Mar 17 2010

QUACK! Teaser

It’s on, folks – QUACK! performs at Out the Box Festival: Thurs 25 March 6pm, Fri 26 March 7pm, and Sat 27 March at 5pm, at The Arena Theatre, Hiddingh Campus.  Book now at Computicket.

Meanwhile, check out the latest teaser by those Yawazzi guys.  Awesome!


Mar 11 2010

Out the Box

And so, it is nearly upon us…drum roll…the 2010 edition of Out the Box Festival of Puppetry and Visual Performance!

otb e-flyer3 We’re busy putting new ideas into place for QUACK! – a small shuffling of roles, a combining of masks, and a developing of story.  We’re never quite just finished with a work, hell no.  Always something to fiddle and poke around at.  Ees the way we like it.

But it’s gonna be a blast – check out the website for more details, there are some awesome sounding performances, workshops, and talks going on.

This is why Cape Town is the cultural centre of SA.  This is why we have the reputation for ground-breaking and innovative work.  This is where it’s at.


Oct 26 2009

Cape Town Edge 2009

We have completed our 2009 report for Cape Town edge, and it makes pretty interesting reading.  You can download it here and have a look.  Comments, thoughts, and observations can be made on this post, or email me on ugli@fthk.co.za


Oct 16 2009

Cape Town Edge 2010

Cape Town Edge Logo

There are still two weeks left to submit an application for Cape Town Edge 2010. 

Cape Town Edge is a collective of professional independent theatre companies and/or theatre makers. Initiated by FTHK (from the hip: khulumakahle) and Hearts & Eyes Theatre Collective, it was formed in 2007 to overcome some of the difficulties small scale independent theatre companies face when presenting work at primarily the National Arts Festival. With the Cape Town Edge, the emphasis shifts from individual companies/productions to a collective venture that enhances the value and impact of each production under an umbrella structure. This significantly promotes Cape Town independent theatre by pooling resources in terms of pre-production, funding, administration, co-ordination, transport, technical needs, and taking care of that vital ingredient – the audience.

Sound tasty?  Wanna apply?  It’s really easy – if you’re based in Cape Town, or will be making the work in Cape Town, just submit a SHORT (approx. 2 page) letter of motivation to tink@fthk.co.za by 5:00 pm Friday 30 October 2009, with the following information:

  1. Short synopsis of the proposed production
  2. History/future of the proposed production (Has it performed before? Where? Has another tour been booked for it post-fest? etc)
  3. Information about the creative team (Director, choreographer, performers, designer etc)
  4. Information about the space in which the show would work best (Cape Town Edge has for the last three years been based at Princess Alice Hall in Grahamstown – a mid-sized venue with 170 capacity, stage 6m x 8m, with computerised board and black surrounds.  Please note – storage space is limited, as is the case with all Grahamstown Fringe venues.)
  5. Motivation as to what you think your production will offer the Edge

For more information, contact Tanya at the address above, or check out previous reports here.

It seems so early to be thinking of the National Arts Festival, but official registration closes in January next year, so don’t delay!


Sep 30 2009

2010 National Arts Festival

And they’re off!  Yep, it’s true – applications for the 2010 NAF Fringe are open.  The Fringe Information Book can be downloaded here, and the registration form itself downloaded here.

Remember, it’s 15 Days of Ama!zing next year, 20 June – 4 July 2010.  Applications close 15 January.  It’s a fact.

And…go!


Sep 8 2009

Hilton Arts Festival

So round here we’re gearing up to go the this year’s Witness Hilton Arts Festival in KZN.  We’ve enjoyed good successes at Hilton over the years, with shows like Water Pockets, GUMBO, and last year’s associated The Dog’s Bollocks

This year, the giant-killing Pictures of You is pulled out of its resting and back on a plane, with great excitement and anticipation.  We have 3 shows at the festival:

  • Friday 18 September 13h30
  • Saturday 19 September 12h30 – already SOLD OUT
  • Sunday 20 September 10h00

All you good folk in KZN – come on down!  This is finally your chance to get to see Pictures on your home turf.

There’s quite an interesting line-up too, with Greig Coetzee coming out of theatre hibernation to revive his classics: White Men with Weapons, The Blue Period of Milton van der Spuy, and Johnnie Boskak is feeling funny. There’s also Kickstart’s Wit that I missed at NAF this year and apparently kicks ass with the sublime Clare Mortimer heading that one up.  Jenine Collecott’s High Diving is also on, which is awesome ‘cos I also missed that at NAF and it was regarded by many as the jewel of the festival.  What else?  Nick Pauling and Scott Sparrow journey with us from Cape Town with Zoo Story.  Why so little Cape Town stuff there this year?  Hmmm.  That’s not great.  There’s the deliciously obscene sounding Molly Bloom, with Jennifer Steyn headlining the adaptation of the last chapter of James Joyce’s Ulysses.  Also apparently a gem.  Oh oh oh, and a new piece by Sylvaine Strike – Pregnant Pause.  That’s always a treat and a look forward to, and good to have her back making theatre!  And lastly, the intriguing sounding Mariner’s Tale – a short ride through the classic poem told with puppets, mime, masks, music…in its own tent.  Sounds a bit like the delightful Alchemist’s Heart created by Jaqueline Dommisse and Peter Hayes a few year’s back.  But hey – intriguing nevertheless.

Will keep our adventures all up to date from here, the Conspiracy HQ.


Jul 15 2009

Festival: The Good, the Bad, and an Ugli point of view…

Need to get this all down before Festival slips completely out of frame…it has that tendency to do that – a huge intense build up, the explosion of the 10 days itself, and joy or frustration at how it all went, then it gets psychologically packed away until the whole cycle starts again next year.  Believe it or not, we are trying to learn./  It might not seem that way sometimes, but we are.

These not really in an order, more how they came to me:

The Good:Pictures of You - Frank and Janet in bed

  1. Pictures of You – yes, because it was the highest grossing theatre  production on the Fringe, but also because Liezl and Dorian took a step into the sublime.  The show was good before, and we’ thought we’d reached some kind of plateau…but at festival it got better.  And proved not only the strength of the Fringe and independence, but sticking to one’s guns, following one’s heart, “and in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make”.
  2. Tony Lankester – CEO of the festival.  This guy is smart, he’s funny, he’s passionate, and he gives a shit.  Not only to artists as business people but to people as human beings.  True, he has his detractors (see below), but he learns and grows from things.  See here for another take on this.
  3. Cape Town Edge – now having done 3 years, it has settled into the Fringe make-up, and this year was bigger, brighter, bolder, with a line-up of new shows and Festival returns in a programme for all tastes.  Furthermore, we had an equipment upgrade (a computerised board!), a venue upgrade (FOH bar and black drape surround – practically a real theatre), and this year we rocked out with selling sushi in the tent.  There will be more on Cape Town edge soon.  Strangely, every year we hear about other groups doing similarly, but this has yet to emerge properly.  Except for the New Joburg Underground…who knows anything about the New Joburg Underground?
  4. The “Hands On! Masks Off!” initiative and “The Remix Laboratory” initiative.  Both programmes jam-packed with networking meetings, workshops, cultural events, sharings, learnings and experiences.  Kudos to Ismail Mohamed, Kate Axe Davies, and everybody who participated, organised, or assisted in their operation.  At times there was almost too much, particularly for this tired moegoe who (have I mentioned this already?) didn’t get a lot of time off to see/do stuff.
  5. The Famished Road directed by Helen Iskander and produced bylindiwe in famished Fresco Theatre Company on the Main.  I couldn’t see many, but this was my show of Festival.  Based on Ben Okri’s book and other writings, the show is a magical visual feast.  Surprisingly wordy for the approach taken, and not perfect yet, but it is brand new, and I am sure it just continued to get better and better as it settled and was tweaked.  I hope it has a long life on South African stages.  It deserves to.  Fresco is doing stuff with such grace and polish that it is inspirational for us scruffy little clowns.

The Bad:

  1. The divide of Grahamstown – Brett Bailey used it expertly in his piece Blood Diamonds by all accounts, and it’s always been there, but for some reason this year it was just a lot more evident.  Part of that was the Village Green moving up into the University, and really showing the racial divide: from Church Square to the township black, from Church Square to top residences white.  OK, that’s a gross generalisation, but you see where I’m going.  This poses a real quandry for theatre makers, because on the one hand you just want to go to Grahamstown and show your art, and watch art, and talk art and catch up and jol…but you can’t escape the poverty and desperation of the Eastern Cape and the Frontier that hasn’t been solved.  So what does one do?
  2. The Village Green moving – now this actually didn’t impact hugely on us…it’s been a good 5 or 6 years since I combed the stalls looking for those 2 or 3 awesome things you could only get in Grahamstown, and you looked forward to each year.  But there was quite an ugly situation with traders in Fiddler’s green feeling neglected and passed over for the professionalism or elitism of the new Village Green up on the Great Field.  At one point, there were bubblings of an inverse Xenophobia with Northern African traders threatening to march on the Green and rip it to shreds.  Kudos to Lankester and co for handling the situation as well as they did, as well as freely admitting their miscalculation and taking immediate steps to solve the situation, which did happen and many traders relocated to Church Square.  But it divided the town all over again, with one prominent theatre maker (OK, really drunk at the Long Table) haranguing on and on about it.  Elements of truth, sure, but we have to face it – things are changing. 
  3. Fascist guards at Village Green – true, I’ll admit that the situation was potentially getting tense (refer to #2 above), but to bar a group of actors in masks with flyers from the Green with an AK47?  Hmmm.  Tony Lankester again to the rescue!  But then we got barred from the tents another day because we couldn’t be identitfied and might potentially thieve the latest line of winter woolies from Scandinavia.  Did I mention I didn’t get to see much theatre?  There was a lot of logistics and organising and ranting going on. 
  4. Boycott #1 – being threatened by a group of directors who accuse the Makana Municipality of sabotaging their Festival and causing loss of income due to their ripping down of posters etc from street signs, traffic lights and so on.  Check here for the Dispatch article, and another blog report here.  Now it’s true that this did happen – I was lucky in seeing them remove our Pictures banner (apparently not allowed on traffic lights - fair enough, same as anywhere else) and had to chase them down to retrieve said banner, but c’mon - some posters being pulled = severe loss of income = boycott?  I dunno about that one, hey.  Everybody knows posters don’t do much other than create a presence and pull maybe a small percentage of your audience in.  Sure, it’s lekker to see theatre makers standing up for themselves and drawing a line in the sand, but this present situation borders on the divisive again, in a time where we need more than ever to be pulling together.  Is it the municipality’s fault?  Are the directors overreacting?
  5. Boycott #2 – this is one that goes even further, as it picks out individuals and has a really nasty edge to it.  There’s this “figure” called James Norton, not his/her real name (it would be so much better if they just came out into the open), who is calling on all artists and crafters to boycott the festival, sack Lankester, and basically turn the clock back 15 years or so to what the festival used to be.  I’m serious.  I first thought this was a joke, or an elaborate publicity prank, but apparently not.  Check out the Facebook group here.  It’s like an ironic backwards version of “Hot Fuzz”.

And an Ugli point of view:

Well, I think it’s all been said really.  Both in this blog, and on others like Meganshead and Artsblog.  Festival is changing, and has been so for the last few years.  This year was a big jump forward, and who knows how 2010 will truly pan out. 

But it’s changing and we need to change with it.  It’s still the national  arts festival, it still is hugely (if at times overly) ambitious, and things like the Fringe remain fiercely independent and democratic. 

It’s getting harder and harder to make a buck, but that’s true throughout the entire industry.  Even having the highest grossing theatre production on the Fringe doesn’t mean that we’re now retiring.  It means we actually have a few coins to jangle in our pockets, but we haven’t suddenly become rich.  More than anything, it has given us an enormous opportunity that we need to take full advantage of.  And that, for me, is the saving grace of festival – it’s an opportunity.  Perhaps the greatest one in the country, because for 10 days the serious theatre and arts lovers conjoin in a small town on one of the faultlines of South Africa.  It’s not perfect.  It’s grubby and messy and fractured and we have a real love/hate relationship with it.  But that’s OK.  Like any relationship, it needs work.  It needs support, and it needs to give us support.

We need to be more serious, without losing our senses of humour.  We need to get together more, find a way of working together, collaborate, join a collective, work in partnership with the Festival offices, work in partnership with businesses and funders and sponsors and patrons, we need to get organised, we need to evolve.  If we actually give a shit about it all.  And we do.  we all do.  We all should.

Because, in the end, “the love we take is equal to the love we make”.  Hit it.


Jul 13 2009

Top of the Pops, Top of the World!

bestseller

I apologise upfront if this is blowing our own bent and buckled trumpet, but official word is out…Pictures of You was the highest grossing theatre production on the Fringe at Festival this year! 

And not only that, but 12th highest on the Fringe across all categories, clocking in healthily behind the comics and other comedies that routinely dominate sales.

Wow.  How do you like them apples?  That’s not bad for a scruffy little experimental show that started a year ago and showed a glimmer of promise, and then through a lot of good will, awesome support from a lot of awesome people, blessings from our parent company to go forth and conquer, and sheer determination, has found its way to the top. 

There’s still a lot to be said about Festival, and in the next few days we’ll hopefully wrap it up.  What has been amazing (and yes, “10 days of ama!zing” – well branded, guys) is that in the midst of a global recession, where everyone expected things to be really tough, live performance has come through so strongly.  Check out the official figures here.  A testament to the vital place of culture in our country’s well being, and a kick up the arse for all of us whingeing whining self-deprecating artists to back ourselves and keep pushing, and when times are hardest…we must get better.

A rallying call, methinks.


Jul 11 2009

QUACK! comes together

Sometimes theatre making is a bit like believing in the existence of UFOs.  It’s a zealous pursuit not shared by many (other than fellow zealots), and our existence is sporadically affirmed usually in little towns like…here, really.  Good old Gatstad  Grahamstown. 

But yesterday there was a sighting of that alien thing – the nigh indeterminable click of a production finding itself and lifting out of the ordinary.  Now we’ve been battling with QUACK! – I’ll freely admit it…despite interesting feedback and bags of potential that it holds, we’ve been battling to properly and seamlessly gel the disparate elements together.  Yesterday we achieved that to a much higher level, and the show finally display some luminescence.  You could palpably feel it coming from the stage, and the audience picked up on it it, and eventually it was 4 sweating performers, and one relieved director/stage manager grinning before the applause.  Phew!  Still a long long road to go, but at least we know that we’ll get there now.  I believe.  Watch for the lights…

Below, successful theatre maker, staunch FTH:K supporter and all round theatre mojo-mama Jaqueline Dommisse chats about her experience of watching QUACK!


Jul 9 2009

Special Day

Today was an awesomely special day for a number of reasons:

  1. Pictures of You turned 50 today
  2. The cast celebrated by lifting it to the sublime.   Quite simply, it was the best performance they’d ever done, and the audience felt it, laughing and sobbing throughout, and then swarming to their feet at the end

It was extraordinary.  The show has been slowly developing and growing as we’ve gone along and we’ve fiddled and faffed with it.  But at Festival this year it just clicked onto another level altogether.  And then today it went even higher.  Quite beautiful, if I say so myself.