Frankie Fightwell Preliminary Draft Complete

Last night I finished the preliminary draft of my new play, ‘The Final Adventure of Frankie Fightwell’. There’s a play there now, I just need to make sure it all makes sense! I have a little over a month until the working first draft deadline, so hopefully that’s more than enough time to complete the editing. To be honest I find the editing enjoyable; it’s getting all your thoughts down on paper and ordered into the initial structure that’s the tricky bit.

showcase_2012_13

Images © Richard Stratton, https://500px.com/RichardStrat 

“The Final Adventure of Frankie Fightwell” Audio Recording

Today I was pleasantly surprised to discover the audio recording of “The Final Adventure of Frankie Fightwell” preview performed at the Blackshaw New Writing Showcase is featured in the latest Blackshaw Arts Hour podcast.

Episode 57 of the podcast can be found here, with Frankie Fightwell starting 26 minutes in. Having said that, the preceding review of “Fifty Shades Darker” is definitely worth a listen too.

Blackshawlogosquare.jpg

More Images From “The Final Adventure of Frankie Fightwell”

Here are a few more preview images from “The Final Adventure of Frankie Fightwell”, the brand new play I’m currently developing with Blackshaw Theatre. These photos were taken at the Blackshaw New Writing Showcase.

Abigail Morgan as ‘Frankie Fightwell’, John Rayment as ‘Stuart’ and Tom Slatter as ‘Dominic’.

Images © Richard Stratton, https://500px.com/RichardStrat 

“Frankie Fightwell” at Blackshaw New Writing Showcase

On Monday night I attended the Blackshaw Theatre New Writing Showcase at the Hen & Chicken Theatre. Amongst other pieces, the opening scene of my new theatrical work-in-progress, The Final Adventure of Frankie Fightwell, was performed as part of the showcase.

Blackshaw New Writing Events always have an amazing atmosphere, and it was great to see the characters come to life for the first time. The actors and director did an amazing job with my script and I can’t thank them enough for volunteering their time and the effort that they put in.

I was very pleased with the audience reaction on the night – now I just have to wait to receive their written feedback in a few days! And then? Well, on with (writing) the show!

frankie-fightwell

Abigail Morgan as ‘Frankie Fightwell’ and John Rayment as ‘Stuart’

Image © Violaine Brunelin, Blackshaw Theatre Company (www.blackshawonline.com)

 

Shortlisted for Blackshaw New Writing Showcase Award 2017

I’m very pleased to say that I’ve been shortlisted for the Blackshaw Theatre New Writing Showcase Award 2017. A short, work-in-progress scene from a new play I’m working on will be performed at the Hen & Chicken Theatre, London, along with entries from the other four finalists. The winning piece will be developed into a full play to debut in 2018. So if you’d like to see the first ever public airing of a scene from ‘The Final Adventure of Frankie Fightwell’, along with the other finalists on the 30th January 2017, then tickets are available here.

blackshaw

‘The Haunting of Exham Priory’ Postmortem

It’s been just over a week since Rumpus Theatre‘s run of my play, ‘The Haunting of Exham Priory‘, came to an end. I think it’s safe to call it a success; it sold well for a play of its size (completely selling out one venue), and we had some reasonably complimentary reviews.

British Theatre Guide Review

A Younger Theatre Review

“The script is engaging and well thought out.”

“The performances are fantastic.”

1-nicholas-bourne-david-gilbrook-h-p-lovecrafts-the-haunting-of-exham-priory-rumpus-16

So am I pleased? Absolutely! And I’d definitely like to say a big thank you to Rumpus for bringing my ideas to life and the actors, David Gilbrook and Nicholas Bourne, who gave outstanding performances every single night. But the biggest thank you of all should go to all the HP Lovecraft and Rumpus Theatre fans alike who turned out to see it. Thank you to you all!

Now I’ve had a bit of time to reflect, I thought I’d share a few thoughts on the creative process and take a look look at if there anything I’d have done differently. In terms of major changes, “no” is the short answer. After watching the show for a second time I did wonder if the part about Walter de la Poer’s mysterious letter could have been cut to make the play slightly shorter. But on balance, although it doesn’t directly effect the plot it does add to the overall sense of mystery and provide a nice connection between Delapore and his family history, so I think I’ll retain it for any future runs.

Actually it’s interesting to think how much already got cut from the story. You might imagine that turning a short story of only a few pages into a two act play would mean that every single word had to be retained and used. But a single sentence of first person narration often equates to several lines of natural sounding dialogue, so the page count soon builds up. Many of the little details about the history of the Priory and the de la Poer family didn’t make it into the final draft. Likewise the full list of everything that was discovered in the final scene. That’s not to say they didn’t make it into early drafts, but they just made the play a bit too long and rambling.

5-david-gilbrook-h-p-lovecrafts-the-haunting-of-exham-priory-rumpus-16

Speaking of the final scene, one question that came up during development was whether or not the final scene should have been staged in full, rather than told via the medium of Delapore’s narration and the sound and lighting effects?

After a lot of thought, I believe our narrative approach was the correct one. Even if we had managed to find a plausible way to stage it in a production of this size, I doubt it would have lived up to people’s imaginations of the spectacular scene described. In fact I doubt even an expensive staging would have achieved this. After all, an important technique in Lovecraft’s work is to hint at horrors rather than spell them out. Imagined horrors are always far worse than the reality.

Another technique that Lovecraft often calls on is [SPOILERS AHEAD] a narrator  retelling the events of the story from a position of insanity, just as happens in the original text of ‘The Rats in the Walls’. I feel it would have been a shame to drop that element entirely. And of course, if we’re not relying on Delapore’s narration then it potentially removed the ambiguity of whether or not he is responsible for the final act, or if it is indeed the rats, as he claims.

So what next? Well I’d certainly love to adapt one more Lovecraft play if I had the chance. I have a shortlist, but I’ll keep it to myself for the moment as I’m likely to change my mind several times. There’s such a rich seam of work to draw on. But I’ve always been partial to Shadows and Horrors.

Of Nyarlathotep and Azathoth

The Haunting of Exham Priory‘, the play that I’ve been working on with Rumpus Theatre Company finally opened on Tuesday of this week. After so much work it was a real thrill to see it all come together. Although I’d been there for the first rehearsals, I hadn’t seen the dress rehearsals so I was seeing it come together for the first time, just like the rest of the audience.14585681_10100469008003010_283630898_o

I’d like to think Lovecraft would have been pleased with what we did, and I’m glad I’ve had the opportunity to cling to his coattails with my cold, cadaverous grasp.

I sat on the back row for the first show, just so I could more easily take in the audience’s reactions. I was pleased to see the light-hearted moments get laughs and the twist in the final scene receive a ripple of shocked muttering, just as I’d hoped. Interestingly though, some parts that I thought would get big laughs just got a murmur, while lines I considered throw-away gags got a big reaction. I sometimes suffer a similar problem with Baby001 – some episodes that I think are the wittiest receive the fewest likes, while the ones I am least happy with get plenty of comments and shares. Talking to the director afterwards, he observed that you never know where and when an audience will laugh at a script, and it’ll vary from performance to performance. I’ll be seeing the show again later in the run, and I’ll be intrigued to see how the response varies again. But for now, I have released it to prosper on its own, like a Night Gaunt flitting away into the dark.

So, to reiterate, I was 100% pleased with how everything turned out on opening night. I was also pleased to be vindicated regarding my concerns over a certain aspect of Lovecraft mythos!
In the original text for ‘The Rats in the Walls’, Nyarlathotep receives a description that is very similar to the description normally reserved for Azathoth, an entirely different deity in the Lovecraft pantheon. This is literally the only time – to my knowledge – that Nyarlathotep is described this way in the canon. So I was left with a choice; preserve the original description and risk some Lovecraft fans believing I’d made a mistake, or change the description which otherwise fits beautifully with the story?
I mused aloud to my wife about this as I was writing. “What? No-one will notice that!” she said after I explained the problem. I wasn’t so certain but decide to preserve the unusual description of Nyarlathotep.

Sure enough, post play, one of the first questions I was asked by a fan was whether I’d got Azathoth and Nyarlathotep confused. I laughed and tried to explain the issue, but it’s not so easy to convey in a busy theatre lobby.

Damned if you do and damned if you don’t. I think Lovecraft would be pleased with that, too.

 

Rehearsals Begin for Exham Priory

Today I had the privilege of sitting in on the first rehearsals for my play, ‘The Haunting of Exham Priory’ with Rumpus Theatre Company (@RumpusTheatreCo on Twitter). It was a lot of fun to see the process of rehearsing, and very exciting to see the play finally being performed in front of me, rather than just in my head. I also had to, quite understandably, provide some input on the pronunciation of the more esoteric words from Lovecraft’s lexicon.

Devising minor edits on the fly was a new and interesting writing challenge. My writing style is best described as “slow and steady”, but I had to think fast today when the need arose to make changes to lines that didn’t quite sound right when read aloud.

As I said, an interesting challenge, but I think I just about managed to cope!

David Gilbrook as Mr Delapore and Nicholas Bourne as Captain Norrys.

Summing-up Lovecraft

I’ve just been trying to write a few lines of background about HP Lovecraft and ‘The Haunting of Exham Priory’ for the show program. It wasn’t easy to put everything succinctly, but this is what I came up with…

Howard Philip Lovecraft was a 20th century American horror writer, most famous for his short stories The Call of Cthulhu and At the Mountains of Madness. ‘The Haunting of Exham Priory’ is based on Lovecraft’s story The Rats in the Walls. Written and set in 1923, it was first published in the March 1924 edition of the horror magazine ‘Weird Tales’.
Although Lovecraft only achieved real fame posthumously, The Rats in the Walls received much acclaim when it was published. Years later, Lovecraft wrote that the story was “suggested by a very commonplace incident — the cracking of wall-paper late at night, and the chain of imaginings resulting from it.”