It was first draft read through this week. I went second. But after I read John read. His script was very naturalistic and the actresses in our group loved it. They could imagine acting it. They wanted to act it. My script was more existential. I'm not jealous. But now I have to go back trash the first half of my draft and re start the play in the middle which was where people started to follow my play.
Reading a first draft of a ten minute play outloud - Cynthia: Lawrence: Scene: etc was very intense. The ten minute play format guarantees that everyone gets a go and is listened to across the three hours. At the end of the night we walked out under the starry sky having learnt more about our writing than we had ever before.
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Sunday, March 28, 2010
Open Day at the Con

Today was Open Day at the NSW Conservatorium of Music. There were concert pianists, clarinet concertos, jazz, and Mrs Macquarie's cello from 1814. While listening to the history of music in Sydney in the 1800s, along with Georgiana's Tune Book we soaked up the atmosphere of this beautiful and historic place in Sydney. It's true that Nick and Alex fell asleep in the concert but hopefully the music went into their memories.Sunday, March 21, 2010
Following Jessica Watson's Blog
Jessica Watson is closer now to Wester Australia than Africa as she crosses the Indian Ocean. You can read her blog every day in the blog links at the right. Im wishing her a safe passage through The Great Southern Ocean south of our large continent when she gets there. Go Jessica!
Playwrighting Week Six
We listened to the rest of the group's synopses.They ranged from a triangulated relationship to a film noir version of Bligh and Christian in a parallel universe loosely based on the romantic tale of The Mutiny on the Bounty. Everyone took turns unlocking the keys to the writer's imaginations. Then we played another word based writing game. You write down 6 things, 3 emotions and 3 colours then order your list alphabetically to write a piece on a theme in our case mortality.
I wrote "You ask if you can have an apricot - just because you sit in front of me in that chair looking out the window at the creek and I still wonder if you even remember the egg cup I brought with your breakfast. No - you were too busy watering your fern - picking up a hairpin to begin your day with happiness. To not be hurried by my indecision or indigo mood. For us it was a lighter moment tinged with red solicitude. That is how I remember you."
The idea is that you write something that you would otherwise have never written.
This week we read the ten minute first drafts of our plays to the group one at a time.
I wrote "You ask if you can have an apricot - just because you sit in front of me in that chair looking out the window at the creek and I still wonder if you even remember the egg cup I brought with your breakfast. No - you were too busy watering your fern - picking up a hairpin to begin your day with happiness. To not be hurried by my indecision or indigo mood. For us it was a lighter moment tinged with red solicitude. That is how I remember you."
The idea is that you write something that you would otherwise have never written.
This week we read the ten minute first drafts of our plays to the group one at a time.
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Sirius Cup 2010


Tom and company in the tinnie
Frank in Tempest

The team went to Sirius Cup at Balmoral and came back with the cup. Tom sailed on the Tasar with Ron and went well. We caught up with him at the boatshed on his return. Here are some of the scout leaders who mentor Tom. I spent Saturday afternoon and evening helping with the ktichen detail for the meal. We cooked a vegetarian pasta dish and had ice cream and fruit for dessert. The cup runs from Friday night till Sunday afternoon. Scout teams come from near and far to compete. We had the Walter Burley
Griffin Sea Scouts from Canberra. The Euralla team. Teams from the South Coast and the Central Coast. The scout leaders can take part and it is a highly competitive event.
Ed on the hobie
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Playwrights Week 5
Finally half or our class presented their 10 minute play synopses. It was like attending a post modern literary crit analysis class. A little confronting for those presenting but a lot of fun for those providing the constructive or not so constructive criticism. The most way out script concerned a conjunction point between two 20th Century feminists and whether selling out in mid life is a good option. Daryll the stand up comedian divulged a complicated 5 scene play that created a bizarre superficiality between three people loosely connected to the art world. My play concerned an artist and her husband with the tension being about her latest works and his yearning for her to go back to portraiture. I could have written it about any relationship coming to an end this week and sounded believable though. Robert the oldest member of our group wrote about a pensioner who embezzels the temperance society's membership fund on a horse race only to lose the lot. His play was tedious to listen to but lots of people came up with ways to spice up his sedentary plot. Hilary is leading the group with her keen visual analysis and ability to steer out work in a logical and practical stagecraft. Stay tuned for next week's write up.
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