SEED TO TREE: JAMES RANKIN

I used to perform in educational outreach tours, for years, and almost every-time I played multiple characters. It was a strong suit of mine; it was easy. However, I was younger, and have learned new things since; also the process was different and expedited. I used to put on the characters like masks, off and on, switch and play, a new voice and a new oversized physicality to show the kids a clean and clear difference. It's acting, but the rules and application are slightly different than how I approach things now. Now, I search for an honesty that comes from inside of me as opposed to an honesty that will be easily understood based off of audience expectations. I want to avoid creating an archetypal caricature - which is isn’t bad - but it doesn’t feel right to me anymore. I want to be grounded, and I want voices to feel real, inside out, not outside in. And to achieve that for this show, I knew i’d have to go about it differently.

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Craig Joseph
FANNING THE FLAMES OF CREATIVE DESIGN: AYRON LORD

Lighting is an interesting design element because it can serve so many different functions within a show but normally it feels relegated to a support role. Often time it is used simply to direct focus or emphasize a particular element of the show. More nuanced applications include setting mood, time of day, or weather.

During rehearsal several weeks ago, I was discussing my initial lighting thoughts when Craig mentioned that it is not often that lighting is thought of as a storytelling technique……

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Craig Joseph
SETTING THE STAGE: CRAIG JOSEPH

Whenever I direct a play, I write a one page conceptual statement about my “take” on the script, in an effort to get everyone - actors, designers, marketing folk, etc - on the same page. I usually do this weeks before our first rehearsal or design meetings.

This time has been a bit different. I held off on doing this until AFTER our first six months of exploring the play together. This was frustrating for some of the team at times because “what we were working toward” was a bit amorphous, but I can honestly say that what I’v written is miles away from what I would have written without the insights I’ve gathered from watching all of these individuals play over the past six months. My work as a director has been made richer and fuller because of them. So here’s where things are at as we move forward:

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Craig Joseph
NAVIGATING TRUTH AND FACTION: JEANNINE GASKIN

Lieutenant Dawes is one of the characters I play in Our Country's Good. What I find so interesting about Dawes is how flighty he is portrayed in the play. He has less than 10 lines and the only thing you learn about him is that he could care less about the convicts and is fascinated with the stars in the sky. He’s there basically to be a foil to those characters advocating that the prisoners put on a play. BUT…..

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Craig Joseph
AN ACTOR'S CHALLENGE: ABRAHAM ADAMS

I have said, half in jest, that the remainder of my career in theater will likely be playing some combination of racists, rapists, or both. This can be a challenge. Myriad questions arise: Should I be telling this person’s story? Why? Should any more space be made in the theater for perspectives that are almost exclusively from a white, colonizer lens? How does a white actor, cognizant of these questions, navigate through deep structural flaws and still keep his moral compass pointed true north?

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Craig Joseph
TRAVELING INTO RABBIT HOLES: MERIAH SAGE

One of my favorite directors, Ann Bogart, wrote: “What you do in rehearsal is visible in the product. The chief ingredient in rehearsal is real, personal interest. And interest is one of the few components in theatre that has absolutely nothing to do with artifice. You cannot fake interest. It must be genuine. Interest is your engine and it determines the lengths to which you will travel in the heat of engagement.”

My personal interest in this project propels me, eagerly, to rehearsal every other week. It also makes me hungry for knowledge. When I’m not at rehearsal, I spend a lot of time in my imagination and brain. I’m curious. I love to explore. I love to dig. Here are some of my favorite “rabbit hole” discoveries so far…

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Craig Joseph
DOODLING WHILE REHEARSING: MICAH HARVEY

There's a difference between reading the show to yourself quietly on the couch at home and hearing a group of talented actors bring emotion into characters. There lies the biggest thing that brings scenery and a show to life: emotion. When we read to ourselves - whether the news, a text message, or an email - we bring our own private emotional interpretation to the table. Theatre allows us to fine-tune this interpretation by bringing others into the discussion.

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Craig Joseph
MORE INTEGRAL TO THE PROCESS: MEGAN SLABACH

One of the distinctives of the OUR COUNTRY’S GOOD project is that designers have been part of the process from the very beginning, sitting in on our rehearsals monthly to see how what the actors are discovering informs their design work. One of the activities in which they’ve participated is a close, slow read of the script over several sessions, with everyone on the team providing INTERROGATIONS (questions we have about the text or characters) and OBSERVATIONS (things we find of interest that we want to note). This very slow, open dialogue is allowing the designers to iterate their work, based on new discoveries being made in the hall.

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Craig Joseph