Archive for the ‘Events’ Category

Romeo and Juliet courting via Twitter? Shakespeare would have something to blog about that…

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Cross Media projects and the growth of digital technology within theatre is sparking strong debate across rehearsal rooms and blog posts alike.

Theatre purists want to remain steadfast to the traditional roots of theatre, shunning digital intrusion in favour of the honest actor/audience interaction that gives theatre its unique presence. Others such as Forkbeard Fantasy, Coney and Unlimited are embracing the seemingly limitless possibilities afforded by digital media.

Increasingly theatres (whether through actual desire or financial requirement) are devising new ways of attracting a more modern, tech savvy audience.  Most now use social media for marketing, with blogs on Twitter, groups on Facebook or film style trailers on You Tube. Some such as the National Theatre or Royal Opera House are turning to screening live performances to outside audiences who are perhaps fearful of the risks live theatre involves and more comfortable with this slightly more removed filmic format (its easier to walk out if you don’t like it!).

And a growing few are taking to exploring how technology can enhance the theatrical experience, often communicating with us through digital mediums, interactive websites where we meet the characters and world they inhabit before even reaching the theatre.  And sometimes, we don’t even reach a theatre…well not the type with a stage and proscenium arch many traditionalists would think of.

This week, with the help of the inspired creatives at Idea Generation, the Royal Shakespeare Company launched their own modern retelling of Romeo and Juliet on Twitter, with each character relating their part of the story over five weeks. Along the way, they’re posting soundbites and videos on YouTube, bringing Shakespeare’s teen romance to twenty-first century teenagers without asking them to set foot in an auditorium.

On April 26th, Stellar Network is hosting a panel event at The Young Vic Theatre to debate these and other pressing issues surrounding digital media in both theatre and film.  Among the six-strong panel is David Varela, a writer/producer who has worked across all four media of theatre, TV, film and online storytelling.  His talents and experience are vast, acting as apprentice to Richard Attenborough while still at university, winning numerous awards for his short films and screenplays, writing for both radio and television (including a great many projects for the BBC and Channel 4), The Hampstead Theatre, ICA and The Royal Court, producing a global adventure for Sony on the PlayStation 3, and now leading a team at nDreams in developing and running an Alternate Reality Game starring Lewis Hamilton.

David works on large cross-media projects that combine all manner of online and live media to tell stories and entertain and usually have some form of interactive element.  He draws influence from many sources, ranging from Charlie Kaufman to 42 Entertainment, Philip Pullman, Raymond Chandler, Kneehigh Theatre and 1980’s text adventures.  But his interest in working cross-media in fact started out as a result of reading the Guardian.

“I studied English at university, made shorts and wrote poetry. Then I came to London and wrote light entertainment (anything from magic shows to musicals) for a holiday entertainment company. I worked as a copywriter, writing in many different voices for many different companies. I wrote plays. I wrote screenplays. I wrote radio plays.

Then I saw an ad in the Guardian written entirely in code.  Unscrambled, it was an open call to writers, designers and creative types to work on an international murder mystery treasure hunt. It was called Perplex City. I started as an in-house writer and took on more and more production duties.  For nearly two years, I worked on this huge cross-media game creating a fictional world using audio drama and live events, fictional websites, videos, puzzles, songs, maps, text messages, board games, and just about every medium you can think of. My diverse career finally came together. It felt like I’d unwittingly trained myself for this new, peculiar job.”

As a writer/producer, David clearly loves his work and is evidently doing well.  Pointing out that he does not have to work across different media for every project (he recently wrote a ‘conventional’ play for Radio 4) his ability to work amongst many media is clearly keeping him in continuous paid work, a situation few writers can lay claim to.

Unquestionably there are some very exciting ventures and possibilities to be explored here and rewards to be reaped.  Our imaginations can be stretched in ways that a bare stage or basic set can only at times achieve.  Artists can communicate with us in many more unique ways and a new audience can be reached who may never have embraced traditional theatre.  But as these barriers are worn down and audiences old and new begin to embrace this shift in culture, questions and concerns about what this means for the future of theatre grow.  Will audiences no longer have to suspend their disbelief?  Will actors feel more like they’re on a film set than a stage?  Will conventional plays lose out to those that are more de rigueur? Will theatre companies who cannot afford these new technologies fall behind those with big budgets and friends in the right (cyber) places?

Whatever the answer, one thing is for sure; as stealthily as it did within our homes and workplace, technology and digital media is becoming an increasingly important part of theatre and its future.  We have little choice but to embrace it.  But in the same way technophobes and traditionalists must open themselves up to these new possibilities, so too must the digital theatre entrepreneurs be mindful of the conventions and devices which make theatre the great unique art form it is.  And for those who fall somewhere in the middle, approach it all with caution…. sometimes computer says no….

Leanne Davis, Actress & Stellar Network PR & Marketing Manager

………………………………….

Stellar Network will be holding our Future Proof event at The Young Vic this Monday 26th April.

This blog post covers the kind of topics we imagine the theatre professionals at this event will be talking about.  There will also be very informed discussion on digital influence in the film industry: content and distribution, from 3D to digital workflows to new business models.

For more information about the panel, the format of the evening and to book tickets visit www.stellarnetwork.com/events

Tassos Stevens’ review of Scratch Interact: the first scratch night for interactive theatre

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

please see allplayall.blogspot.com for Tassos’ fab blog, and the originator of this review. Its a gateway into a lot of the more interesting stuff going on in theatre at the moment.

Scratch Interact is the latest venture by our very own Stellarite Sam Howey Nunn

Last week I went to Scratch Interact, a night of treats curated very properly by the lovely Glue Theatre in the in-between spaces of Southwark Playhouse.

Glue’s opener delivered a box that wriggled out a man who then – having failed beautifully to gather attention from the pre-show crowd – managed to get presents and sweets from many.

Deborah Pearson’s Break Up With Me invited you into a toilet cubicle with her to do just that, however you chose, delicately responsive to its own conceptual knots, beautifully poised.

‘The Minuting Hill Carnival’, a minute version of Notting Hill’s, refereed by a representative of the Honourable Society of Faster Craftswomen, who before she sold me a nugget of jerk chicken on a cocktail stick, made a joyful band of us playing tiny instruments. Gorgeous how just as much glee came from playing it tiny, it was the play that counted. Lovely and messy.

Emer O’Connor then delivered a piece of storytelling, at first staged and delivered to the back walls. Perfectly good performance but not at all responsive to us or the space, and her volume inevitably causing alarm to the theatre staff worried about the ‘main show’. As soon as we moved in closer so she was actually performing to us in the space with her, it suddenly came alive. Which raises very interesting points for me about liveness and scalability.

Emily Smallwood took a pair of us into the disabled toilet. One was sat down on a white towel and asked to listen through headphones to a recording of a story. The lights were then turned off. The other then shared an embrace with her in the corner. Then the lights back on, one was asked to record a story while the other listened, very close. This piece worried me and it’s still with me. I loved her assurance in the disjuncture of these elements, the light and darkness, the very living intimacy of the exchanges and near brutality in heightened awareness of the other people in the room. Fantastic sensibility.

Sam and Chris from Glue then led a lively round-table discussion for the good number of us present. But there should be more of us. This night is quarterly and make sure you make (something for) the next one.

To put yourself on the mailing list for Scratch Interact visit http://www.gluehq.co.uk

Skillset Business Skills Seminars

Saturday, December 6th, 2008

Today marked the final installment of our Business Skills Seminars for Film Professionals, delivered with the kind and invaluable support of Skillset, and in association with the Film Business Academy at Cass Business School.

A huge thank you to Skillset, and all our speakers and attendees both.

And in case you couldn’t make it, all the presentations delivered, which looked at Legal, Financial, Marketing and Strategy Issues respectively are now available for Stellar members to view in the Community portion of the site, under Discussions, then Resources.

Skillset Logo

Stellar Skillset Strategy Seminar

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

Alliteration much!

Our final seminar, delivered with the support of Skillset and in associationwith the Film Business Academy, is taking place this Saturday December 6th at BFI Southbank in the Delegate’s Centre.

Topics addressed will include

• Understanding the film competitive environment and your own unique resources
• Information and tips on business planning

There will also be opportunities to steer the conversation towards attendees’ unique areas of interest.

Speakers are:

Natasha Munshi – Assistant Director, Institute for Business Integrity, Wright State University
Emily Corcoran – Consultant, Film and Digital Media Exchange

The fee per seminar is £10.00 for members of Stellar Network and £60.00 for non-members. The fee includes lunch, refreshments and a pack of supplementary materials including speaker presentations, exercises and recommended resources.

Register here –

Improbable’s Devoted and Disgruntled at Shunt

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

5th November 2008, 7.30p.m. (full details below)

Hosted by Stella Duffy

Devoted and Disgruntled is an opportunity to meet up with artists, arts professionals, and audiences. The next three D&Ds will have a different theme and guest host. November’s D&D will be hosted by Stella Duffy, an Associate Artist of Improbable. As always the response to this theme, and the conversations we have, will be decided by you at the start of the evening.

Do gender and sexuality still matter – and if they do, what do we do with them?

Dear All
I am a woman. I am gay/queer/lesbian – and far happier with any of those terms as adjectives, than as necessarily-limiting nouns. I write, perform, direct, make theatre and other work. None of those things solely define me, nor would I want them to, yet as artists, what we do comes from ourselves, our own lives, those we meet, and the worlds – real and imagined – we inhabit. We make work by and of ourselves. How important then, are gender and sexuality to what we do?
In twenty-five years making work I have seen our women’s and gay/queer theatre companies virtually disappear. This doesn’t matter if all the issues we once thought so vital have been taken up by newer artists less concerned with drawing lines and/or with speaking from and for the ghetto. It doesn’t matter if the issues of gender and sexuality – so prevalent, for example, in the classics – are investigated in current work. Nor does it matter if we now truly do have a level playing field from which to make our work.
And yet … I still hear more women than men decrying childcare provision in our work/places. We still have many more men directors than women, and a glance at any listings magazine will show men writers in (at best) a 2:1 ratio to women. Gay men may be in the public eye in unprecedented numbers, but where is the work by young women about their sexuality? Why is it now deemed empowering for women to get their kit off in the rise of modern burlesque – and if those women are still subject to the male gaze, whose empowerment is it anyway? (And are there any straight men empowering themselves by getting naked too?)
Maybe it is all sorted. Maybe there are no women thinking there’s still a glass ceiling, no queer people believing they rarely see themselves represented on our stages, no heterosexual men hemmed in by a society forcing them into a patriarchy they would rather reject, no straight people pushed into playing boy/girl games they hoped stopped in the 1950’s …
Or maybe we can have an Open Space about it, ask if we have arrived at a stage where gender and sexuality are truly fluid, or truly irrelevant – or both. And anyway, as was mooted at the very first D&D, didn’t we all come into theatre in the first place because we thought it was sexy, because we were seventeen-year-olds hoping to get laid? (While we changed the world, obviously.)

Stella Duffy, October 2008

DETAILS:
The evening runs using Open Space technology which gives anyone the chance to propose a starting point for discussion, then take part in one of these conversations, flit between them all, or head to the bar.
To get into Shunt for free, let them know on the door that you’re there for D&D. No need to book, just turn up on the night.
Shunt is on Joiner Street, a little alley inside London Bridge tube station. Find a map at:http://www.shunt.co.uk/map.php
For further information or to discuss access requirements get in touch with Lucy at lucy@improbable.co.uk or at the office on 0207 240 4556.
Hope to see you there.
www.improbable.co.uk

Lone Sharks and Satellites # 1

Monday, September 29th, 2008

Last month Stellar Network created a brand new way of networking, meeting people and generally getting things done in the theatre world.

It’s called “Lone Sharks and Satellites” and the first event was held at Exmouth Market’s trendy Wilmington Arms.

Want to see why the event was so great? Check out this video.

Podcast now available: “How To Make The Most From your Brilliant TV Idea”

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Back in May we ran a great TV event designed to help you protect your TV ideas.

It was held at 01 Zero-one in conjunction with Own-It and the speakers were Robert Lands, Head of IP Media, Finers Stephens Innocent LLP and Sarah Edwards, Head of Entertainment Development, Talkback Thames. The compere was yours truly.

It was a fantastic event, full of lively discussion and debate! The podcast is now available in two parts – here and here.

Please take a listen and let me know your thoughts, opinions, etc. We’d love to do similar events in the future but we need YOUR feedback

Cheers

Tom S

Stellar Network at Power to the Pixel

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

As you’ll all know, Power to the Pixel is an exciting two day forum which forms a part of the Times BFI London Film Festival, and which aims to explore how emerging and established digital technologies are transforming our industry. At this year’s event Stellar Network, in conjunction with the Film and Digital Media Exchange (FDMX), is involved in Need to Know, a think tank/round table discussion on October 23rd, during which we will aim to explore the evolving value chain through discussion and debate. The information will then be channelled into a comprehensive report on the needs of the digital creative industry with well informed suggestions to target and tackle the issues raised.

We have a number of free places for Stellar members to attend this exciting event – and are keen to enlist experienced professionals with strong opinions, such as yourselves. All attendees will also be able to benefit from the first full day of PTTP on October 22nd, and will be able to attend a number of invaluable seminars and events – see here for the full line up http://powertothepixel.com/category/london-forum-2008

Please take a look at this document and let Claire Geddie know at claire AT stellarnetwork.com if you’d like to take advantage of this fantastic opportunity to be part of the industry’s evolution.

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