Winner of Three Awards at Cork Arts Theatre Writers Week 2010.
Testimonials and Images from UCD Viewpoints Workshop.
Testimonials and Images from our Viewpoints and Creative Composition workshop in University College Dublin. Students from the Master’s Degree in Drama and Performance and Theatre Directing recently participated in a day long workshop as part of their Issues and Perspective module.
Co-facilitated by Aoife Connolly and Andrea Scott.
“ I thoroughly enjoyed the experience. It was inspirational. I learnt some excellent techniques”. Noirin Barrett, Music Teacher
“ You both have a lovely gentle presence that was very encouraging. I loved that it got me to focus in being in the present.” Sinead Kelly, Student
” I enjoyed it all. Very well structured and presented.” Sylvia Beatley, Student
“ The workshop was very well facilitated. I had a clear idea of what it was I was participating in. I enjoyed the individual sections of the viewpoints and then the collaboration at the end. It felt very rewarding. Well worth it! “. Liz Tyndall, Teacher
” I found the workshop very enjoyable. The girls really know what they teach.” Andrea Hynes, Student.
“ ( I really enjoyed) using viewpoints with movement and text. Great day! Thank you!” . Barbara Hughes, Student.
“ The workshop was really insightful. I learned so much! I would very much like to introduce the practice to future classes I teach as well as my own work as an actor”. Alexandra Sevakian, Actor/Teacher
” An honour to work with such open teachers and such an open group”. Simon Toal, Actor/Writer
“ I really enjoyed getting up on our feet and ensemble playing. It was well paced and mediated by the facilitators.” Shadaan, Student.
” The workshop helped with a deeper understanding of how to build a healthy productive rehearsal environment and a sense of ensemble”. Vincent A. O’Reilly, Director/Playwright
” I really enjoyed the workshop . You both made me feel at ease and comfortable with your style and knowledge. Thank you. ” Bryan Hogan, Actor
” It was awesome..It has given a much greater sense of ensemble and lots of ideas for future rehearsals” Liam Creen, Student
“ The workshop was very enjoyable. In particular the concept of impulses, raising of awareness, choices and freedom. Removing ego (from the practise)” Simon Keogh, Actor
” The workshop expanded my awareness of using space and body in performance and is a more holistic approach to practise“. Lauren O’Toole, Actor
“The workshop really opens up your mind and body to both spacial awareness and (ensemble work). It would be wonderful if this lasted more than a module day”. Mary Hanson, Actress
To read more testimonials from past participants click here
Irish Theatre Magazine Review of Chasing Butterflies
Chasing Butterflies scoops three awards at Cork Arts Theatre Writers Week
Siobhán Donnellan’s new shortlisted one-act play Chasing Butterflies has won three awards at Corks Arts Theatre Writers Week.
Best Director Award for Aoife Connolly
Best Female Actor Award for Siobhán Donnellan
Best Male Actor Award for Martin Maguire
A Nomination for Best Male Actor for Fiachra O Dubhghaill
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Photography by Martin Maguire
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Writers Week ran from the 23rd-27th of November 2010. For more information see www.corkartstheatre.com
Irish Theatre Magazine Review of Memory Palace
Bluepatch’s Memory Palace is an experimental, experiential meditation on the protective, encrypting functions of memory. Appropriating Greek mythology, the piece imagines the Amazonian queen Hippolyta’s posthumous meeting with Mnemosyne, the goddess of memory. Encouraged by Mnemosyne (here called Mimi) to remember, Hippolyta (here called Lottie) struggles with her repression of how she stormed her former husband’s wedding to Phaedra. Memory Palace explores how we hide traumatic experiences from ourselves. It reminds us that, although the ephemeral nature an event may allow us to forget it, tangible traces inevitably remain.
Bluepatch staged a cyclical dream world, composed of what seemed initially to be incongruous fragments: sounds, images and objects. While Aoife Connolly (playing Lottie) sat centre-stage draped in white fabric spread widely and beautifully across the floor, images were projected on a screen behind her. The photographs (by Tamsyn Speight and Joanne Murray) and their arrangement were cumulatively evocative. Deliberately ambiguous at first, the pictures progressed towards clearer associations with romance and weddings. Each scene of the drama was a revised repetition, at the end of which an object – a clue – was attached to a string and suspended at eye level. Hence, the audience accompanied Lottie on her anxious journey towards revelation, gradually piecing together the vestiges of her painful experience.
Playing Faye (Phaedra), Andrea Scott inhabited the role of an irritatingly gleeful bride with ease. Skipping around the stage, her giddy energy was in stark opposition to Connolly’s sedate bewilderment, rooted to a seat centre-stage throughout the performance. Her stationary position could have curtailed a passionate performance. However, while Connolly’s facial expressions subtly conveyed Lottie’s frustration, occasionally her body took on a fitful jerking, vigorously dramatising the character’s inner conflict.
Along with changes in lighting, Aisling Quinn’s soulful, romantic notes punctuated the work’s repetitive sequences. She sang a 1920s standard famously performed by artists such as Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald and, more recently, Kate Bush: all surely influences on Quinn’s own melodic, crooning style. The song, ‘The Man I Love’, was aptly chosen; its hopeful lyrics were tragically at odds with the play’s subject. Distorted recordings of Quinn’s rendition of the song were also played sporadically to enhance the production’s dreamlike quality.
Through language, dramatic structure, movement and visual allusion, this work collapses time’s apparent linearity. During the opening moments, Lottie looked into the audience and announced “you’re here”. Mimi’s response came from behind the viewers: “I’ve always been here, since before.” As well as penetrating the fourth wall through the positioning of the actors, this exchange illuminated the vagueness of such temporal references as ‘always’ and ‘before’. The actors occasionally moved in slow-motion. Some dialogue and moments of silence were accompanied by a ticking sound. These features intensified the production’s contemplation of time.
By combining a variety of artistic elements, Memory Palace reaches beyond an exploration of memory and identity. The drama’s progression resembles the completion of a puzzle, linking objects, signs and traces to piece together buried memories. In doing so, it imaginatively examines the interconnections of dreams, symbolism and representation itself. This collaborative ensemble has created intelligent, truly inspiring theatre.
Siobhán O’Gorman is currently completing a doctoral research project on gender and the canon in contemporary theatre at the National University of Ireland, Galway.
Memory Palace by Jane Madden and creative team
26 – 27 October 2010
Produced by Bluepatch Productions
In Nuns Island Theatre, Galway
Set, lighting and costume: a collaborative effort
Visual Artists: Tamsyn Speight and Joanne Murray
Music: Aisling Quinn
With: Aoife Connolly, Andy Crowe and Andrea Scott
Two days left to Opening Night…
Chasing Butterflies shortlisted for Cork Arts Theatre Playwright Award
Chasing Butterflies, a new play by Siobhán Donnellan.
Directed by Aoife Connolly
Annie Caryford and Big Story Hannigan survive to retell their story,to retrace their tragic steps of a faithful night.Two seperate lives caught in a vortex of guilt and shame.What happens when the spirit of the dead become more vibrant and alive than those they leave behind?
Cast – Siobhán Donnellan (Winner of the Outstanding Actor Award, New York Fringe Festival 2007) Martin Maguire and Fiachra O Dubhghaill.
Sound Design by Alan Meaney
For two performances only;
Tuesday 23rd and Saturday 27th November at 8pm,
Winning play will be announced on Saturday 27th Nov.
For bookings contact Cork Arts Theatre Box Office on (021) 450 5624 or for more information please visit www.corkartstheatre.com
Photos from Memory Palace, collaborative project for Galway Theatre Festival 2010.
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Photography by Visual Artists Tamsyn Speight and Joanne Murray
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Stagedreaction Review of Memory Palace in this years Galway Theatre Festival
November 1, 2010 Reviewed by Barry Houlihan
Blue Patch productions staged their work-in-progress piece, The Memory Palace, as part of the third annual Galway Theatre Festival. Using characters and stories from Greek mythology, the playwright Jane Madden strives to explore the realms of our memory, our identity and the uncharted regions of our psyche. When we die we cross into the Underworld and are given a choice; to drink from the river Lethe and forget all our pain or to drink from the river Mnemsoyne and remember everything. Lottie chooses to remember but at what cost?The black-box setting of Nuns Island theatre aptly mimics the purgatorial scene between memory and between realities. Aoife Connolly, who plays Lottie, the woman who is lost in time and place, is still and frozen, like a seated sphinx. “You are here”, she half acknowledges, half questions Mimi. “I was always here, since before” This exchange places the emphasis on what has already transpired, past actions that are beyond recollection by Lottie.
As she drinks the water of the river Mnemsoyne and memory becomes reticent, there is purpose to the goading of Andy Crowe’s Mimi, in forcing Lottie to remember, regardless of the pain this will bring. The past and thoughts, the working of Lottie’s mind are relayed on the screen projected behind the character, a blurred sequence of images that hint at what transpired. The imagery of the clothes force the realization of a ruined wedding, a distorted union; “My dress, his suit, his tie, that he wore for me”.
Aisling Quinn’s beautiful vocals and the staggered entrance on-stage of Andrea Scott forces a flashback like effect which presents a separate possibility; that the happy ending and wedding of Lottie is not her memory at all, but that of Scott’s character, Faye, who married the love and groom of Lottie. These overlapping lives and concentric stories blur the narrative and question who in fact owns the story.
Bluepatch’s production is extremely interesting and current. It has traces of works that trace the female reawakening to a lost and broken past, as Olwen Fouere hauntingly did in Sodome My Love and it also has parallels with works with other exciting groups such as The Company who explore the identity and memory of the modern form.
It is ironic that as a memory play, what Madden chooses to leave out and chooses to forget provides more of the story than we actually see.
Barry Houlihan is theatre archivist and researcher in NUIG .
Barry writes a blog on various aspects on culture and society in Ireland. Issues relating to history, theatre, current affairs, arts and archives are always up for discussion. Check it out at www.stagedreaction.wordpress.com
Memory Palace in Galway Theatre Festival 2010
Bluepatch Productions Presents MEMORY PALACE in this years Galway Theatre Festival 2010
The devised piece explores t
he relationship between memory and identity and is a special collaboration between a creative ensemble of actors, visual artists, a musician and playwright.
Cast – Aoife Connolly, Andrea Scott, Andy Crowe and Musician Aisling Quinn.
Visual Artists – Tamsyn Speight and Joanne Murray.
Playwright – Jane Madden.
Based in the Greek myth of Mnemosyne; the goddess of memory;
When we die we cross into the Underworld and are given a choice; to drink from the river Lethe and forget all our pain or to drink from the river Mnemsoyne and remember everything.
Lottie chooses to remember but at what cost……….
Opens Tuesday 26th of October at 8pm in Nuns Island Theatre and runs till Wednesday 27th at 1pm
For further information and booking please contact 091569777 or see www.galwaytheatrefestival.com or www.bluepatchproductions.com






