Saturday, February 28, 2009

February 26th/09 Café

As always, Café DaPoPo this month was a unique experience - a busy blast of performance preparation, rehearsals, organization, and work shopping.... and it all culminated in a very smooth, high caliber, performance night. A few highlights from my perspective were the big ensemble song (Nine People's Favorite Thing) that Andrew (Droodles) re-wrote and taught us - a huge hit -, Shakespeare pouring from every corner with Amy, Keelin, and Nathan falling head over heels for each other in As You Like It, Andrea and I getting to revive our Children's Hour scene for an appreciative audience, and Nathan and Droodles' rendition of Agony - complete with cravats and Andrew chasing Cinderella through the bar! Bonnie kept us on track and focused throughout the night as always - thank you!! - and we had a truly impressive surprise when John Han (who initially billed himself as a 'chord playing' piano accompanist) turned out to be 'ninja-in-training' on the keyboard!! Here's what John had to say about his first Café experience:


When I was asked to join the February cast of Café for piano accompaniment, I was
overwhelmed by the thought of a higher caliber of work than I am used to. But
that didn't last as the thought of all the music, Shakespeare, and monologues to
be consumed that night excited me. I tried to do my best to learn the Sondheim
songs (for me, Sondheim at Café Dapopo is like getting a whole cheese cake to
myself at a real café), and even tried to tackle some classical pieces.

On Café night, we performed to a smaller crowd than I am used to from my previous Café attendances. However, this allowed me to take my time and gave me a chance to take a closer look at the other cast members and observe their Café experiences. THESE ACTORS ARE BRAVE!! I have seen Nathan turn from a Prince (Agony) to George (Sunday in the Park with George), then to Silvius (As You Like It) within matter of minutes. Keelin wowed the audience with her rendition of Cabaret then, within seconds, she was taking shots of tequila with the audience (yes, you can order that.. and you should!). The audience members are so lucky to have such talented actors to put out their 100+%. I was even luckier to get a chance to work with them.

I brought some friends to Café who weren't too familiar with theatre or the Café
scene. They were surprised, delighted, rowdy and thought it was a great way to
spend your evening outing. So... why don't you make the last Thursday of each
month a Dapopo-Thursday?? Drama is more fun when there's more people to share it with.. just sayin!!

p.s. did you check out that new ensemble number? sweet stuff... John


So, off we go to rehearse for March's Café (see side bar). Hmmmm.... I wonder what we'll have on the menu this month?? ......Sher

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Some Reflections On Two Years of Café Madness

The Café with its cabaret style à la carte performances has now become somewhat of an institution with its own peculiar history. The Café is no longer a mere fundraiser for DaPoPo. It has grown into a strangely poetic, undeniably popular monthly event for Halifax. Patrons are no longer surprised – have in fact come to expect – classical Shakespeare recitations, German art songs and dramatic monologues to happen side by side. The Café has found a home in Menz, at least for the present, and has come of age. 

Poverty, the Poor Theatre, has proven to be an agent for artistic discovery. Our financial restrictions have proven liberating, allowing us to connect with the community and our audience in a personal, entirely non-traditional way. The Café is a form of People's Theatre: exposing audiences to work they might not otherwise have known about without unnecessary didacticism; whetting theatrical appetites and thickening the bisque of artistic passion; remaining energetic, humble and generous to the max. The poetry, or craft, of what we do reveals itself within the restrictions of the Café environment. 

We have performed in four different venues: the old pre-eviction Mollyz Diner, Ouro Preto, The Good Food Emporium and Menz Bar. Over 40 performers have worked with us at the Café – including three Stev/phe(n)s and three Ann/ies – as well as four designated accompanists. Pieces have been written especially for the Café by more than one writer, including Andrea Dymond and Steve Cloutier. We've seen staff turn-over at Mollyz/Menz, witnessed crowds protesting Harper's cultural slur against the acting community, and watched US elections finally ousting George W. Bush from the White House. 

Perhaps most strikingly, the work for Café is always training, the product always process in an indisputable sense. As we madly mix and stir the creative juices, we've developed recipes (or at least cooking tips), rehearsal techniques for the Café. Our sock puppets function like masks, freeing and sometimes possessing us as we let a Shakespeare sonnet speak through us, or a Mozart duet sing through us. The art of the intimate performance focuses our attention to detail: light, sound, touch, smell, even taste. Café performers learn a mind-boggling amount of material in diverse styles and flavours, exploding and exposing our habits, while forcing us to push the limits of our skill. 

And where do we go from here? In anticipation of our Potsdam Café at the museum FLUXUS+, we have received dozens of submissions by local writers. We now boast a menu bursting with Canadian content including pieces by Jackie Torrens, Natasha MacLellan, Pam Calabrese Maclean, Colleen Wagner, Josh Macdonald, Jenny Munday, Bev Brett, Michael Melski, Marshall Button, Steve Cloutier, Amanda Jernigan, Steph Berntson, Jim Betts and Allen Cole. We have introduced our Academy DaPoPo members Aaron Andreino, Sophie Fong, Ali Richardson and Holly Winter to the Café format at our old haunt the Good Food Emporium. 

We are welcoming new performers, not least of all our wonderful Berlin bound quartet, and attracting new audience members. We are perfecting our technique, tailoring rehearsals and performances to suit the Café set-up. Looking forward to this July, our third DaPride Café promises to be more integrated with Halifax Pride. Could we sustain (as we did this month) two Cafés each month, find host venues in other Canadian cities, provinces and outside the country, find funding to employ a steady Café cast? These are questions that make me dizzy and giddy, with some trepidation, but most of all make me excited for another year of Café madness.