Showing posts with label BYU-Idaho. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BYU-Idaho. Show all posts

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Becoming Mr. Hardcastle

Mr. Hardcastle


I've taken a hiatus from blogging for the last three or four months, not because I had nothing to say but because I had no time to say it.  I have been working sixty plus hours a week for the better part of three months.  In that time I've spent precious little time on the computer.  Work, eat, rehearse, sleep.  That's about it.

So here's how all that came about.

I was assigned several months ago to design the costumes for "She Stoops to Conquer".  As I read the play, I found I really liked the character of Mr. Hardcastle.  I drew him first and felt that the whole costume design hinged around that design.

The design team, which consisted of Hyrum Conrad the director, Richard Clifford the set and lighting designer, Antonia Clifford the sound designer and me as costume designer, met several months ago and discussed where we needed the show to go in each of our respective areas.  Because of a line Mr. Hardcastle spoke in act I, ("It was but yesterday he fastened me wig to the back of me chair, and when I went to make a bow, I pop't me bald head in Mrs. Frizzle's face!") I told Hyrum that I wanted whoever was to play Hardcastle to shave his head into male pattern baldness, and to either be portly already or to wear a fatsuit.  We also decided the part should be cast age appropriately.

We bandied a few  names around and didn't agree on anyone, and left it at that.  About a half an hour later, Hyrum came to my office and asked me if I would like to play the part of Hardcastle.  I immediately said, "Yes!"  Then I asked, "Does this mean I have to shave my head?"  He nodded.

Prior to him asking me, I had not even considered myself as a candidate.  I am really glad he asked me to do that part.  I literally did not have a single bad day of rehearsal throughout this process.  I never once asked myself, "Why did I ever agree to this?"  Every day was a joy for me.  I worked with some very talented actors and had a good stage management and tech crew.  I always enjoy working with Hyrum.

He works in an unorthodox fashion called "Mosaic Acting" which allows for much deeper character study and development I think, and it makes the actors take more responsibility for the final product.  It really becomes a partnership, and great discoveries are made.  There is much more freedom to explore a character in this way of working.  Instead of a director telling you what to think or where to move, you learn your character inside and out and move appropriately.  If I am ever fortunate enough to be cast in another play where we perform in this way, I'll blog about it in greater detail.

One of the sweetest things about this part is that I discovered quite by accident about a month ago that my Dad had played the part of Mr. Hardcastle in 1966 at the Playmill Theatre.  It was sweet and it also put a lot of pressure on me.

Hardcastle may be the largest part I've ever played, and it is among the most fun parts I've ever played.  Not only did I have to shave my head and wear a fatsuit, I also had to learn a dialect.  I've only used a dialect on stage once before, and that was in "The Robber Bridegroom."  That dialect was a made-up one though.  This one was taught and coached.  We used a West Midlands dialect for the country folk in the play, and early on my accent moved between country English to Scottish to Russian with a little pirate mixed in here and there.  Slowly, I worked through and became reasonably consistent in my dialect I am told.  That may have been the most difficult part of the whole process.

I decided that since I had to shave the top of my head for the play, I would shave the rest of my head after we closed so my hair would grow in uniformly.  That, and I wanted to see the scar on the back of my head from when a wall fell on me in Buffalo, New York back in 1991.

But enough talk, here are the pictures.

Before
 
Trimming the mustache

Lathering up

Shaving

Clean lipped.  My students were all scandalized when I showed up without a mustache because it is 
apparently how they identify me.  I was pretty amazed that they commented more on the mustache
 than when I shaved my head partway.

Before the indignity

After

Tabula rasa

The tools

Applying the base


The corrective part applied

Linework applied

Wrinkles, highlight and shadows

Sealing with powder

Eyelines

The fatsuit.  First of all, I had heavy tights.  The camouflage booty shorts were there
 with snaps applied to hold the fatsuit in place.  The fatsuit was built on a cotton T-shirt
covered with poly-fill quilt batting and covered with nylon tricot to control it. 
Essentially, I'm wearing a quilt.

The knickers were made of heavy upholstery fabric
and the shirt was made of heavy bridal satin.

The vest was added next and it was made of heavy drapery fabric.


Then the coat out of the same upholstery fabric as the knickers. 
To suggest that this costume was hot would be a gross understatement.

Add to that a "great flaxen wig"

And there is Mr. Hardcastle
Prior to being in this part, I weighed 195 pounds.  I weighed myself on closing night and weighed in at 177.4 pounds.  I'm certain a hefty portion of that weight came from wearing the sauna in the 90 degree heat in Rexburg, Idaho in the middle of July.  I am not complaining, however.  This was the most fun I've had on stage in many years.  I would gladly do it again.

Closing night:

After the show on closing night, several of the company members said they would like to take a shot with the clippers on my head.  I let them.  I was going to get most of the hair off with the clippers and then shave the rest.  One of the students asked to do that part as well, so I allowed it.  Kind of fun really.  Sadly, the battery on the camera died in process, so the photo essay will have to be incomplete.

Last chance to back out

Committed now

More

Everyone that wanted one, got a shot at me

That's one way to take your frustrations out against the teacher...

Last shot, almost done

Picture we took today at Big Springs with my chrome dome.
Believe it or not, being totally bald doesn't bother me near as much as just the top of the head being shaved.  I do believe it bothers my wife, the hot chick so I'll let it grow back in.  I felt I needed to shave it all the way so my hair could all grow in at the same rate and so I wouldn't have a two layer haircut for a couple of months.  I suggested that I should keep the head shaved but grow the mustache back, but she wasn't having any of that.

Hopefully this is a good post for returning to blogging!

Thursday, May 3, 2012

The Costume Designs of Susan Whitfield: A Gallery Exhibit

Count Almaviva from The Marriage of Figaro

I have known Susan Whitfield almost all my life.  She came to work at Ricks College (later BYU-Idaho) in the early 70's and worked with my father in the Theatre Department.  For 18 years she designed and built all the costumes for all the theatre department's shows as well as taught a full load of classes.  The college eventually hired a costume shop director and for the last 23 years she has been able to design the costumes but not build them.  She has also served as the department chair more than once.

In 2000, I became her colleague when I was hired to teach at Brigham Young University-Idaho.  In that time we worked on the addition to the Snow Building together and she oversaw the construction of a new theatre wing including a new black box theatre and a new costume shop with compact storage.  With all the things she has done, no-one has really ever recognized her for her accomplishments.  I think we all tend to take one another for granted alot of the time.

At some point, Susie started talking about retirement and I resolved to do something to show to the campus community what I had come to know about Susan Whitfield.  I conceived of a gallery exhibit with mannequins dressed in some of her best costumes on display either in the lobbies of the Snow Building or better yet in the Spori Gallery.  I started talking about this exhibit around five years ago to deans and department chairs as well as the curator of the BYI-Idaho art collection.  At first the idea was received kind of tepidly, almost as if it were a good idea but would require alot of work to do.  Over the course of the next few years deans and department chairs were changed and new attitudes prevailed.

As Susie grew closer to retirement the idea began to be more of a priority.  Our new department chair, Richard Clifford bought into the idea and did alot of the legwork to convince the gallery manager that we needed to do this and then he bought 10 mannequins for the exhibit.  The thought was, no matter what we were going to do this, even if we had to curate the exhibit in our own building.

Permission was granted and the show was scheduled for Spring Semester, 2012 in the Spori Gallery.  Richard, Kyoung Dabell (the gallery manager) and I designed the exhibit from the middle of February of this year to opening night which was at the end of April.  We selected costumes to be shown based on several criterion.  First we wanted to show the best of her work, second we wanted to show variety, and third we wanted to show costumes designed over a long period of time.

Count Almaviva's costume from The Marriage of Figaro was the opening piece in the show.  The photo at the beginning of this blog post is that costume.

To the left we had two female mannequins dressed in Aunt Abby and Aunt Martha's funeral dresses and one male dressed as Teddy from Arsenic and Old Lace.  There was also some interpretive materials that included a brief description of the costumes and concepts as well as additional photos, but these were not in place when I photographed the exhibit.

Aunt Abby, Teddy and Aunt Martha from Arsenic and Old Lace

Further to the left of the gallery and around a corner is what we called the "Biblical Room".  On one wall we had the wedding garb of Mary and Joseph from Savior of the World and on the other wall we had the costumes of the three kings from the opera Amahl and the Night Visitors.  These costumes were not on mannequins but hung on custom hangers that I designed and Richard and I built.  We stuffed the costumes to fill them out and hung them from wrought iron hooks on the walls.

Joseph and Mary's wedding garb from Savior of the World

Kings Kaspar, Melchior and Balthazar from Amahl and the Night Visitors

On the exterior wall in the "Biblical" room we had a couple of stands with hats on them, then opposite on a movable pylon we had the two wedding dresses, one pristine and one distressed from The Taming of the Shrew.

Snood from Life is a Dream, hand beaded by Susan Whitfield

Wedding dresses from The Taming of the Shrew

In the center room we had an eclectic group of costumes beginning with Goods from Everyman which was a modern couture abstraction of medieval ideas.  Susan embroidered the big panel in the back of the jacket.  Opposite Goods were Orgon and Elmire from Tartuffe.  On one of the side walls in the center room we had Lady Bracknell from The Importance of Being Earnest and on the other we had a victorian lady's outdoor dress from Abe Lincoln in Illinois.  This was the oldest piece in the show and was made nearly twenty years ago.  I especially like how the bonnet is displayed with this outfit.
Goods from Everyman


Orgon and Elmire from Tartuffe

Lady Bracknell from The Importance of Being Earnest

Lady's dress and bonnet from Abe Lincoln in Illinois


In the other main room of the gallery we had a trio of costumes on mannequins from what I believe to be Susie's best show, Life is a Dream.  This show was produced in fall of 2011.  I find it remarkable that Susie is doing her best work at the end of her career.  She's going out on top.  I respect that immensely.

The costumes from left to right are Duke Astolfo, Princess Estrella and King Basil.  Each of these costumes and most of the others in the show had handstitched ruffs around the neck and the cuffs.  Susie stitched on many of these as well as other workers in the costume shop.  Princess Estrella's dress is gathered in cartridge pleats where the skirt and bodice meet.  One of the things I think set's Susie apart from many costume designers is her attention to detail, especially on period garments.  Estrella's underskirt is made from a piece of heavy chenille that Susie and I have been "fighting" over for twelve years.  I have wanted to use it for upholstery and curtains and she had been saving it for about twenty years to use on an Elizabethan gown.  She won!

Astolfo, Estrella and Basil from Life is a Dream

Finally, the last room of the exhibit is what we called the process room.  We designed it to be an interpretation of Susie's design and production process.  It started with a table with a script of Life is a Dream, some research for the play and finally some of her sketches in progress for the show.  Across from the table is a pattern making and cutting station to show the next step in the process.  After that is an industrial sewing machine we borrowed from the shop and then there are three dress forms, one male with King Basil's heavy sleeve made as a fitting shell and the other two dressed in other costumes.  One was a woman's costume from Athaliah and the other was Adela's green flamenco dress from The House of Bernarda Alba.  Finally, on the last wall were three hats.  Kyoung always likes to put something quirky on that wall since it is the least visible one in the gallery.

The design station

The cutting table

Industrial machine with suit form.  Basil's sleeve was fitted the day after this photo

Dress from Athaliah and Adela's dress from The House of Bernarda Alba

The quirky hat wall

In addition to the costumes on the walls and mannequins, for the gallery opening we had seven students dressed in costumes Susie had designed.  For the most part they were costumes that the individuals had worn on stage at one time or another.

Susie and the students

For my part, this was a labor of love.  It's something I've been invested in for the better part of five years.  It was a joy to do and absolutely satisfying once it was complete.  I'm thankful to have been a colleague of Susan Whitfield.

The gallery opening was from 7 to 9, April 26th, 2012.  It was a heavily attended event from the opening to about 8:30.  The last half hour the crowd thinned out but we were still greeting people almost until nine.  It was a great night.

This exhibit will be on display until May 18th, 2012.  It's well worth seeing.


Susan Whitfield and Me