Wednesday 19 March 2014

Going off-script: real life ad-libbing.


In the show I’m currently touring we open by asking members of the audience to make a plasticine version of themselves as they enter the theatre. Last night in Alnwick a gentleman came up to me during this initial pre-amble to protest that he ‘comes to the theatre to be entertained by the performers and not the other way around’. On leaving he let it be known that he still prefers ‘plays with a script’, which we took as a gratifying compliment. Thing is, we do have a script, but we’ve also got carte blanche to meander from it according to whatever is happening in the room during each performance: heckling, phone calls, stage invasion - all actions are gleefully incorporated into the show. We’ve done our jobs well when even the scripted bits feel as if we’re improvising.

Yet again I find myself comparing this experience to the theory around life scripts. This weekend on my psychotherapy course we explored our own life scripts [meaningful face]. The psychotherapeutic counselors among you will be familiar with the ‘this is your life as a play’ exercise, for the uninitiated: essentially, you imagine your life as a play.

To envision the First Act of our life play we are led by the course tutor to imagine the stage onto which our life is set. What kind of play are we watching? Who are the main characters? What is the atmosphere? Act One ends with the beginning of adolescence.
The theatre maker in me was already on guard for any Chekhovian weaponry adorning the flats. (Anton Chekhov’s remark about playwriting that ‘if there’s a gun hanging on the wall in Act One, it must be fired before the end of Act Three’ is one of the oft quoted golden rules for making theatre, along with Aristotle wanging on about time, and if you’re going to tour a show, three is the biggest cast you can fit in a van). Of course because life scripts are by definition ‘unconscious’ it might not have helped the exercise that I was cognitively analyzing my life script with such professional interest. I found myself resisting the reflex to imagine a proscenium arch stage with obligatory red velvet curtains, yet despite the fact that I can count on one hand the times I have performed on such stages in my career, this stereotype is what sprung to mind when asked to ‘imagine a stage’. In a small way this is an example of how life scripts work: an inherited idea with which, despite present-day resistance, we are compelled to comply.

The Second Act of our life plays took us up to present day. After the fight-dance choreography item of my late adolescence I found myself turning to the box and asking for the house lights to be switched on and the red velvet curtains taken down. I stood on the lip of the stage, conscious of being higher than the stalls and not wanting to be, conscious of ‘being in a play’ and not wanting to be. As we took a break to notice what we had conjured in our respective life-plays my mind wandered as I wondered about the connection between my desire to break the fourth wall in both my ‘life play’ and work in general.

So much of the theatre being made now that excites and engages me enacts this deconstruction of inherited convention. The artists I look up to are the ones you don’t literally look up to from the stalls – they’re on the threshing floor with you, in this moment, in the same room, and they’re talking to you. Not yesterday’s audience, not the audience they imagined in rehearsals, but the living-breathing-right-here-now audience. In a sense, the theatre I’m interested in making is theatre that is interested in breaking it’s own inherited script.

I’m thinking of Steiner’s assertion that life script is ‘a life plan which is rigid and unchangeable. Like the lines of a play, a life plan expects to be followed word by word from beginning to end and allows for little improvisation. A script is written by somebody else and like actors in a play we feel bound by ourselves and others to act the part to the bitter or happy ending’ (Steiner C, 1979, Healing Alcholism).
Far be it for me to contradict the man who brought us ‘Warm Fuzzies’ but there are plays that allow for a bit more than ‘a little improvisation’, in fact there are plays that allow some of the script to be created live each night. I happen to be in one. I concede the ending is always (necessarily) the same, and to that extent it is absolutely scripted, however the care taken to make it feel like it might not be, speaks to the desire to ‘break script’ and act according to the moment, to be truly ‘live’. It is pleasing that the same language when applied to breaking life scripts describes people who are wholly a-live.

To imagine one’s Third Act is to contemplate the type of ending you feel your life play is heading toward. ‘Ah’, I thought, as I returned to the mind-theatre I had just flattened at the end of Act Two, what to do now then? Make it about the audience, I supposed. Let some of the audience onstage. Go and sit amongst the others. ‘What happens next?’ Well I have no idea - it entirely depends on who else is in the room. ‘How does it end?’ Well I guess I’ll leave, at ground level, probably through a fire exit, I might afford myself a Hollywood-esque backward glance, perhaps I’ll sight a space once called ‘a stage’ filled with people getting on with stuff. Maybe I’ll have played a part in starting that.

[Curtain]