review last year as “a couple of real swine” – I hope we succeed again!

Our main challenge is performing in the Animalism gallery at the Museum. It isn’t a theatrical space at all, and after several considered discussions in the space, we have settled on where we feel it would work best. It will take a little bit of manipulation, but I do think it will work very well with the subject matter.

For the audience to be surrounded by such an amazing exhibition, with such stirring photographs, will hopefully really set the mood.

More Animal Farm information and book tickets