MUSIC AS METHOD: ABRAHAM ADAMS

The complexity of creating a character cannot be overstated. Similar to other complex endeavors, there is much that remains unseen by those who witness the finished product. My favorite analogy is that of shipbuilding. An ocean liner or an old sailing vessel in the vastness of the sea is a thing of beauty. Consideration is rarely given to what it took to create such majesty.

Music is a scaffold that can be utilized in the process of character creation. By design, music is intended to quickly find an emotional and spiritual core. Songs provide instantaneous transport to vivid memory, inner life, or atmosphere. For myself, I find music provides freedom from the burdens of heady intellectual processes like script analysis or using imprecision of words to determine “character actions”.

Read More
Craig Joseph
OUT OF MY MIND: MERIAH SAGE

In rehearsal a few weeks ago, I stood on the edge of the room, warmed up my actors’ ideal center, and crossed the “Threshold”into the playing space with two of my fellow ensemble members. The air inside that invisible membrane was different. What I found that day was a swirl of joy, focused playfulness, and connectedness with my fellow actors. It’s moments like these that I live for in theatre. I’m out of my “mind” and fully present with all my cells, my senses, and my imagination. I fully trust that we are agreeing to believe and play in the same imagined world. It’s a rush.

Read More
Craig Joseph
ON ROBERT SIDEWAY: BRETT RADKE

In Our Country’s Good, I play two characters, Captain David Collins and Robert Sideway. Both characters are based on real life people, and it has been intriguing to dig into their stories through history as well as through the world of the play. Where do these two versions of Collins and Sideway overlap and when do they not? Today, I would like to share a bit about Robert Sideway.

Read More
Craig Joseph
WHO IS LT. RALPH CLARK?: SCOTT ESPOSITO

It’s always interesting playing a real life character. In Our Country’s Good, I play Lt. Ralph Clark, a British officer in the Royal Marines. Born in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1755 or 1762 (there is some disagreement), he enlisted in the Royal Marines and fought in the American Revolutionary War and was part of the “First Fleet”, which transported convicts to a penal colony in what is now known as Australia.

Additionally, he kept detailed diaries of his experiences of the early days of the British colonization of Australia. Included in his diaries are accounts of his homesickness for his wife, Betsey Alicia; his despair at the conditions and lack of food and other provisions in the new land in which he finds himself; and his pleasure witnessing the punishment of the convicts.

While all of this information is helpful, I am not tasked with playing Lt. Ralph Clark in a historical reenactment of British colonization. Instead, I am creating the character of Lt. Ralph Clark that lives on the pages of Our Country’s Good, as imagined by the playwright.

Read More
Craig Joseph
ALL ABOUT DABBY: NATALIE KERN

The main character I get to explore is Dabby Bryant. One of the things that interests me about this play is that many of the characters we portray were pulled from actual officers or convicts in the "First Fleet" of convict ships to Australia. However, while the characters are pulled from historical fact, the play takes many liberties in changing details, omitting details, or fabricating histories about these characters. It's been fascinating to dig in and find what was historical truth, and what is only true in the world of our play.

Read More
Craig Joseph
GIVING & RECEIVING: LANA SUGARMAN

My introduction to the Michael Chekhov technique was in my first year of grad school in 2018 at Kent State University with Fabio Polanco. Over the course of two years, we learned and applied various exercises, from Crossing the Threshold to the Four Brothers, Qualities of Movement, and Psychological Gesture. Because the MFA program was for Returning Professionals, many of us were attempting to break down, untangle, and perhaps even define our unique approaches to acting, so that in theory, we could share that pedagogy with others. While digging into my past process, I was also being offered a whole new set of tools that could lead to inspired performance.

In summer of 2021 I attended the Great Lakes Michael Chekhov Consortium. After a year of pandemic life and teaching theatre history online, spending a week in play and joyful connection with other artists was a gift. The intensive reinforced my enthusiasm and curiosity.

Read More
Craig Joseph
ON THE JOURNEY: BENJAMIN GREGG

The rehearsal process for Our Country’s Good has been unlike any other project that I’ve been involved with previously. Many times, the preparation before and even during rehearsals can feel like a very solitary endeavor. You spend countless hours locked in a room memorizing lines or conducting research about your character or the play in its totality. There’s only so much time to actually play because there’s inevitably an emphasis placed on shaping a show, finding the beats, and capitalizing on the major focal points of the production.

Read More
Craig Joseph