National Shakespeare Schools Production 2015

Legislative Council Chamber, Parliament House, Wellington

04/10/2015 - 04/10/2015

Expressions Arts & Entertainment Centre - Upper Hutt, Wellington

03/10/2015 - 03/10/2015

Production Details



This year’s SGCNZ NSSP was held at the Silverstream Retreat in Upper Hutt. The tightly packed week of Workshops and Rehearsals culminate in public performances featuring a 48-strong cast performing scenes from Pericles, Much Ado About Nothing and As You Like It

Much Ado About Nothing 

The battle that took the men to war may be over, but Beatrice and Benedick are still locked in a war of words.  On their return the men rest and party at Leonato’s house, where Claudio makes plans to marry Hero, Leonato’s daughter.  He woos her with the assistance of the Prince, Don Pedro.  Beatrice and Benedick are also ‘set up’ by their friends. 

Don Pedro’s evil brother Don Juan wants to upset the marriage plans and enlists his servant, Conrade’s help.  He in turn, traps Hero’s maid, Margaret, into helping them.  Hero is accused of being a loose woman, and discarded at her own wedding by Claudio. 

It takes the idiocy of Dogberry and Verges to uncover the evil scheme, meanwhile, Hero has taken kind Friar Francis’ advice, and is pretending to be dead and Benedick has sworn to kill Claudio…

Pericles 

A 700 year-old poet comes back to life to share an epic story of sin, sea storms, shipwrecks, love, loss, pirates, brothels, naturopathic remedies, lost children, family tragedy, maritime disasters, disloyalty, redemption, fishing quotas, famine, miracle reunions, and nuns – all in 40 minutes.

In the twilight of his career – was Shakespeare losing the plot?

As You Like It 

Sir Rowland de Bois has recently died, his estate has passed into the possession of his eldest son, Oliver (Olivia in our production). Out of pure spite, Olivia denies her younger brother Orlando the education, training, and property befitting a gentleman.

Meanwhile… Duke Senior has been usurped of his throne by his brother Duke Frederick who has allowed Senior’s daughter, Rosalind, to remain at court because of her inseparable friendship with his own daughter, Celia. Orlando and Rosalind instantly fall in love with one another at a court wrestling match set up by his sister to kill him. Orlando returns home from the wrestling match, only to have his faithful servant Adam warn him about Olivia’s plots against him and leaves for the safety of the forest of Arden.

Duke Frederick has a change of heart regarding Rosalind and banishes her from court. She, too, decides to flee to the Forest disguised as a man and leaves with Celia and Touchstone, the court jester. 

Rosalind and Celia, disguised as Ganymede and Aliena, ( A shepherdess )  arrive in the forest and meet a lovesick shepherd named Silvius pining for the disdainful Phoebe.  Rosalind also bumps into Orlando who taking her to be a young man confides that he is in love with a lady called Rosalind. Meanwhile, Phoebe falls hopelessly in love with Ganymede.

Olivia appears and tells how Orlando stumbled upon her in the forest and saved her from a lioness. Olivia and Celia, still disguised as the Aliena, fall instantly in love and agree to marry.

Things carry on in this merry and confused way until the wedding day arrives and Rosalind brings it all to a happy and well deserved end with some sneaky manoeuvring.

SGCNZ NSSP 2015 performance

Expressions, Upper Hutt
Saturday 3 October (7.30pm)
To book visit their website 

Legislative Chamber, Parliament
Sunday 4 October 2015, 4.00pm
To book return a completed booking form to SGCNZ.


Much Ado About Nothing
Student Composer:  Jake Robinson
Student Costumier:  Elekis Poblete Teirney 
CAST:
Beatrice:  Zara Gilbert /  Pauline Ward
Benedick:  Conan Hayes / Luke Major
Don Pedro:  Micaela Jacobs /  Sarah Gulley
Leonata:  Mirren Callaghan
Claudio:  Polaiu’amea Kirifi
Hero:  Tara Malone
Don John:  Peter Burnham
Conrade:  Daniel Hurley
Margaret:  Zoe Spence
Friar Francis:  Petera Taingahue
Verges:  Brook Bennett
Dogberry:  Cael Friday

Pericles

Student Composer:           Jake Robinson
Student Costumier:  Elekis Poblete Teirney

CAST:
Gower:  Tatai Proctor/  Matthew Kereama/  Alex Kennedy/ Shwetha Wevita/  Khorshed Tarapore/ Tatai Proctor
Pericles:  Ryan Cook/  Caleb Muller / Dryw McArthur
Helicanus:  Dylan Hutton 
Fisherman 1:  Reva Grills 
Fisherman 2:  Emma Rattenbury 
Fisherman 3:  Emma Botha
Cerimon:  Arya Harilal 
Thaisa:  Morgana Chapman 
Marina:  Mirabai Pease 
Diana:  Bertha Tamuna 
Random Servants, Lords and Gents played by Elekis Poblete Teirney and Jake Robinson.

As You Like It

Assistant Director:  David Simes
Student Composer:  Jake Robinson
Student Costumier:  Elekis Poblete Teirney

CAST:
Rosalind:  Phoebe Johnson / Sophie Coomber / Josie Hick 
Orlando:  Rienhard Schwanecke / Jack Rainbird / Adam Hayes
Celia:  Hannah Brown / Beth Kennedy
Olivia:  Jenny Nimon
Touchstone:  Kaydin Budd
Phebe:  Olivia Colville
Audrey:  Kes Lewis-Davis
Duke Frederick:  Jimmy Robinson
Adam:  David Simes
Minstrel:  Jake Robinson

~~~~~~~~~~~~

Non Nobis Domine & The Compleat Works  
Music by John Dankworth 
Arranged & taught by:  Lesley Graham       
Rehearsed by:  Nick Erasmuson & Phoebe Johnson
Performed by:  Full Company

Waiata – Hine e Hine 
Taught & rehearsed by:  Reva Grills
Performed by:  Full Company

Haka – Tika Tonu 
Taught & rehearsed by:  Kaydin Budd
Performed by:  Full Company

Production and Technical Team

SGCNZ CEO & Organiser of NSSP:  Dawn Sanders ONZM, QSM
Administrative Assistant:  Liz Weschenfelder  (part time) 
Programme:  Liz Weschenfelder, Kirsty Bruce, Dawn Sanders, Philip Gravatt, Rapid Copy
Videographer:  Glass Gecko Films – Nigel Sanson 
Photographer:  Bruce Pool 
Stage Manager:  Jenna Kelly 
Lighting: 
Kevin Adams – Ex ressions;
Steve Sanders, Grouse Lighting – Parliament 
FOH & Ushers:  SGCNZ & WSS Volunteers


Theatre ,


A formative and valuable experience

Review by John Smythe 05th Oct 2015

Given the 48 high school students* selected to participate in this year’s Shakespeare Globe Centre New Zealand (SGCNZ) National Shakespeare Schools Production (NSSP) arose from a pool of well over 5,000 participants nationwide in this year’s SGCNZ University of Otago Sheilah Winn Shakespeare Festival, Theatreview feels it’s appropriate to note this annual event.

Some will doubtless gravitate to the profession as practitioners or teachers. Others will benefit from the skills they develop in the process. As SGCNZ CEO Dawn Sanders ONZM QSM puts it: “The ability to listen, react and respond quickly, with vitality and dynamism, interact with others around you on stage, behind the scenes, with the audience or administratively, apply in every work place.” And in families and all community endeavours, come to that.

In my observation, young people left to their own devising devices tend, understandably, to limit themselves to relatively small areas of life experience. Yet privately they are dealing with all the big metaphysical and ontological issues at personal and global levels. Shakespeare gives them access to a way of exploring those timeless and universal themes and putting humanity into perspective by articulating and playing with our value systems and what it is to be human.  

During the NSSP week – just one week! – the students engaged in a range of workshops and, in three groups, were cast in, and rehearsed, hour-long versions of Much Ado About Nothing, Pericles and As You Like It. The showings do not, therefore, purport to be fully realised productions. Yet the quality of the work is astonishing.

Having performed them on Saturday night at Expressions in Upper Hutt, a fully-equipped theatre with an end-on stage, here – in parliament’s Legislative Chamber – they adapt to a thrust space with some audience on the same flat floor and others in the gallery above. The dynamics of working a space like this (avoid closing in on one section of the audience; avoid all actors facing the same way; ensure everyone can see into the space between the interacting characters; play to the gallery …) are often compromised in this one-off performance, so that’s another learning opportunity.  

Some actors showing signs of strain in their voices will quickly realise, I trust, the essential value of good voice training and warm-ups, especially with text-rich theatre like Shakespeare.

That said, their ensemble work is exemplary and the intelligent understandings each actor shows of their allotted character and their relationships within the sometimes convoluted stories, and the fluency with which they speak the text is very impressive, especially given the short rehearsal time. Within this sort of exercise it is, of course, necessary to share the large roles around and the various strategies employed to achieve this work a treat.  

Directed by Perry Piercy, the Much Ado About Nothing cast set a lively tone with the women welcoming the men back from the war. While the set up to Don John’s dastardly plan falters somewhat due to some text tangling that dilutes the conspirators’ strength of purpose, the payoff is good and well counterpointed with deceiving Beatrice and Benedick into thinking each loves the other.

The cast is so natural with their delivery of blank verse that it comes as no surprise – and is a good bit of fun – when someone says, “Here is a text I found upon his phone.” I approve whole-heartedly of such tweaks, and also of complete revisions to accommodate gender changes (as with Oliver de Boys becoming Olivia in As You Like It).

“In the twilight of his career – was Shakespeare losing the plot?” asks director Peter Hambleton when introducing Pericles. We might also ask, “What was he on?” given the “epic story of sin, sea storms, shipwrecks, love, loss, pirates, brothels, naturopathic remedies, lost children, family tragedy, maritime disasters, disloyalty, redemption, fishing quotas, famine, miracle reunions, and nuns”.

A sextet of Gowers fill us in on the story up to the point where three fishermen find a washed up coffin, and a trio of Pericles play out his tragic circumstances and respond to the revelations that his terrible losses – of a wife and daughter – are not so lost after all. Amid a uniformly strong cast it may be unfair to single one out but I feel bound to say this will not be the last we see of Dryw McArthur (from James Hargest College, Invercargill).

Making the wrestling bout that was supposed to kill off Orlando in As You Like It, directed by Rachel Henry, into a tag-wrestling match is a clever way of establishing the three Orlandos. The three Rosalinds, with two capped as Ganymede, and two Celias are also creatively combined and juxtaposed.

Most of what’s played out is from the Forest of Arden scenes. Giving ‘All the world’s a stage’ to Adam (no Jacques is designated in this cast) and having it played as a soliloquy is surprising but works just fine. The fun the cast have is contagious and proves an excellent vehicle for sharing the tale.

Ending with ‘I’m a Believer’ (composed by Neil Diamond for The Monkees) puts a fitting end on it – and wait, there’s more. The use of music and song throughout has added great value and now, as a bonus, the entire ensemble sings two classical works and a waiata then rounds it all off with a haka.

Whatever each of these students end up doing, there is no doubt this experience will loom large as formative and valuable in many respects. Meanwhile it’s been a pleasure to witness and share in the results. 

*The students come from: Auckland (Buckland’s Beach, Howick, Mt Albert (2), North Shore, Takapuna (2)); Blenheim (3); Christchurch; Dunedin (4); Gisborne; Hamilton (2); Havelock North; Invercargill; Masterton (2); Matamata; Nelson (2); New Plymouth (4); Palmerston North; Porirua; Rotorua (2); Taupo; Tauranga (6); Timaru; Waimea (2); Wellington (2); Whangarei (2).

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