Vine Blog- Week 6 – Season weekThis week was a massive week. Lets break the events down day by day…
MondayWe bumped in. We started the process of painting everything. We started rigging lights and learning how the audio works. The day was long, I was there painting until 9pm. We rehearsed a run of the show without costumes. This experience gave us a lot of insight into the open space we could now perform in compared to the tiny drama room we had been living in.Â
Audiowise, we realised the problem that there was only one Cd player at the theatre and we needed another one to overlay two tracks playing at once. (EG Alex’s memory) So I brought in my DVD player the next day. For audio, this was the day we really used all of the edited audio. Both me and Jarod were 80% happy at what it all sounded like. All it needed was a few tweaks with levels and cues.Â
Acting, since Saturday was the first time we had ran through the whole show I didn’t really know what to expect. But, after two whole runs on Monday I realised that the theatre gave me so much more focus and characterization. It gave atmosphere and I soon liked the fact that I lost track of what time or day it was. When we were in the theatre it was like a world of its own. Â
TuesdayWe had school in the morning then at 12.30 we left for MIPAC. We had lunch and then went into a stop-start run to plot the lights. I had to set up the DVD player, which I wasn’t very good at! I then learnt then how to turn everything on- by the amps. (You learn something new everyday!) After the stop-start run we had a continuous run without costumes for the lighting-Bethany. By that time it was 7.00pm, some people left. I stayed behind to help people finish painting the back walls and stuff.
WednesdayWe left
Aitken
College at around the same time as yesterday. We had a full run in costume and with lighting and audio. This was the day that I started to get confidence in what I and everyone else was doing. We had lunch and did whatever it is that we do and then we listened to notes. We finished painting the little bits and pieces left to do while Cooper went to pick up Burak. We got some notes and did some characterization one-on-one with Lisa. Our characters developed and it got us thinking about our motives to react in a certain way or why we do a certain action or line. What that line would really mean to our character. We then used these notes to focus in our next dress-rehearsal. This would be the last rehearsal before Opening Night. I was confident that we were ready for what was to come, maybe it hadn’t hit me. We finished up and took the decision to paint the stage black. We later realised it was the wrong paint but it gave the stage a matt plain black. I think it looked better than the glossy paint, because our paint absorbed the light giving the effect of the void that we wanted. The glossy paint reflected the light.
ThursdayWas OPENING NIGHT!! Nerves and butterflies had suddenly hit me. I now realised it was the best feeling for me. Those nerves helped me to focus and take that extra step to get into character. What I was most scared of was that every other day we had rehearsed two runs together in the one day. On this performance we were going straight into it. But it paid off. Overall it was a fantastic performance. There was still room to improve but it left the audience thinking about what we had performed, which is the purpose of Non-Naturalistic theatre. You don’t have to get it, but we want the audience to think about it.  Improvements, for me, could have been:
·       The fact that my friends were sitting in the front row one metre away from me didn’t help. I had to tune out every time they laughed or moved in their seat.
·       There were 2 second gaps between everyone’s lines. For me it was because I would get so into what others were saying that I would have to snap back and realise what I had to say. Â
FridayAnother day, another show. We started the day as a normal school day. Then at 6.00pm we arrived at the theatre. Firstly, I have to admit that the quality of this show decreased instead of improving. It was because, for me, I noticed that there was a smaller audience. Therefore my focus declined and we all got comfortable with what we were performing. Scotty came to assess us, we all got extremely nervous and feared Scotty. This affected our performance.
Saturday Our last show, for me was really sad. Each time we performed a scene I thought…â€aw, the last time we’ll do that†other times I thought…â€Yay!â€Now reflecting on the events of the week we all really grew and learnt amazing experiences out of 100. Audiences had the chance to reflect on their own lives, and so did we. We bumped out and got back to unload everything at Aitken. The season of 100 was officially over