- Published: 10 December 2011
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Mayhem and Mask: A Day Long Comedy and Physical Theatre Workshop
January 21st, 2012 at The Colonial Players, Inc.
108 East Street, Annapolis, MD 21401
Session 1, Physical Comedy, 9 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Session 2, Character from Mask 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
As performers, we are responsible for many tasks. First, we must tell a story, clearly and without bias; we agree to be players in a fated game. Second, we must fully inhabit a reality completely unlike our own and live in that moment onstage, we must be honest in the fated game. Third, we must use our minds and bodies in service of a vicious game for the audience's enjoyment... in short, we exist to serve them. Physical comedy is simply dynamic, ferocious play for the audience's sake. Masks heighten the element of "character" in the dynamic play with the audience. Masks also need a larger 'size' of performance from the actor. What results from this concoction of elements, adding physical comedy and mask to traditional actor responsibilities, is what the Renaissance age first called "the professional actor": performers with a sense of complicity with the audience as well as their fellow players, articulate bodies that can say much more than words alone, and intentionally crafted character realities that are instantly recognizable and relative to the watcher.
Over the course of 6 hours, we will train together in the realm of physical theatre, in the spirit of training the professional actor of the Renaissance. Our activities will include techniques and style work from the territories of clown, buffoon, mask performance and Commedia Dell'Arte. Largely ensemble-based, the classes will emphasize movement and devising. There will be extensive movement and shape making, and some preparatory body conditioning in warm up. Please come in neutral colored clothes, plain (not a lot of prints or images to distract the eye) comfortable tee shirts, etc, pants that are easy to move in and that give. No jeans please. We will probably work barefooted. In this way, we will sensitize our bodies to better hear and respond to our partners, revealing the comic play between us when there is no script.
Session 1 will begin at 9 a.m. and we will work until 12 p.m., when we will break for lunch and reflection- group lunch is encouraged! Session 2 will pick up at 2 p.m. and continue work done in Session 1 so it is ideal for attendees to come to both workshops. However, if this is not possible, students can attend either one of the workshops; they will "catch up" by watching their classmates. We will conclude the workshop at 5pm.
Workshop Registration
This workshop is free of charge for current members of The Colonial Players, Inc. Non-members may join us for the workshop for a fee of $15.00 which will include membership for the 2011-2012 membership year.
To register for the the workshop, please contact Fred Hallett by emailing This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
About Tara Cariaso
Tara is a Baltimore-based theatre artist that at times wears many different hats: performer, director, designer, movement instructor, producer, singer, writer, activist. She has worked with local companies such as The Chesapeake Shakespeare Company, Faction of Fools, Distilled Theatre Company, as well as companies beyond the Baltimore/Washington region, including The San Francisco Mime Troupe, The Dell’Arte Company and Sojourn Theatre Company. Tara has collaborated on more than 20 original works for the stage; she received her MFA from the Dell’Arte International School of Physical Theatre with an emphasis on Ensemble-generated work, her BA from UMBC in performance, and a certificate from the Sartori Centro Maschere e Strutture Gestuali where she studied with master sculptor Donato Sartori. She is the founder/director of Waxing Moon Masks Company. As educator for WM, she provides physical theatre education to performers of every age; as designer for WM, she produces handcrafted theatrical masks from start to finish. Descriptive of Tara's own values, Waxing Moon's mission is to use mask play and physical theatre to bring theatrical size, audacity and complicity with the audience back to contemporary stages. In 2012, WM begins work on their first original full-length play in mask which Tara will direct.