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WHAT'S HERE: We asked Frigid Festival participants to answer the following three questions:
   1. What is your show about and what can audiences expect when they see it?
   2. Why is your show pertinent to today's times and/or why should your show be the choice for audiences to see?
   3. Why did you choose to present this show?

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Live!...at the Cockpit

Produced by Loose Moon Productions

Author: Kobun Kaluza and T. D. White

Live! … at the Cockpit … is a look at what back stage, the “tiring house,” might have been like one day in 1599 at the newly built Globe Theatre when Shakespeare was working with his actors, then The Lord Chamberlain’s Men, on new plays such as Henry V and Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, and rehearsing certain scenes for upcoming performances such as Henry IV, Part One, a particular favorite of the Queen’s. It’s Shakespeare alright, but this time from behind. Our new, original work for theatre opens back stage in what we now would call a dressing room as we hear a production of Midsummer Night’s Dream ending with the “…lamentable comedy and most cruel death of Pyramus and Thisby” (Act V). Shakespeare plays The Lion but is often seen scribbling feverishly between entrances and exits and “directing” those remaining back stage in a physical imitation of what’s being said on stage — after all, he understands what his words really meant better than anybody! Will will then introduce his actors to new scenes from his new play, Henry V, one of which he will compose right before our audience’s eyes. Then it’s some after show entertainment and a trip to The Mermaid Tavern where Shakespeare will seek out the former boy actor “Joseph” and direct a scene from Hamlet about “… country matters.” For an uproarious conclusion, it’s all about sack and saloon as Shakespeare puts the actors playing Prince Hal and Falstaff through their paces. Where there’s a Will, there’s a way!

Today, curiosity about actors and their processes approaches adoration. We feel that people are fascinated by the craft and art of acting and would appreciate a journey into a most iconic past for acting, the Elizabethan Era, to see how Shakespeare and his ensemble might have worked together, what Shakespeare’s particular role might have been “back stage;” what his relationships with his fellows might have been like; what the acting “styles” or methods might have been like. Modern people seem more fascinated in what goes on “back stage” than in the production being presented! People can come to this show and really enjoy watching actors work with new material, somewhat familiar to them perhaps, but not to the actors. Are actors any different today than they were 350 years ago? We explore that question!

The primary reason for presenting this show at this time is that it’s fun and funny. And people need to laugh. It’s healthy. People respect Shakespeare and his work, of course, but we feel much of the richness is lost on contemporary audiences — quite naturally — because of archaic language and constructions, and lack of knowledge of customs and history easily familiar to Elizabethans. Today’s audience for Shakespeare loses a lot due to some natural self-consciousness when sitting through a two or three hour even well-made production. Our production is meant to reduce this strain and give a contemporary audience the full delightful flavor of Shakespearean theatre in just short of an hour in a modern, most digestible way.

Thomas D. White, co-director/co-playwright