Don’t miss Shipley Street Arts Festival!

The weekend of June 26-28th is the Shipley Street Arts Festival, co-ordinated by our good friends over at Q20 Theatre. There’s lots of activities and performances for all tastes and ages, many of them taking the river and canal as a watery theme…  We’ve got a hand in various events including the water flume demonstration near Shipley Library (from noon on Saturday 27th), and the duck race from Baildon Woodbottom Working Men’s Club (1pm, same day), and on Sunday 28th there’s a special screening of our short film Wading to Shipley at the Ibis Hotel. Multi-Story Water‘s main contribution to proceedings, though, will be this:

SevenBridges-leaflet-HiResThis new, interactive promenade performance will be directed by Simon Brewis, and performed by David Smith and Lynsey Jones. All three were part of our original, 2012 Multi-Story Water performances, and we’re delighted to have them back for this project. The Seven Bridges include some obvious ones and some less obvious ones, so do come along and discover the trail… (it’ll end up not very far from where it starts, you’ll be reassured to know!)

Meanwhile, on the very same weekend, just a few miles downstream, the Leeds Waterfront Festival is taking place. So to create a bit of a conceptual “bridge” between the two festivals — and between Shipley and Leeds — we are also presenting this:

SevenBridges-leaflets2Now that’s actually a photograph from Shipley (Amber Wharf flats viewed from under Junction Bridge, at Dockfield) but the designer liked the picture, and it sort of works for Leeds too… where there’s a whole lot of new build flats by the water!

Anyway, the Leeds piece will be performed by Steve Bottoms, who will be supported musically by the very wonderful Eddie Lawler (the Steve and Eddie partnership is now a recurring one, and also dates back to our 2012 MSW performances). In theory, it’s possible to see both Seven Bridges pieces in the same day, if you do Shipley at 11.30am and Leeds at 3.30pm. Or you can do them different days. You don’t have to do both, of course, but they will, we hope, complement each other in interesting ways… And it is all free, so you can’t go wrong!

 

 

Seven Bridges, Two Cities

The Shipley Street Arts Festival is coming up at the end of June (26th-28th), and this year is taking the river and canal as a linking theme. We’re delighted to announce that the Multi-Story Water project is working actively with Q20 Theatre to make this happen. In case you’re wondering whether there is any “street art” in Shipley, well lookee here…

DSC_0320A genuine (as far as I can tell) piece of Banksy graffiti, tucked away on the footpath that goes up to Gallows Bridge – across the canal – just up the hill from where Aldi and McDonalds sit by Bradford Beck. In case you don’t know his work, Banksy is a famously anonymous, Bristol-based artist whose graffiti has become internationally renowned. People sometimes rip down entire walls so as to be able to flog things he’s painted on them… This particular metal panel looks like its secure enough where it is, though. I’m not sure how long the painting has been there, but it’s tucked away in this wonderfully unassuming location… Here’s the image in close-up:

DSC_0318OK, that’s all I have to say about Banksy. But Gallows Bridge will be featuring as one of Seven Bridges in the Shipley area that will be linked by a looping promenade performance that we are making for the Street Arts Festival. I’m pleased to confirm that this will be performed by David Smith and Lynsey Jones (both of whom co-created and performed in our original Multi-Story Water tours back in 2012), and will be directed by Simon Brewis (who directed them). Always nice to keep things in the family…

Meanwhile, though, we are getting delusions of grandeur. Because simultaneously with the water-themed Street Arts Festival in Shipley, the Leeds Waterfront Festival will be running the same weekend. So to provide a kind of conceptual “bridge” between the two festivals, we will also be presenting another performance — with the same title, Seven Bridges — in Leeds. If you’re really keen, you might want to see both… (!)

DSC_0285This is me being anonymously artsy (if not banksy) while researching the Leeds end the other week. That’s Leeds Bridge you can see reflected in the plate glass — the crossing where the city began. Leeds’s whole history was built around the river, which is why it’s so strange that the city has sort of turned its back on the waterfront: you can live there for years and barely even be aware of its existence…

DSC_0304Here’s another of the Seven Bridges — Victoria Bridge, which was built (unsurprisingly) in the 19th Century to replace a longstanding ferry service. It’s one of the major road links to Leeds station … right beside Bridgewater Place — the unnecessarily tall building better known as “the Dalek”! But even though there’s a clue in the name — Bridge — water — place — you can drive across Victoria Bridge a thousand times and barely even notice that you’re crossing a river…

Now… notice the white, ‘canal style’ railings to the right of the shot above. That’s because this image was taken at the junction where the River Aire (aka the Aire-Calder Navigation) connects with the Leeds-Liverpool Canal. And here it is…

DSC_0303… the footbridge that crosses the end of Lock 1 on the Leeds-Liverpool… the very, very beginning of the 109 miles of canal, that goes through Shipley and all the way to the Mersey… Meanwhile, if you turn through 180 degrees and move upstream on the Aire a little (also in the direction of Shipley, of course…) you come to this…

DSC_0298This is the brand new entrance to Leeds Station, currently being built by Carillion. I like the sign on it: “this is civil engineering“! (as opposed to uncivil engineering…?) Notice that because space is so tight around the station, the building materials are having to be floated upstream on pontoons (in the foreground of the shot) in order to get to the site. Notice also the angle this shot is taken from… I was standing on – you guessed it – a bridge. Granary Wharf Bridge, to be precise — quite a new, modern one… That’s the western end of our Seven Bridges route… and here’s (almost) the eastern end…

DSC_0256This is the entrance to the weir and lock at Crown Point (Clarence Dock), with the Crown Point Bridge arcing overhead… another road bridge that you can merrily drive across without ever noticing the river… And in the shot below is the weir itself, viewed a little further downstream from Knights Bridge (footbridge)…

DSC_0261Notice the black holes in the middle of the shot here. Not technically a “bridge” perhaps, but this is where Meanwood Beck enters the Aire… a rather lovely beck that flows down through Meanwood Park and its attractive, surrounding valley, but then disappears into underground culverts before it gets close to the city centre (shades of Bradford…).

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This is Knights Bridge itself, viewed from the Clarence Dock side, and looking across to the building that operates as the headquarters for the Canal and River Trust in Leeds (hub of the CRT Northeastern partnership, if that means anything to you). Some very nice people work there… This bridge, as you can tell, is pretty modern, but I need to do some more research about it…

What strikes me here is the proliferation of white-painted metal, which even extends to these cage-like railings in front of the CRT building itself…

DSC_0262I like the little bit of signage here, pointing you to the next bridge (“hey, you’ve just crossed the river, fancy doing it again in the opposite direction?”). But there’s no shortage of signage in the vicinity of the river in Leeds… Check these out, for instance…

DSC_0239DSC_0242DSC_0251DSC_0272 DSC_0243Everywhere you go, it seems, you’re being warned that you’re on private property… that you are walking at the permission and indulgence of property owners… that you are on CCTV… There’s no sense in Leeds at all that the banks of a river might be public space, for anyone to walk along. The riverside paths are constantly broken up, interrupted by buildings or private spaces that you can’t enter. There is no “ancient right of way” here, in the way that there is in Shipley… And then the city wonders why people don’t engage more with the waterfront…

O Banksy, where art thou…?

 

Coming up at next month’s Saltaire Festival…

sALTS wATERS JPEGThis informal performance event will feature a combination of music and storytelling… Eddie Lawler, “the bard of Saltaire”, will perform a selection of his own original songs, focusing particularly on watery ones such as “Bradford Beck” and “Bradford Canal”, and showcasing a brand new song, “Little Beck”. In case you’re wondering, Little Beck is a very short tributary river that flows into the River Aire up at Hirst Wood, after flowing down through the overgrown grounds of Milner Field — the ruined mansion near Gilstead built by Titus Salt Jr. (who had the beck dammed to create boating lake for his guests). Meanwhile, I (Steve Bottoms) will be interspersing Eddie’s songs with a selection of stories and ‘spoken word’ material, all relating to places along the way between Saltaire mill village and Milner Field (via the Aire, the canal, Little Beck and Loadpit Beck). Salt’s Waters is a one-off, ‘work in progress’ presentation of material currently being developed for a downloadable audio guide of the same title, which will take listeners on a looped tour from Saltaire to Milner Field and back.

We hope you can join us!

Into the Groove… (Collated Feedback)

Collected below is the written feedback that has been sent to us (mostly via email) from some of the people who attended our recent, July performances of Multi-Story Water’s three, interlocking tour routes. Also, do check out the lovely, illustrated blog piece by another audience member Paul Marfell, which he tweeted us the link to. Plus there’s our twitter feed itself, which includes a number of other comments and photo snapshots from audience members.

None of the people quoted below were previously known to us (or at least, not to me), so this is all genuine public feedback. To compare with the feedback we received after our previous, September performances, click here.

* * *

“I just want to say how much I and my friends enjoyed last Saturday’s Multi-Story Water event.
I really didn’t know what to expect, but was delighted with the experience. The whole thing was so interesting, informative, and well thought out, taking us to places we had no idea about, even though we are frequent visitors to Saltaire. The actors were utterly convincing, with humour and pathos. The barge trip would have been a lovely event all on its own. Impressively well-organised too, and all of it free of charge !!!!   Thanks again.”  — Penny Heaton

“Just a quick note to say how much we enjoyed the performance last Friday and that it was a great way to spend a summers evening. Please pass on my sincerest thanks to all the actors and supporting staff in providing a great piece of informative entertainment.”   — Terry Shroder

“Hi. Just to feedback from the ‘Green Route’ last week. A brilliant show. I really enjoyed every minute. Great actors. Great content. So interesting and moving. Great script and such a brilliant concept. I went on last year’s walk through the mill and to the brewery [i.e. September’s Red Route]. That was good, but this was even better. Well done. I hope you can do some more next year.”   — Rachel Goulcher


“Just wanted to say thanks for a wonderful weekend of tours around the Saltaire / Shipley area. The actors were very talented. I didn’t know what would happen next! It taught me things I didn’t know about the area I’ve lived in 30+ years! The boat ride was a special treat. Loved the singing, stories, and tea and biscuits made us feel welcomed! Amazing that it was all free! Thanks again.” — Helen Scott

“Thankyou to everyone involved for the Red Route walk on Friday evening in Shipley. It was an interesting mix of voices and points of view. I have lived in Shipley since 1971, but it showed me things and told me things I didn’t know. I haven’t even got memories of the flood of 2000, which was clearly a dramatic event. . . The actors were engaging, and the stewards unobtrusively kept us in line — it was a good experience, enhanced by taking place on a lovely evening. . .  There is often a heron standing on the weir along the river, and I’m glad to say that there it was, on cue, as we stood on the footbridge. . . What a great idea – and finished off with a generous present of Saltaire beer! I shall look out for that now. Thanks again and best wishes for your future work.” — Anne Wooff

“Hello, I came on the multi-story event last week, on all three stages. I just want to say how much I enjoyed it, I thought the quality of the acting was absolutely outstanding, and I have to say unexpected. Very often these things can be a bit “am dram”. The piece about the Burma Railway [a reference to Billy Glover’s POW experiences] had me in tears. One of Lynsey Jones’ characters said “I don’t vote”, and someone next to me said “Doesn’t vote??????”, because the character was so real to her. The barge trip was very nice too and I enjoyed the singing. I learned quite a bit about the area that I hadn’t known before. I suppose I ought to try for a bit of criticism as well. The video of Bradford Beck would have been very interesting in its own right but was ignored in the barge. The beer at the end was a lovely idea, but maybe should have had some plastic glasses for those who didn’t want a pint – and people who don’t want to drink out of bottles, and I felt it would have been better if it could have been merged into a final scene somehow, so we could watch while drinking. Oh, and it would have been nice for the all-day audience to have been warned to bring a snack. These things are really so trivial as to be hardly worth remarking, but well, you did ask. Thank you for a truly excellent day. Congratulations to everyone who made it possible.” — Jim Lawton

*

Responding to the letter above… Thanks Jim for those thoughtful pieces of constructive criticism. We did indeed ask for feedback, and you make some good points, especially about the distribution of the beer (but hey, it was free!). And while I like the idea of integrating the beer into the final scene, I think it’s probably best to save the festive spirit for the end, given that what “Lynda” has to say about the recent experiences of Lower Holme residents is not exactly celebratory. Your point about the video on the boat ride is a very interesting one… We left that to speak for itself, so that people could pay attention to it or not, according to taste (and position in the boat). But you might be interested to know that I have just completed an edit of a stand-alone, 12 minute film using that very footage, which will shortly be available to view on this website.

And finally… If we were awarding a “Star Prize” for the most thoughtful and detailed response we received, Jim’s would probably be runner-up, but the award would have to go to this letter from William Hird:

Dear Multi Story Water team,

Thank you so much for a wonderful Friday evening on your tour.  It was really unexpectedly special and magical, with a (good) increasing sense of unreality towards the end, particularly when the free beers appeared. The whole event was superbly well organised and not only the actors and the hosts on the barge but all the stewards did a great job too. Many thanks to all. The recreation of local residents stories was very powerful and you have clearly done an amazing work in reducing people’s accounts and reminiscences to short extracts that make a connected sequence.

I asked about whether there was a danger of people’s stories being ‘gentrified’ or made slightly unreal by being reproduced for ‘tourists’.  This was because it was different from drama based on imaginary characters even if set in a real period world as for example one might find at a heritage property.  On reflection of course people like their stories to be told, and some of it (especially the old man whose brother did not recognize him after his wartime suffering) was very powerful.

I was also impressed by the simple but effective costume changes you managed to squeak in.  Its surprising how even when there’s no other sets – apart from the real places of course! – this is very effective in helping believe-ability.  The use of hats for council staff when we were in Roberts Park was neat but at this stage for me Paul’s red T-shirt was a bit ‘distracting’ – too out of kilter.  That’s a very small point overall. There is so much history in that area I dare say a similar sort of walk related to the buildings might also be possible…. Also, in the last few years I’ve got to know the abandoned bits of canal round Nottingham and am so glad we have one that still works.

William Hird

*

In response to William’s point about “gentrification” (which he countered for himself, anyway), I responded to point out that the performances were primarily aimed at local people rather than “tourists”… He said that perhaps this had been the wrong word – and that he himself was only coming from as far away as Leeds (although it did occur to me to wonder, after the fact, if doing this in July did mean that some summer holiday-makers from further afield, visiting Saltaire, might have seen the flyers at Salts Mill and come along…?). For myself, I think maybe the key point is that the stories are always told in the proximity of where the actual people who told them to us live and work… It’s not that the story is being taken off and turned into “art” in some high cultural context — it’s being witnessed in situ, with all that entails. But there is of course an interesting debate to be had about this, more broadly…

William’s points about costuming are also very well made… and it’s interesting to note that Paul seems to have decided the same thing about that red T-shirt, because it didn’t make another appearance all weekend (the cast were wearing their own clothes, as narrators for Green Route).

Anyway, to close… (and to finally explain the heading of this post) … Here is a poem that William appended to his email, in response to our Blue Route canal tour. I think it’s particularly apposite becuase the metaphor of “grooves” is appropriate to many aspects of these performances — e.g. the grooves in the grass where people have made “desire lines” where there’s no path; the tracks we made as a group moving through the locality; or, less happily, the grooves in that oppressive metal fencing at Lower Holme… Anyway, blah blah blah… Over to William.

*

P.S. As I mentioned on the barge, I especially like the grooves you see on the old canal bridges, and wrote about these years ago.  Perhaps a bit depressing – but your work helps record the memories and keep it all alive.

The Groove 

stone cut by wire
rock cut by steel
scored line by line
grooved, groined and ribbed
deep chasms chased
by hawsers wear
slicing the abutment
old bridge, ribbed rock
a testament, a witness
to ghostly wires, ghostly barges
to lines stretched taut
pulling boats on the old canal
as the horses turned the corner
from the confines of the archway
back onto wider the towpath
the groove is made.

the canal is a groove
the water courses

my street is a groove
the terraced houses

the city is made of grooves
cars course the ribbing

our lives run in the grooves
pulled along, so slowly
we make our grove in the world
and under the gloomy archway
and into the wider meadows
we leave our groove in the earth.

William Hird 07.05.2001

 

 

Some Miraculous Moments…

After a long working week, it’s Friday evening and finally an opportunity to reflect back on last weekend, and our second mounting of Multi-Story Water‘s mobile performances. We were blessed with fine weather, and some miraculous, unrehearsed moments such as when this magnificent heron appeared on Hirst Weir right at the climax of our final run of Green Route on Sunday…

Actors Rob Pickavance, Lynsey Jones and Paul Fox. (Photo courtesy Milan Govedarica.)

Actors Rob Pickavance, Lynsey Jones and Paul Fox. (Photo courtesy Milan Govedarica.)

I didn’t witness this myself (I was over on the boat getting ready to perform in the last showing of Blue Route), but I’m told this sublime moment was shortly preceded by a ridiculous one, as some prancing horseman went galloping past in the water, preening himself at the audience like some wannabe Mr. Darcy. These are the joys of live, outdoor theatre…

One of the hardy audience members who undertook all three legs of the tour on the Friday night, and then e-mailed a response to us, described the experience as “really unexpectedly special and magical, with a (good) increasing sense of unreality towards the end, particularly when the free beers appeared!” You can’t do much better than that for feedback, but I can also say without big-headedness that know exactly what he means… That’s because, even as one of the people who did most to devise this event, I found that it continually took me by surprise, as the light and weather conditions interacted differently with the acting and narratives to create different moods and conditions. And Friday night’s Red Route, in particular (i.e. “towards the end” for the respondent above), was just glorious… It had been a scorching hot week, but the cool of the evening was great for walking even as we benefited from the last of the golden sunshine. We had a great turn-out for the walk that evening, and sights I’d never seen before – as when, walking through Victoria Mills with “Andrew Mason”, we were confronted with a courtyard full of residents basking in the sunshine (when 9 times out of 10 that whole intererior area of the Mill complex seems deserted). Actor Rob Pickavance took this brilliantly in his stride, hailing the residents and even briefly name-checking one of them he’d previously met. It looked, for all the world, like he really did own the place (and indeed, another e-mail respondent who had not seen Green Route before Red – and thus not encountered Rob before – admits to having briefly thought this was Andrew Mason…). The journey onward from there that evening did indeed seem to become “increasingly unreal” as we journeyed across Baildon Bridge to hear stories of the flood chaos in 2000 (on this balmy summer evening with the river at minimum flow!), and then along that broken riverside path towards Lower Holme, to hear the bleak story of the residents there… Cutting our way along that path, through all the overgrown summer riverbank foliage (I keep seeing purple amongst green!) was just amazing… And in a sense all we’d done was to “frame” this pre-existing space as an “event” in this particular moment in time… Of course on other runs of Red Route during the weekend, as solid cloud cover set in, the whole atmosphere was much less golden — a cool wind started whipping at us (visible in the play of Lynsey’s skirt in the shot below, again taken by Milan on Sunday afternoon), and that too seemed eerily appropriate to the tales of mill demolition and lost community that come towards the end of the tour… Yet it made for a very different audience experience!

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Rob Pickavance as “Nigel” at Baildon Weir… (heron also visible here on occasion!)

When we mounted MSW first, last September, I think all of us were in too much of a state of panic about it (fresh off the drawing board, downpours threatening, would anybody come, would anybody like it?) to really take in these subtleties. So one of the really valuable things for me personally in reviving the piece was being able to take a bit of a step back and really see what we’d made… and becoming more aware of all the environmental and atmospheric factors that seemed to variously interact with the performances was very much a part of this for me. I mean, one could have expected this to be the case, given that we’d made a piece about environmental themes, but it’s a very different thing to know something theoretically as opposed to really experiencing it physically and emotionally…

july 2013 025Completing a little trilogy of weir pictures, here’s Saltaire weir at the start of Green Route, showing clear the very low water flow (including a whole central chunk where there’s hardly anything going across it at all). This was another strange thing about reviving the show this July… Last year, which turned out to be the wettest on record in the UK, the conditions were generally soggy and green, and the stories of flooding seemed quite immediate (indeed, there was major flooding elsewhere in Yorkshire, on the Ouse, within two days of our last performance!). This year, July had mostly consisted of a heatwave up to the point of us performing… the ground was parched, grass barely green at all in places, but you could see this as the other hydrological extreme that “Bradford Council” warns us (in the “hydro” scene at this weir) may occur more frequently with a changing climate… Indeed, playing “Neill Morrison” in this section, Paul was able to throw in a reference to something I’d heard on the radio — that this July was on track to be the driest since 1825! (Of course that probably all changed with the thunderstorms we’ve had in the week since the performances — but even these are arguably indicative of a change towards more “tropical” weather…)

july 2013 028Leaving aside the scary stuff, there’s also the fact that – it being July – there was a lot more cricket on than when we staged the piece in September. In Roberts Park, we several times had to move the “Billy Wizz” moment from where it had been rehearsed – on the bench outside the cricket pavilion – because the benches were full of cricketers! This minor inconvenience was more than offset, however, by the presence of Billy Wizz himself (groundsman Billy Ricketts), who was invariably present watching the games, and would interact briefly with “himself” as Paul came past in role…  “Eh up Billy Wizz!” Billy really could be an actor himself, becuase these interventions were always perfectly judged… just enough to “authenticate” the actor as playing a real person who was supportive of what we were doing (Simon’s word – thanks Simon!)… and still more important, Billy’s comic timing was invariably perfect! Miraculous moments all…

It would be remiss of me not to mention here, though, that Paul’s timing was spot on as well. One of the things that really transformed the performances this year was his presence in the cast… Which is not to suggest that there was anything wrong with Richard Galloway’s origination of the same roles last year (Richard did a great job in creating and shaping a whole range of characters during the devising process), but Paul brought with him a real confidence – even a certain swagger! – about ad-libbing in character. He could also do this more naturally since he’s a Yorkshireman himself, whereas Richard (an Irishman) needed to stick more carefully to the rehearsed “voices”. If I was a textual purist (and OK, I did write/edit the text…), I might quibble about Paul’s sometimes liberal interpretation of what was on the page — and to be fair to him he’d had only a very limited time to learn a lot of lines while also rehearsing the parts from scratch. But what he lost in “verbatim” accuracy he more than made up for in the sense of characterisation, and his interaction with those around him… always there with an apt quip or sharp comment, and (as “Philip”) mercilessly teasing Lynsey (as “Lynda”) along the riverside walk between Victoria Mills and Baildon Bridge… He’s really quite brilliant at this kind of semi-improvisational performance, in which the distinction between what’s scripted and what’s spontaneous at times became invisible (almost!) even to me.

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Paul Fox as “Philip”, showing the audience his house – just across the river from Victoria Mills on Red Route.

The other new addition to the cast was Rob Pickavance, who brought something very different — but equally fresh and welcome — to the roles he inherited from David Smith (who, by the way, turned up to watch Green Route on Sunday morning – and apparently enjoyed it very much, while also finding the experience slightly strange!). Rob is a very experienced actor (notice I didn’t say “old” – the issue of his age became a running joke among the company, which Rob did nothing to discourage!), and brought a classicist’s craft to his delivery of the material… deftly paced lines, beautifully textured distinction in characterisation. I feel like some of that is captured in this shot below, taken during his brilliant “David Attenborough” moment during Green Route… it’s almost Prospero in The Tempest…

july 2013 036Although it should be noted that Prospero is arguably somewhat bonkers, and Rob also went whole hog with this in his creation of “Steve” – another of his narrator figures towards the end of Green Route…

20130721_174037“Steve” was originally “David” – named for one of the residents on the Coach Road estate whose words the character uses (and also for David Smith, who contributed some lines of his own last year) – but since the character is very much a composite of different people’s voices/comments, Simon proposed changing the name so as to “legitimate” the character going off in directions that would be difficult if he was based on a real person. Crazy Steve (named, I blush to say, after me) was an inspired creation — completely barking mad, laughing like a fool, and yet somehow maintaining the vocal technique needed to project every word with perfect clarity from ground level up to the footbridge the audience was standing on (one of the significant blocking changes from last year). “Steve” injected a fantastic bit of manic energy into Green Route just at the moment, towards the end, where it is most needed… Genius.

Rob Pickavance as Billy Glover, at his "little tree".

Rob Pickavance as Billy Glover, at his “little tree”.

It would be remiss for me not to point out, however, that Rob’s own favourite moment, again on Green Route, was getting to play Billy Glover, the 92-year-old former footballer, former prisoner-of-war, who lives on Troutbeck Avenue. This had been a key moment in David’s performance last year too, and Rob didn’t disappoint with a quite different but pitch perfect rendition that, again, had spectators dabbing away tears. And one of those spectators was Billy Glover himself who, in another of those miraculous moments over the course of the weekend, came out of his house on Saturday afternoon to start interacting with Rob… even correcting him on some of the details! (I’ve since asked Billy for clarification on this, since the script has it that he was 8 stone when he came back from the war, and yet the real Billy told Rob he was 6 stone 2! Apparently, the latter was his weight when he left the POW camp in Burma… and he’d got back to 8 stone 7 when he got back to England… still well below his “normal” weight of 11 stone.) Rob coped brilliantly with being knocked off stride in his monologue, and I did manage to persuade Billy (who had his arm round my waist in a vice-like grip the whole time!) to let him finish without further interruptions… Once Billy started really listening to his own words coming back in Rob’s performance, he was clearly moved by it (I could feel it – he still had hold of me…), and at the end he declared to everyone that “every word of what he said is true!” To which Rob responded, “that’s because it’s your words, Billy”. And Billy went to give him a big hug. The audience was clearly caught up in this impromptu moment of metatheatre too… And then somehow Lynsey and Paul had to follow that

july 2013 041And that, of course, leaves Lynsey… Our only returning performer this year (unless you count me and Eddie on the boat, and that’s a whole other blog entry… maybe). And this was one of the really wonderful things about doing it again, because Lynsey really seemed to have grown into her roles since last year — she knew the material, she understood how the show worked, and she’d clearly matured further as a performer too. Her performances last year were great, but she sometimes seemed slightly in the shadow of David, in particular – as the most experienced of that original cast. This time she was able to command things because, goddamnit, this was her show… Rob and Paul were very strong, but she matched them pound for pound (improvisational spontaneity with Paul, especially on Red Route, subtlety of characterisation to match Rob’s – especially as “Jill” and “Sarah” on Green Route). Indeed, one friend said that she felt Red Route in particular was Lynsey’s show, that she pulled it along seamlessly from start to finish… And what I always loved, especially, was Lynsey’s “Lynda” finally coming into her own during the climax at Lower Holme… banging that “Mandale” fence with contempt, twirling in the wilderness asking why nothing had been built… filling in the goddamn pothole outside Margaret’s back gate…

Of course, Margaret herself also became a performer of sorts! One of our greatest supporters through this whole thing (despite walking difficulties, she even came out for Green Route – as well as Red – with her grandson James, and loved it!), she allowed us to store the Saltaire Brewery beer in her house to keep it cool on that hot Friday evening, and ended up playing barmaid over her back wall with the audience! And when she came along on Red herself on Saturday, she too made a couple of perfectly judged interventions, to confirm the story’s accuracy, without “pulling focus”… Thankyou Margaret for everything!

20130721_174713I’ve droned on quite long enough, so it’s time to wind up the sentimental nostalgia… But it would be remiss of me not to close with a big shout out to all our tireless hi-viz stewards for their hard work and very smooth handling of all the costume and prop transitions. That’s Chris Marr in the shot above, but thanks also to Alex Fullelove, Sophie McWhannell, and of course our producer and general enforcer Milan Govedarica, who also took most of the best photos in this blog post (I took the rest!). Milan, you know we couldn’t have done it without you…! Finally, also in hi-viz, is director Simon Brewis, who was a complete pleasure to work with. The occasional tensions between us last year, when we were trying to work out what the heck this show was, were barely in evidence this time — we were able to agree very quickly on the changes we wanted to make to the script (my department), and then he picked up and ran with how to apply them on the ground (very much his department). The image above, of all three actors in their wellies in Loadpit Beck, is entirely down to Simon – who last year came up with the idea of sticking David in the stream, and this year enhanced it by having Paul and Lynsey wade downstream and under the little footbridge to join Rob… A thrilling little theatrical moment! The repositioning of the very end of Green Route too, in amongst the greenery looking across at Hirst Weir and Mill (see below – and also the shot at the very top of this blog), was also Simon’s innovation (as were many other things). But perhaps the greatest compliment that can be paid to a director is that his hand was often invisible in the proceedings… He was clearly in control throughout, shaping things deftly to fit the landscape and to make all the logistical issues disappear, but he allowed the material and the performers to do the work of connecting with spectators, and avoided the pitfalls of looking for flash and gimmickry… Thankyou Simon. You did us proud.

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Teaser Trailer Quiz!

Just three days to go until the first public performances of Multi-Story Water version 2… Director Simon Brewis has written this blog about how rehearsals are progressing. He’s confident (as am I!) that this year’s revised edition will be “a step up” on last year’s well-received performances.

To whet your appetite, here are three video snippets from the 2012 version… And there’s a quiz here for you: of the three sequences below, ONE has been cut entirely from the 2013 version, ONE has been significantly rewritten, and ONE is largely the same but with a different actor…See if you can guess which is which! (And then come along to the show to see if you’re right…)

Clip 1: Here’s the introductory sequence for Red Route, featuring actors Lynsey Jones (still in the cast) and Richard Galloway (off doing something else now…).

Clip 2: A sequence from later on in Green Route, again featuring the erstwhile Mr. Galloway (now replaced by Paul Fox) as Yorkshire Wildlife Trust’s Don Vine.

Clip 3: Another sequence from Red Route – featuring the very excellent David Smith (also no longer in the cast – but replaced by the equally excellent Rob Pickervance) as the owner and developer of the Victoria Mills complex, Andrew Mason.

Mirror Mirror, on the floor…

various may 13 026Here’s Bradford’s city centre Mirror Pool, the City Hall behind it, yesterday afternoon as the sun shone. In the foreground is Andy from Pro-Audio, on the phone trying to figure out why he can’t get control of the fountains at his lighting desk. We were setting up for last night’s Blue Mirror performance – commissioned by Bradford Council’s Chief Drainage Engineer Tony Poole, to help open the Flood ResilienCity conference taking place in this city this week, with delegates from across Europe (don’t ask me about the weird spelling…). I’m such an idiot that this is the only picture I remembered to take – I got a bit preoccupied with just getting the show to happen – so we’ll have to wait for Simon Warner’s official pics to see what it all looked like… (from his point of view)

The brief had been to make a theatrical presentation for the Mirror Pool, on flood-related themes… In keeping with my own creative interests, I had interpreted this in site-specific terms, on two levels: (1) the Mirror Pool area is a site in which you frequently see children splashing about having fun, so it seemed to me that an appropriate creative response would involve children as performers; (2) that Bradford’s flood risk problems largely arise in areas where the river itself is invisible – submerged beneath the city in Victorian tunnels. Indeed the Beck actually passes by quite quote to the Mirror Pool, which according to the maps is in the risk area – yet the Mirror Pool (opened last year at a cost of millions) is the only water visible in the area. So I had set out to devise a performance that “made visible” something of the Bradford Beck river system, by thinking of the Pool as a kind of microcosm of the city…

With the help of the Council, we identified two primary schools in the west of Bradford – St. James and Crossley Hall – that were interested in participating in a project about rivers and flooding, leading to a performance. I wrote a previous blog entry about my scouting trip along Pitty Beck and Chellow Dean Beck, the two tributaries of Bradford Beck that pass near the schools. Subsequent to that visit, before the Easter holidays, I led two Year 5 classes from Crossley Hall on adventure trips along Chellow Dean, upstream towards the old Victorian reservoir — although on the second occasion we didn’t get that far because we got caught in a snowstorm and had to turn back! In fact in this picture below, if you look closely, you can see class teacher Miss Taylor gesturing with her thumb to pull everybody back in the opposite direction…

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Only minutes earlier it had been much less snowy, as you can see from this image (taken by Miss Taylor, I think – who kindly supplied all of the pictures below), as the some of the children and I pick our way across the stream in the Chellow Dean wetlands area…

DSC00827In fact, the weather got so terrible in that period just before the Easter break that I twice had to cancel the planned walk along Pitty Beck with the St. James Year 5 class, which we only finally did a few weeks ago. As a result, St. James have only been doing their river project work this term – too late to feed it directly into making the performance itself. The Crossley Hall children, however, did some beautiful natural art work in response to the river trip… natural art 2 And they also learned about the water cycle, and how their bit of river fits into the wider geography of water movement – as illustrated by this picture below…

water cycleThey also did some really amazing expressive writing, some of it in semi-pictorial form, like this piece below… from which I directed lifted quite a bit of the wording, to weave into our performance text…

image-1 (2)The raindrop is “falling from the sky” to “meet my destiny”, while the river is saying “come on, come on”, welcoming it down: “I’m here for you and I always will be…” (There’s a pretty profound sense of ecological consciousness in there that adults might do well to think about!) Finally, the kids also did some imagining of fictional creatures that might live in or around the river, like this scary looking fellow… IMG_0129This gave me the idea to use some fantastical creatures in our performance – hence the “Sewage Goblins”, the “Elves of Industrial Effluent” and “the Foul Flies of Fly Tipping” – for which the children also made masks to perform in. These three groups (the three class groups involved) were the hideous minions of “the Evil Queen of Concrete”, who has smothered Bradford Beck (“Just call me Brad”) and family of little Becks… “Moo-ha-ha-ha!”

The moo-ha-ha was the very distinctive, very funny laugh for the Evil Queen decided on by Neiha (sorry – not sure of correct spelling), from Miss Butler’s Crossley Hall class. She’s a very sweet, shy girl but she was brilliant as “Elvira” on Monday night – word perfect too! She brought her evil minions down from 3 directions on Brad Beck (Maneeb, a small but very feisty boy, again perfect for the part – and again I don’t know how to spell his name) and his family. The other speaking parts with lines to learn were “Hope” and “Dwayne” – Annam and Aiden from St. James – who appeared at the end of the play to exhort us all to do more to “be the friends of Bradford Beck…” – to clean it up and make it happy. (The script was originally Hope and Faith, but Mr. Wilson wanted us to use a boy, so…). These guys too were great. It was strange watching these speakers in the middle of the Mirror Pool because they seemed so far away in this big space: the radio mikes meant we could hear every word crystal clear, though, and none of them fluffed a line!

Most of the script (which you can read here, if you like) was written to be delivered by narrators – one from each of the three classes involved – who could read from clipboards and so didn’t need to memorise lines. Uzair and Laiba (from Crossley Hall) and Iqra (St. James) all did a tremendous job with this, again speaking steadily and clearly so that the whole narrative came across clearly even in the slightly windy conditions. The challenge in writing the script for them had been to create something that said something about the Bradford Beck system – its geography and its history, and potential flood risk – in a way that would be clear to the children and make sense coming from them as speakers. I think for the most part we managed this, and we had some very positive feedback from some of the conference people about how well we’d balanced the positives and negatives in thinking about the state of the river and its potential risks.

The trickiest part of the whole process, though, was the choreography. The Mirror Pool is a big space to work in, so I always knew we had to make something that was primarily visual and movement-based (with music, narration and fountains…). I was lucky enough to be able to bring in Lucy Hind, a really wonderful movement director (worked on the Paralympic opening ceremony last year!) who was great with the kids and fun to collaborate with. It was very interesting to watch her gauging what the kids could cope with, movement-wise, and adapting accordingly. Our problem, though, was that we had quite limited rehearsal time at the schools (quite rightly – they have other things to be teaching these children!), and that we had extremely limited rehearsal time actually on site at the Mirror Pool… The first time the kids came together to work on it there was after school on Monday, shortly before we performed for our audience. So the results, in all honesty, were a little bit more chaotic than Lucy and I hoped… We just hadn’t had the time to work out all the details on site, and the kids were getting distracted pretty easily by the opportunity to splash about! (well they would, they’re 9 and 10!). What they lacked in rigorously drilled precision, though, they more than made up for in enthusiasm and energy, especially when it came to the splashing. And there were some sections of the show that looked really great – with the three classes stretched out along the three arms of the “Y” path that cuts across the pool, all twirling round, stamping feet, raising arms, etc. It’ll be fascinating to see how the pictures turn out…

I was also pleased to see that my “river trains” idea worked out OK. In this bit, different groups of children – linked in ‘conga’ lines with hands on shoulders – converged on the middle of the space from different directions, in a sort of mapping out of how the different tributary becks flow into Bradford Beck. The idea was that we’d locate the city centre in the middle of this map with a mini version of the Mirror Pool itself and the buildings around it (made by the children from boxes etc.). Unfortunately, the wind caught some of the models, and the kids carrying them had too much ground to cover for the narration to gel with what they were doing… But the big long river train came together beautifully. Geographically speaking, it ended up heading off somewhere towards “Leeds” instead of “north” towards “Shipley”, but I’m sure I was probably the only person watching who noticed this particular subtlety…

So, key learning point: children have less spatial awareness than you assume they will, especially in a big space. They’ll also naturally group together to feel safer when exposed, so instructions like “spread out across the space” are largely lost on them. (Maybe these are concepts that we grow into as we get older.) All that said though, I think these children did an amazing job considering the limited time we had and the scale of the task we gave them! And most important of all, they really seemed to have fun on the day, especially during the bit where they got to go bonkers in the water.

So thankyou Lucy, thankyou Mr. Wilson, Miss Taylor and Miss Butler, and thankyou most of all the Year 5 children of Crossley Hall and St James (some of whom I have become very fond of, and will miss!). All in all, it was quite an experience, and a lot of fun too!

 

 

Feedback

Thanks to everyone who wrote in with responses to our public performances on the weekend of September 21st-23rd. In addition to the following comments, you can also read a very interesting write-up on the highly regarded Culture Vulture arts blog: just click here to go to the review.

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Thank you for a wonderful experience on Friday evening on the Green, Red and Blue routes.  Wonderful stories, magical theatrical experience, lovely surprises, parts of Shipley I have not explored in 30 years.  Please thank everyone concerned.

–  Mervyn Flecknoe, Baildon.

My wife and I attended all your events on Friday 21 September.  It was the best walking theatre experience we have ever had; it was one of the best  dramatic performances we have ever seen. It was deeply and accurately researched; it  involved and valued real people, built community, did not duck big issues, dealt even-handedly with tricky questions like the Saltaire Hydro;  and it was fun. Please put it on again. . . . Thankyou for an extraordinary and uplifting  experience.

– John and Ruth Anderson,  Baildon .

A great thank you to your team for making Saturday 22nd of September such an entertaining and memorable day. Not knowing what to expect when we first met up for the Green Route walk, we were quickly into the ‘flow’ of it, had a laugh, some had a little cry, learnt lots of fascinating things about the places we usually just walk by and generally had fun. I think this would be such a great lesson for local schools, I hope somehow some funding could be found so that it can be repeated. The Junior Blue Route was quite different but was of equal enjoyment to us as a family, I think we all could have a quite easily have sailed on to Skipton, although I am not sure whether we would be there yet.

– Richard Sabey, Saltaire

Many thanks to the whole team for a very entertaining and informative couple of days.  We have lived in Shipley and Lower Baildon for 19 of the last 30 years (plus many times passing through on our floating home) but were surprised by the amount we learned about our locality.

– Dave & Pam, Lower Baildon

I went to two of the performances (Green and Red routes) of Multi-Story Water last Saturday. I just want to say how much I and my friends enjoyed them. The actors were brilliant, the script was clever and interesting and although we all live locally, we learnt new information and, on the route in Shipley, even walked where we’d never been before. It certainly raised my awareness of water around us and I have often thought about our local river and the flood areas during this week of almost constant rain! A great idea and a lovely bunch of actors and stewards! Thankyou all of you!

– Libby Ray

I just wanted to take time to say “thank you” – what a terrific experience! I felt the whole thing was really well crafted and acted; I was engaged throughout. I’m only sorry that time prevented me from undertaking the other two tours (I was on the Green tour yesterday). I learnt so much about Roberts Park and the estate I didn’t know- and I’ve been living here 25 years! Many thanks again to all concerned.

– Jonathan Hall

I would just like to tell you that we really enjoyed our two walks yesterday, they were informative, interesting, funny and moving. The actors were very good, the old P.O.W. from Burma moved us to tears. The script was well researched and interesting. Thanks to everyone.

– Annette Dent

My friend Judy and I thoroughly enjoyed Sunday’s 12:00 Blue Route barge experience. Thanks again!

– Barbara Walker, Thackley

I’m writing, a little late, to thank you for the MSW Green Route. I went to the show on Friday afternoon and thoroughly enjoyed myself. I particularly enjoyed the stories of some of the residents we “met”. Thankyou for telling the story as a whole world view of heritage and the environment. Congratulations to the actors!

  – Neill Morrison, Bradford Council