The Three Virtues

It's official. Theatre is best enjoyed in the summer. 

The steady heat lingering in the air, the flexibility of choice in venue, setting & performance area on the part of producers and crew, adaptable also for the director to take on new heights in envisioning the script at hand needed to be made manifest, reflected from the casts' side also. Copyright © Diandra A. 2014

I can speak and relate from my last summer adventure for The Merchant of Venice, but a recent, most professional Maltese production I have watched last Friday night - 31st July - got me motivated to create a new post, recalling what got me into theatre in the first place: a desire - both as actor and audience - of being enveloped and transported into a story.Copyright © Diandra A. 2015


I don't consider myself a critic, hence this isn't a review. I find critiquing a theatre production half takes away the enjoyment of watching a performance, and this little factor took some time to brush off after a few projects and presentations for Theatre Studies back at Uni. 

Besides, where there's need to think, it comes by itself. So . . .

Recalling this solely 
through the eyes 
of an audience member 
and theatre lover-practitioner.

We passed the gates of Fort St Elmo, striding through a stone passage leading to the Pjazza t'Armir. 


First sight of immortal antiquity, 
specially in link to the Knights of Malta 
really captivates me, 
and seeing it 
set and used 
for a theatrical  performance 
emplified this ageless-ness even further.

Four massive pseudo-crates on wheels were aligned in front of the natural backdrop of the pjazza, a church's facade. Two women dressed in WW2 army uniforms gave us what looked like an old newspaper, the front page dated 1st September 1943. A piece of history in our hands, cleverly recreated to be the program and containing the cast/production bios for Faith, Hope u Charity.
Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

The play began.

Live music . . .

the pianist cueing a blackout 
and a grandmother walking in with an old pram
leading the spotlight across the stage . . .


We follow the story of Marija, 

a volunteer nurse in WW2 from a Maltese noble family, 
both in status and virtue,

helping others as a duty 
and family creed. 

Living with her grandmother the Contessa Fiorini Sacco, and their personal maid, she ends up in an uncomfortably political and very awkward love triangle. Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

Commiting in a relationship 
with well-reputed 
Irish pilot William 'Timber' Woods
(true person in history) 
and yet drawn to Francesco Cavalli,
Italian soldier 
made prisoner-of-war when he lands by parachute 
in her grandmother's garden.

We're also drawn to the subplot of a family of farmers, providing some humour to the play and as much humanity in joy and suffering as in Marija's social circle and surroundings. Their scenes were my personal favourite; one scene always cracks a smile as I remember the father chastising his mischievous son:

Jekk taqa' minn hemm fuq u tmut, noqtlok!
(If you fall from up there and die, I'll kill you!)


Karmen Azzopardi clearly was a worthy narrator, 
a joy to watch such a veteran for the first time, 
considering her ten year absence from the stage.

I had last seen her on the stage over five years ago, though reading out some sonnets for MADC's Shakespeare's Centenary Celebration between short performed collections of the Bard's plays. Aside from past mental reverberations of a well-known TV series back in secondary school, It-Tfal Jigu Bil-Vapuri (Children come by Boats).Copyright © Diandra A. 2015


In most of this current play her presence and recollections as the older Marija drove the story on, and made manifest echoes of Maltese history before us, 

as to the fanatism faced . . . Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

A mob-fight down the then infamous 
Strada Stretta
between British soldier/s 
who were minding their own business
getting busy with their usual local whore, 
and local Fascist  
having their routine 
attention-seeking marches 
for anyone's cringing pleasure.Copyright © Diandra A. 2015



Coming to that theme, 


it's precisely those various historical-echoes 
recounting actual events 
through these scenes of fanaticism, 
deaths, 
arrests 
and mentalities 

that this theatre piece aided to bring them to life. 


Something which history books couldn't, 
and up till that night, could only be imagined 
straight from the recounts of those who lived and witnessed them. 

If one were lucky 
or took the time to listen.

Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

I was well impressed by the creativity and ingenuity 
behind the four simple crates, 
as they were turned one time into Strada Stretta, 

one sole 'crate' turned inside-out
into the farmer's family's humble abode, 

in the second act as an interrogation room 

and the two remainders transformed into Contessa's living room, spreading & joining its outer area as the garden. Copyright © Diandra A. 2015


On the evening I went, there were some mishaps: 
the moving backdrops for the living room for starters. 

As Marija was sitting in an armchair

conversing with her grandmother, 
mid-sewing, 
a slight breeze 
eased the left side of the living room wall from its position, 
wheeling in a 90 degree angle 
and very nearly hit the young actress 
as she got warned by the audience's sudden gasps 
and nervous chuckles.

One other mishap however was humorous. 

The head patriarch, grandfather of the farmer family, 
well brought to life by veteran Mario Micallef
was talking in very authentic rough Maltese dialect, 

and the scene was rudely bombarded by 21st Century fireworks, 
not far off from Fort St. Elmo,
blowing up vociferously in colours on the far right of the sky, 

giving the actor no choice 
but to freeze in a position, 
hands up face level, 
eyes looking upwards, Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

resembling slightly
a Christmas crib figurine in his costume, 

silently encouraging his fellow cast members in that scene to wait, 
and invoking respectful applause from the audience in his manner of dealing with the situation.
Copyright © Diandra A. 2015


As said previously, the church facade acted as another stage backdrop. 
People rushing into it for shelter at the sirens' wail, 
while the father-farmer 
naively stayed outside 
to see the planes in action; 
the same naivety that costed him his life, 
as his family were safely inside, 
faithfully praying the Rosary. Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

Act 1 had ended with an Italian soldier escaping a crash in patches of fire, provoking the mourning grandfather to kick him alongside an angry mob. 
All this happening with a blue moon (said to appear on that night's performance) slowly rising to peer over familiar tragic displays of years before.

Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

The Contessa was a delight to watch, 
specially when her characteristics contrasted brilliantly in company of the other characters. Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

She doesn't have that squirmishness that is normally expected from an upper class figure, conversing with the housemaid and farmer family as equals, sharing in condolences and sympathies at the father's death, 
as well as, when talking to Marija later on, cheekily enquiring on her first kiss. 

Not afraid to speak her mind, even in the tiniest hints of dislike. 
Her grandson, the Fascist leader of the previous Strada-parade, Marija's cousin, gets a well-deserving, whopping great slap from her at a social gathering. Her act removing all sense of personal social decorum to do what's right.Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

The Contessa-grandmother is a strong character; the playwright made her an ambassador, rightly so, clarifying  to the colonial authority, when she's taken in for questioning 
that the Maltese's identity is not to be seen as barbaric. 

An ambassador to also remind her fellow citizens that charity tops over any form of persecution, love tramples hate, and no class difference should cause anyone to forget virtue over their current obstacles. 

Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

One sweet, delicate image that remained branded in my mind was the older Marija conforting her younger self, at the abrupt loss of many loved ones in her life, caressing her head and kissing her on the head as young Marija breaks into tears. Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

The most heart-warming of the whole play, the strongest in my opinion, 
was the ending lines from older Marija; 

the fabric that she used to create the baptismal dress, 
that had gone down from her children to the youngest descendent, 
was from the same parachute 
that landed Italian soldier Cavalli into her garden. 

The playwright had a symbolism and intent in mind, 
I'm more than certain of that.

* * * * *
Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

A somewhat strong connection to my late grandmother, Rosette Pisani, rekindled in me that evening. Watching the play, I recalled my fondest memory of her telling me what she saw and experienced in the war as a child, and the play acted as an instrument in bridging a close tie to her. 

M
ost strongest when I saw the program, 
the front page copy of the newspaper dated 1943. Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

I looked at it and mused . . . 
what was she doing that day? Thinking that day? 

Where was she at that point? 

At home? with her siblings? Parents?

Did she see this very front page, on 1st September with her own eyes? 

What did she witness? Felt?

I had images of her recounting her experiences, now and again during the play.             She didn't feel so distant or lost at all.

Copyright © Diandra A. 2015
* * * * *

At curtain call, special public thanks was given - with a bouquet of flowers - to an old woman in the front row, Anne Rossi, who aided the whole team in giving the play more flesh in sharing with them her past experiences in WW2 as a plotter charting pilots of the Royal Air Force. 

Her interview right here, written and guided by Kim Dalli, worth the read. Copyright © Diandra A. 2014


I really do hope they consider publishing the play's script into a book. It would be worth holding a copy and keep it right next to Francis Ebejer's Il-Gahan ta' BingemmaSecond reason being to finally learn the possible symbolism behind the use of Cavalli's parachute as a baptismal dress . . . I somehow can't shake off this un-enlightened intuition.

Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

Breathing Art

"Calling to the Stage . . ."


Claire Farrugia

Artist

First Place in Art Competition
by Lakireddy Balireddy College of Engineering
in Vijayawada, India

Exhibited at 7th Malta Cultural Institute Concert

Social Links: 
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How long have you been painting?

I've always remembered painting since a young age; it was when I took Art for O-Level that I took painting seriously. That was more or less where I really started.


What normally inspires you when you're working or about to work on a piece?

Stress. [laughs] The more stressed I am with exams the more I paint. That or music usually. If there's a new song I like, it inspires me and brings about a certain emotion, so I try and convey that to my drawings.Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

Looking at your works on your Facebook page, I gather your individual trademark as an artist is combining fused bursts of watercolors with simple pen or pencil drawings. Why this combination in particular?

I like watercolors. I also feel the pen helps gets the details out, and I like details. It’s a challenge to achieve them out with watercolors alone, yet I’m satisfied when I manage to depict the details with watercolors. I like to keep it simple as much as possible and allow the person space to make their own interpretation of the piece. Keeping the mystery of that vagueness.

Who are your favourite artists?Copyright © Diandra A. 2015
Unfortunately I haven’t studied art that much to know many artists, the classic ones are those I know the most. I have seen some classic ones which are inspiring; though I do love Michelangelo’s anatomy, I love looking at the sketches rather than his actual works. I personally don’t stick to one complete style; I feel different elements and combine them. Sometimes I incorporate them and sometimes I just leave them alone.


Favourite themes you go for. . .

I think when you look at paintings in watercolours they’re mainly sceneries. I personally find sceneries boring, so I tend to draw people instead because there’s a certain emotion behind people and especially the eyes, to me that’s interesting. Whereas with scenery it’s all, “oh look there’s another Mdina”. I need to draw some sceneries aswell; they sell, whereas people as subject matter don’t sell that much.Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

When it comes to sketching, what I specially like to do with my sketchbook is preserve a fragment of a day into each drawing. For instance when I was in Spain and I would be in a coffee shop alone, I’d sketch the scene and write the details of it, such as what time it was, what song was playing. It’s as though I took a part of that place with me. I like to collect, almost like creating a time-capsule on paper. It’s more intimate working in a sketch book.Copyright © Diandra A. 2015


For you personally what difficult inhibition do you face when exposing your art? 
What’s that one inhibition that’s holding you back?

[Smiles] That bring out the character. I’m really shy, I hold myself back about it and I’m not in-your-face kind of person. Even to upload something on Facebook, it’s a wrestling match with myself as to whether or not to upload a piece and if it's good enough to be viewed now or another day. 


Over a year ago you got to lead an art workshop on the use of watercolor blocks. How was the whole experience for you?Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

I was really nervous at first, but it was a brilliant experience. The people that attended had already seen my works and really loved them, so it was a great boost for my self-esteem on a different level. 


How did it feel to teach and pass on to others some techniques that you developed?

It was great because I got to work with an enthusiastic class! Despite giving people the same notes and techniques, each and every person will take what you gave them and change it to produce something new and different. I managed to learn plenty from them.


Talk to me about the art competition you did in India.Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

That was at a university; they were holding a competition where they set a list of themes. People could participate and I signed up and got first place. It was all sudden; the people that were taking care of us saw my work and were persuading me to show what I can do through this competition.Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

See I’m in an organization called AIESEC; two people from Malta went up to India, and later we had other interns in different AIESEC branches around the world. We were living with people from AIESEC India, who introduced me to this competition. They were also having a stand at that university to try and promote AIESEC. I got to go up onstage to get the certificate when I won; it was a proud moment.


You also had exhibited your work at the Cultural Institute Concert.

It was a very on-the-side exhibition. During the intermission people could come and take a look. It wasn’t focused on the art. 

Unfortunately I don’t have the resources to hold my own exhibition where my artwork could be the main focus. Though that sideline exhibition was still exposure, because that way I could see people’s reactions: see if they’re attracted to it, which ones they like best, which concepts, which colours especially. It’s good to see their reaction and get their feedback about it and see the way they interpret them. 

I don’t like being direct, in the sense I don’t dictate to the viewer through my work what they should be feeling. You let people interpret it and see what they want to think about it. Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

Copyright © Diandra A. 2015

Summertime Theatre

Been putting blogging and interviews on hold for quite a while now . . . feels good to get back to writing again. Still intend on interviewing artist Claire Farrugia. It is a challenge I admit to think up an interview plan for someone who clearly has talent and yet sadly hasn't got to that stage of being given that opportunity to exhibit her works with an air of recognition and humble attention. I hope eventually this and next post will be a medium to aid her on, just as I have done in a previous Calling-To-The-Stage Segment.Copyright © Diandra A. 2014

Meantime, I've been doing theatre in double this summer. 

I acted for the first time in MADC's production of The Merchant of Venice as Stephano, and directed for a second time in the annual One Acts Festival with a Maltese play that has never been performed by the playwright till this September.

It felt great participating in one of my favourite Shakespeare plays earlier in July; to befriend and be among an awesome & lively cast and crew, see the story develop gradually up to rehearsals and performances at San Anton Garden 

and watch the poetry and characters come to life . . .Copyright © Diandra A. 2014


Citing in unison 
to strong monologues and scenes 
were my personal delights, 
and parroting some trademark verbal shenanigans 
from fellow actors 
were never lacking between us. 



PRINCE OF ARAGON: [nasal, high pitched] 
Who chooseth meee . . .


Yet the more I attended the rehearsals 
and dove further into the story 
as a piece 
beyond the pages and the academics, 
the more I could see a deeper layer in the play that presented more than merely being an "anti-Semitic" piece. Copyright © Diandra A. 2014


The theme can only be rounded up in one phrase: 
the presentation of sinners

Copyright © Diandra A. 2014
The Merchant of Venice, I believe, is a medium of presenting people from various walks of life. It was not just made up of racism and hate scenes, but each scene of that scenario were stitched up by hinted linings of people with flaws, and yet are redeemable. 

Redeemable also if they allow themselves on that path to be beyond the stereotype placed upon them.
Copyright © Diandra A. 2014

I believe 
it is
a reflection 
of our imperfect human state 
as sinners 
and the rippling effects we create 
at each other.

Copyright © Diandra A. 2014
Shakespeare is more than a poetry-monger. 


He is a mirror barer. 


Whoever passes his path becomes the echoing soul he places in his plays,
occupying the bodies within his fellow actors on the stage. 

His pen brought to life  
the gossiper, 
                             the arrogant, 
                                                           the materialist, 
                                                                                              the proud, 
                                                                                                                     the humble, 

the feminist, the misogynist 
(I'm thinking here more on Benedict and Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing)
the amateur (like Dogberry in same play). 



Even most of his villains aren't solely villainous 
without having flaws
emotions 
and a history behind them, 
because perhaps 
he was able 
to see right through such people. 

People that we see to this day.


He wrote with reason.


Looking again say at the character of Antonio, 
true he was generous and aided friends where he knew they needed it, 
even in a position where he couldn't. 
He has some virtues. Copyright © Diandra A. 2014

However 


when he was redeemed 

and saved in court 
from the increasing anger of Shylock, 
partially caused by his own lack of charity, 
his actions of accepting one half of his goods and demanding Shylock to become a Christian may have proved superficial . . .


"Presently becoming a Christian"
came to Shylock by force
not by choosing 
in response to received mercy and love
out of his own free will . . .

and the receiving of the letter informing Antonio of his ships arriving safely to Venice at the end of the play, proved not so much a quick penning from the Bard to create a happy ending, but rather making Antonio no better than how he behaved before and lacked that acknowledgement and gratitude to pass that same mercy to his enemy. 
Copyright © Diandra A. 2014
Copyright © Diandra A. 2014
That letter proved undeserving next to his previous actions in court towards Shylock.

He was just as business-minded (and somewhat materialistic) as Shylock was: 


ANTONIO
He seeks my life; his reason well I know:
I oft deliver'd from his forfeitures
Many that have at times made moan to me:
Therefore he hates me.

DIANDRA
It's way beyond liberating forfeitures Antonio. 
Shylock was a victim of his own hate 
that increased at each ounce of enmity he received, 
including from you. 
You didn't regret earlier cursing
and spitting on him 
nor denied to do so again in future.
He was just as weak as you.
A man most vulnerable by prejudice -
who could understand that more than you 
in that court room?
Your generosity was limited by your own prejudice

Charity falls on all just as much as mercy. . .



and we can't ignore the possibility 
that Portia's Mercy Speech 
acted also 
as generally guiding and acknowledging
every single person 
in that courtroom 
of the vulnerability they and we all would face:

That in the course of justice
None of us should see salvation
We do pray for mercy
and that same prayer
doth teach us all to render 
the deeds of mercy.


Portia had her own flaws too. 
Some audiences love her, some don't. 
Copyright © Diandra A. 2014
Yet she stands out in my eyes to be the one redeemed from certain characteristics that made her (and seem like) a-spoilt-little-rich-girl, by receiving the true love she wished to be more worthier for, and yet has humbly gained it. Copyright © Diandra A. 2014

Out of love for Bassanio, she uses her intelligence and understanding of logic (like father like daughter) to be an instrument and voice of guidance to mercy, victory and humility (for Shylock in his case) 
in a courtroom . . .
where the language and behaviour 
of such a surrounding 
is all law, 
blind to the human being standing before them 
calling them one term or other that lacked distribution of dignity & mercy. 
Copyright © Diandra A. 2014
Seeing Portia more fully during production, she is a worthy heroine to look up to.

Next time you pick up The Merchant of Venice
look beyond the anti-Semitism. 
See the characters in your mind as people, 
and those sorts whom they talk about, 
and take note how nearly every character mentions one type or other of people: from two-faced Janus (Act 1 Scene 1, ll 50-56) to Shylock's speech; from tedious suitors to fellows who speak an infinite deal of nothing.
Copyright © Diandra A. 2014
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The third time participating in the MADC One Acts Festival (second time as director) proved itself to be more fruitful, working with more confidence, as the overall rehearsal process was absolutely void of the notion of competition behind the Festival. Copyright © Diandra A. 2014

Focused solely on bringing into existence Adam u Eva, a Maltese play written by Guze' Aquilina. A play I found in a collected book of one act plays that, according to Aquilina, was never performed.

I chose it from March this year; the earlier the better to see and create the vision. It was tedious work editing and cutting down the script to the time limit of 30 minutes, aside the fact that the play itself without the editing was frustratingly repetitive and would have completely side-tracked attention from the playwright's poetry. 

I worked on dabbling first time with surrealism, a style the story was calling to be staged & bring to presence. With a full and determined cast at the ready also, unlike the first time. A whole month meant to rehearse two years ago was a prolonged audition session. Nightmare.Copyright © Diandra A. 2014

We worked as a team, one encouraging the other, with a few laughs here and there. The best compliment I got from my fellow actors was how much they enjoyed themselves in both nights, and willingly agreed at the possibility of staging it again, whatever the resulting feedback would be. No care towards walking out of the Clubhouse without an award whatsoever.

To sum it up . . . the general feedback we got? Copyright © Diandra A. 2014

Oh my gosh!!!

Didn't even imagine it to be so positive!! 
Absolutely exhilarating. Will stage it again in future - defo!!!
Copyright © Diandra A. 2014
And to top it off, we walked away with 3 awards and 2 nominations!! 

The awards - again - were never important, but to be focused on creating theatre and learning along the way was what made the surprise more rewarding. 

For at the end of the day, when we actors and directors step in a theatre for rehearsals and production nights, it's not people's approval that gives the satisfaction, nor the anticipation of a good review by the critics (whose perspectives are always different from the directors, unless within reason), but the journey of creating with people, to finally reach to the destination of presenting art. Always serving God from the start to curtain call, and acknowledging Him as the Divine Playwright and Director of the plays being done together.

Copyright © Diandra A. 2014