AMERICAN THEATRE | Falling in Love With Love

by Admin
AMERICAN THEATRE | Falling in Love With Love

Sometimes show crushes don’t go so smoothly. One anecdote that arose in my interviews involved two actors playing love interests in a show who began to practice outside of rehearsal. “That’s the first red flag,” noted James. “You should always have three parties present in a rehearsal process when it comes to intimacy.” The actors began going on pretend dates to be in character. Eventually one actor broke off their engagement to their real-life partner, and the other actor divorced their spouse (who then moved out of the country with their children). The two actors did eventually marry and start a new family.

It’s important to approach stories like this with grace and without judgment. “Love is love if love is going to happen,” James added. “But let’s not be lazy about parameters of the intimacy design so that things happen. We’re in an imaginary situation that comes from a playwright’s brain. The more you want to make it real by having private meetings and dates to talk about the relationship, the more we put the whole production in danger of imploding because of a showmance gone wrong, or of an artistic coupling gone wrong.”

Similarly, Bones noted, there has been an aesthetic and cultural shift away from the idealization of actors losing themselves in their characters.

“Good acting, and especially good chemistry between actors—you have to be present and vulnerable at the same time,” she said. “If you’re pushing on that trauma or lust all the time, your body and nervous system will shut down and you lose access to your instrument. When we build a container of boundaries, it’s a way to respect ourselves, our instrument, and our collaborators in the work.”

One opportunity to reflect on how theatremakers build—and break—these ephemeral containers came in October 2023, when I saw Measure Still for Measure, written and directed by Jessica Kubzansky, artistic director of Boston Court Pasadena. After seeing this show, I half-joked to friends, “This is about a show crush gone terribly wrong.” In all seriousness, it became an entry point for discussion questions and stories around attraction spurred on by fictional settings, real emotions, and temporary power dynamics.

Mara Klein, Robert Beitzel, Alexander Matos, Randolph Thompson, Jenapher Zheng, and Bukola Ogunmola (on screen) in “Measure Still for Measure” at Boston Court Pasadena. (Photo by Bruce Hashimoto)

Kubzansky’s immersive play led the audience from Boston Court Pasadena’s parking lot to its rehearsal room and finally onto its stage (where we also saw live feeds of the sacrosanct dressing rooms) while a company of actors prepared their production of Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure, a “problem play” in which a moralist authority figure, enamored of a young novitiate, pressures her into sex in return for her brother’s life.

The original play is rife with themes about power dynamics, sexual harassment, bodily autonomy, and consent; Kubzansky’s play transposes the Shakespeare plot and topics onto the dynamics of a theatrical cast, exposing their various intersectional identities and levels of agency. When the Measure for Measure director takes his own feelings for the lead actress too far during a dress rehearsal, it’s a murky and disturbing moment that blurs fiction, reality, false intimacy, work, and entertainment. It hits close to home not only for theatremakers but for anyone touched by the #MeToo movement.

Jessica Kubzansky AT
Jessica Kubzansky.

I shared my quip about the show with Kubzansky, and delved deeper into the differences between show crushes, showmances, and attraction arising from the play-making process.

“Are we talking about having a show crush, or about if a show crush starts to get acted on in a way that becomes visible to the company?” she replied. Either way, she continued, “It’s all about not getting in the way of the room. If the show crush starts getting in the way of doing the work of enacting the play and pulling focus inappropriately, that’s when it becomes a problem.”

After all, if you have a show crush and nobody knows, does it matter?

On one level, no. Many show crushes truly are fleeting, enduring for the course of a show and finishing shortly thereafter. Actor JB Tadena, who worked in theatre in Washington, D.C., and Los Angeles prior to landing a role in the CW television drama Kung Fu, hasn’t had a show crush, but remembers being crushed on.

JB Tadena AT
JB Tadena.

“I was oblivious to it for a bit,” he said, “then everyone noticed, and I started to see the signs. I didn’t want to lead anybody on, and she never said anything to me, just other people, and I think she let it go after a certain point when I wasn’t reciprocating, which is healthy.”

Having played a romantic love interest in Kung Fu, Tadena broke down the process like preparing for any other role: reading the script repeatedly, analyzing the character, and building rapport based on natural chemistry and charisma with John Prasida, the actor playing his love interest. He noted the multiple layers of actor and character converging into one person. “John is the character,” he said. “I don’t really separate the two when I’m working because I have to love these things about him. It has to be real for me in that sense.” At the same time, he develops rapport and friendship with the actor as a person off the set.

Tadena singled out another quality of the show crush which may make it more common in theatre than in other mediums. “In film and TV, sometimes you just go to work, sit in a trailer for most of the time, act, go to your trailer, and you go home,” he said. “In theatre, you’re always with everybody.”

Even so, show crushes can remain invisible to others. Choosing not to display or act on a show crush doesn’t make it any less real, though, as it can still stir up powerful feelings and physiological responses in the person experiencing it. Take, for instance, the experience of the playwright.

“A lot of writing—creating anything—is wish fulfillment,” Langley said. She explained that in her dark romantic comedy, the protagonist was based on a younger version of herself, and the experience of witnessing the play embodied made her realize how much growth the characters needed. “The thing about a character in the play is that they’re not there—the burden of full humanity is not on them. If you create a character who is romancing someone, or based on someone who you loved in the past, and you see [an actor] doing it over and over again, getting better and better at embodying all these wonderful things about that past person or idea, it becomes real to you in the form of biological responses—you get a little heart flutter, you get a little hot. It gets confusing, because you’re like, do I love insert-actor-name here? Or do I love this character I already knew I loved because I made them; I Pygmalion-ed them out of nothing?”

Sometimes the confusion can lead to feelings of loneliness and shame, especially if the parties involved are in relationships or if negative emotions interfere with the creative process.

“Make sure you don’t get lost in the process of having these feelings and that you are journaling, speaking to friends, not isolating yourself, being social, and listening to the community of your friends,” James recommended. “The last thing we want to do is pile a whole lot more shame on top of someone having genuine feelings.”



Source Link

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.