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 (Picture above shows Jennie Fox as Thetis and Glyn Williams as Peleus (c) Avril Jones Photography)

On Sunday 22 April 30 actors from the cast of Olympus - including 8 children arrived at The Questors Theatre in Ealing at 9.30am.


Two hours later we had run through an hour long version of the show, with the remarkable Ted Robinson holding it all together as a narrator, dressed as The Greek God Hermes. Only 14 years old, Ted had his 7 or 8 monologues - linking narratives - off pat. And he only had the script the week before. His first entrance through the trap door, we felt, would get the show off to a good start! (And it did...) Christopher Backway, too, excelled as the young Homer, taking the pressure in his stride.

At 12pm Maggie, the Stage manager called time on the tech rehearsal but we had got to the final number, so had broken the back of the show and acclimatised to the Questors Space and it's remarkable set design by Alex Marker.

Graham Mountain and Alister Morton sorted lights and sound and though Ian Rae was placed with his keyboard on the high walkway at the back - he still managed to follow everyone...just!

We did the show acoustically - no mikes - and the workshoppy feel of principals in costume and ensemble in blacks gave a real essence of the piece 

Penny Parks drilled the movement that afternoon in a rehearsal room - then it was a cup of tea on the green opposite before performing OLYMPUS to around 100 people that afternoon.

Next step - hone the detail ready for The Ashcroft Theatre in two weeks time and a whole new set of technical requirements. The momentum is building now - it is a race against time! The show is aptly named!


 
 
 
 
When you ask the cast to build a back-story for their characters (when playing Spartans and Athenians in Olympus) it is heart-warming to receive an email the next day like this!

I am BIBULUS - twister of tails, teller of tales;
I fought Athenians to a standstill.
I have a failing heart - but iron will.
I'll die in the tavern
I am a pliable lover, and hard as nails.

I scorn the living pain of hell
I spit on pity for a miserable heart
I'll play my part.
I leave no blood in other veins;
I am an empty pouch - a vacant shell.

I am the fly on any fresh paint;
I defy the itch you need to scratch;
I am the "purple patch"
I manufacture nothing - but plenty to say
I spoil, defile and taint.

I see visions in my restless sleep
I wander in time, I see all,
I believe the call
I am a man of vision;
I have secrets that - I keep

I take my pleasures where others fail,
I caress the skins of hanging thieves,
I'll crush what she believes.
I welcome worthless, bitter land.
I leave a stinking trail.

I lie in stupor, pressed 'gainst rocky sill.
I hear in fretful waves, the nightjar's chittering call;
I thrash about and fall.
I know not when or wither for
I've touched a place where time stands still.

I watch a figure stretching, reaching out to death.
I see it for my shade and know
I must let it go.
I do not covet my other self,
I will not claim another's soul but give it my last breath.

I AM BIBULUS THE SPARTAN - AN ANCIENT MAN IN ANOTHER WORLD

(Tony Dent - Bibulus The Spartan in OLYMPUS THE MUSICAL!)

Book tickets now...
 
 
Another Way Producer and actress Nicola Chambers will be performing in TWO for three nights at The Crown Pub in Oxted, which has recently started hosting professional theatre courtesy of PLAY AT THE PUB Theatre Company - Follow the link for more info.
 
 
BOOK SOON for OLYMPUS at The Minack. The Saturday night unreserved seating is nearly SOLD OUT!
Pictures taken by John Chambers & Marcus Ascott (from The Mitre Players production of Gulliver's Travels at the Minack 2008)
 
 
It is quite a shock to the system, half way through rehearsals of an epic musical, to gather up the props in the rehearsal room, reshape the script and create a shorter version for a showcase performance in front of a paying audience. Well, that's the next step of the journey to performance for Olympus and its 60 strong cast. Coming in the last three weeks of the rehearsal process has its pros and cons. Cons are less time to rehearse the show, pros are forcing actors to get off book and creating a positive community spirit, as well as giving us a chance to see if the show "works!"

 For The Questors version of OLYMPUS on 22 April the script has gained an additional character - a Narrator, linking chunks of the musical together. But this is no ordinary narrator - it is Hermes - yes - the god Hermes - as played by 14 year old Ted Robinson (who will see his script for the first time tomorrow - no pressure!) 

Hopefully this kind of pressure will bring the cast even closer together in the creative process of bringing a new musical to the stage. 

Then there is the fact that on that Sunday, two of the cast are absent - so Director and Producer will be standing in! Just because you write a script doesn't mean you know all the lines! Never a dull moment...better get learning...
 
 
Chris Chambers interviewed by Jaz Mackenzie on BRAAP. Click here. Or read transcript below:


Twenty years ago, composer Ian Rae wrote a sung through piece of musical theatre called OLYMPUS, drawing on Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet and retelling that story in the context of Ancient Greece. Weaving Athenians, Spartans, gods and myth through the piece, he created a work that was twice presented as a concert version.

In the years that followed the two concert performances, there were a few occasions when Ian and his wife, Morven (Producer of Good Company) considered resurrecting it, but time passed and nothing happened. However, in 2010 with The London Olympics on the horizon, they felt the time was right to develop the piece further.

Having seen my adaptation of Gulliver’s Travels (which was produced at The Minack Theatre in 2008 by The Mitre Players) Ian approached me about working on a book for Olympus. 

I listened to the music and was overwhelmed with its beauty – particularly “You Are The Air I Breathe” and “How Many Dreams.” (Listen at www.olympusthemusical.co.uk) 

Hearing these songs inspired me to take the project on, but I was a little wary, as it was clear to me from the start that reshaping the piece into something more contemporary was going to involve some big changes in structure and plot.

The transformation of the original concert piece has been a fascinating process – not always easy for Ian or myself, but has proved to me that there is no set formula for working on a musical. Ideally it would be easier, I think, to start with nothing and shape the plot, music and lyrics moment to moment. In the case of Olympus, existing material has had to be shuffled, switched, cut, pasted and totally rewritten. It may sound like a crossword, but actually it is quite a similar process to adapting a novel or existing story for the stage.

New songs have been composed for Olympus and new characters introduced. There is a comedy mystic by the name of Asclepios, and Homer himself, of Iliad fame, makes an appearance as a ridiculously talented twelve year old boy. 

Instead of the action taking place in Ancient Greece alone, it now takes place in two time zones – 2012 AD and 780 BC. We have introduced a modern story and weaved it through the material that existed previously. Bizarrely, much of Ian’s music and lyrics have remained unchanged, as the original story has become the dream that our Olympic Athlete (Dimitry Raphael) experiences when he is struck by lightning and sent back in time. 

The process is on-going and we are all looking forward to getting into the rehearsal room to bring the play off the page. Only then can you really see what works and what doesn’t. Someone said that musicals aren’t finished – they are abandoned – and I would go along with that! We must have been through twenty drafts in the last two years – each one an improvement. You just have to keep open to change.

And now we have cast over 60 people in the show and it has a fantastic community feel about it, drawing on talent from many local amateur societies, a number of professional actors and singers, local children and students from Croydon College.

Composer Ian Rae will MD and s et designer extra-ordinaire and self confessed “Minack bore” (how can she call herself that!) Jill “Wiggy” Wilson will be designing the show. She has recently been part of the team restoring and creating the artwork on the Minack stone after the reconstruction of the dressing rooms. Peggy Mayes will work on Costume, Niall Monaghan on creating atmospheric lighting and Penny Parks, who for 35 years has run a successful Dance Academy in Purley will choreograph the show. (It should be noted that her charity – The Penny Parks Charitable Trust - has agreed to donate a sum to help fund Croydon College students whilst in Cornwall, giving them the chance of a lifetime.)

We are indebted to Phil Jackson for thinking outside the box and giving OLYMPUS a slot to co-incide with the arrival of the real Olympic Flame at Land’s End on May 19th.

So all very exciting to get to this point and we are also very pleased to have had OLYMPUS approved by the RSC as part of their Open Stages Project. We have attended workshops given by the RSC and picked up some great tips for bringing a new musical to production - all part of developing the links between professional and amateur theatre and audiences.

To watch our progress follow Ian’s Blog at www.olympusthemusical.co.uk or mine at www.anotherwaytheatre.co.uk

So do book your tickets for this epic new piece of musical theatre. We can’t think of a better venue in England to produce Olympus. We might just as well be producing it at Cape Sounion or on the slopes of Olympus themselves.

Chris Chambers
Writer & Director