Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Advent Calendar - Christmas Eve and Day


The Advent Calendar has come to its end. It has been a wonderful journey and I am very grateful to all of my friends who wanted to take part in this project and to all readers of course.

Sookie wishing you all a Merry Christmas

I can finally say that I have managed to get the video greetings to work even if the quality is a bit worse than expected. I hope you will enjoy them. First I have one from Sookie.

Sookíe's Christmas greeting

I have a couple of very special Christmas greeting to you from Sweden. Most of you might not know that I am related to Santa Claus or Tomten as we call him in Sweden. He is my uncle. He was of course too busy to meet me in the middle of all the presents that he has to deliver but I did meet my dad and my uncle (Santa's shy brothers) and they wanted to wish you all a Merry Xmas with a little song.

Christmas greeting from Santa's brothers


I also met the cutest gingerbread cookie and the cutest Lucia (see December 13 in the Advent Calendar for an explaination Lucia) who happen to be my nieces. They were also very eager to sing you a Christmas song about wanting snow for Chirstmas and they are wondering why their dad looks very much like Santa.

A Christmas greeting from my nieces Tilda and Selma

I WISH YOU ALL A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR!!


December 24



Sunday, December 23, 2012

Advent Calendar - December 23 - Lotta Granér


An actor's dreams and doubts Advent Calendar proudly presents - December 23 - Lotta Granér from Sweden. I have the special honor of presenting my mother to you. She has taken me to the theatre and to the Opera my whole life which is an amazing gift. She is one of the biggest reasons why I am so fascinated by theatre and acting. I owe her a big Thank You! The word is hers.


 

I was four years old when I had my first encounter with the Opera scene in Stockholm. I was allowed to go with friends to see Peter and Anneli's journey to the Moon a saga and dance performance by Gerdt von Bassewitz for families. I thought I was in heaven. Everything was so beautiful. It was gold and ornaments everywhere and all the actors were so pretty in their well made costumes. It was  fascinating and scary. I don't remember the whole story but I do remember fragments that are still so clear to me even though it is 57 years ago. I never wanted it to end. It ended and I wanted to see more.


There has been a lot of visits to the theaters since then, in Sweden and in other places such as New York, London, Prague, Saint Petersburg and Amsterdam etc.


As a young adult I was a member of the amateur theatre group connected to Fria Proteatern in Stockholm. I don't act anymore but I have used acting as part of my work. I have worked with children and teenagers with different disabilities and sometime acting has come in handy to make them understand their own behavior. By showing them how they have acted in certain situations they have been given the chance to redo an improve these situations and it has improved their view on how other people perceive them. They have been able to improve their relations to other people.


As a parent it has been a joy to go to the theatre with my children. From the age of two years old I frequently took them to the theatres and to the Opera in Stockholm and other cities. I am therefore very happy that Lina has kept this interest alive.


I wish you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year filled with as much theatre as possible.


December 23

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Advent Calendar - December 22 - Juel McNeilly


An actor's dreams and doubts Advent Calendar proudly presents - December 22 - Juel McNeilly from Canada and Trinidad and Tobago. Juel is a lady who knows how to party. She is very special and I think most people feel great in her presence. I know I do. The word is hers.



 
 
The sound of crunchy snow beneath your feet. Pretty mistletoe hanging around (that sometimes actually catch people really kissing underneath it). Sleds for sledding. Little chocolate advent calendars counting down the days in a yummy way. Snuggling up under blankets with steaming hot cocoa. Eggnog or gluhwein (depending on where you're from) warming you up from the inside. Mittens and scarves on to go skating. The exciting panic shopping for presents. Turkey and stuffing with all the roasting hot warming veggies and stuff to accompany it. Tree shopping and decorating, or even digging up your Christmas tree from your backyard. Little shortbread cookies that crumble when you touch them. Lights of all colours up and all over the damn place making things look magical…. all work with us to build that special Christmassy feeling….. right? That feeling that makes you want to at least mark this period or occasion with something…not necessarily religious but something… just by eating or doing something, anything, christmassy.

But what if there was no snuggling under a blanket, or even snow to snuggle up from. Or chocolate was rare because it would melt. Skating made impossible because there will never ever in a million years, (unless we truly kill earth) be any ice to skate on… What if that traditional turkey was replaced by curried shrimp and roti (flat indian cooked bread)? What do you build Christmas spirit up from? What is Christmas spirit?


Being half Trinidadian brought with it two completely different ways of celebrating Christmas. Unfortunately for most, the one I enjoy most is 'trini' style. I say 'unfortunately' because the initial response or comment I've always received regarding Christmas time in Trinidad is: "how can you feel that special feeling if it's 33 degrees and sunny all the time?" This is usually followed by "you need snow!!". Well my answer to that is "you make your own Christmas feeling", and the Trinis do a good job at that. Sunshine and palm trees is what they know, they've never had snow to roll around and make snowmen or angels out of. Regardless of how religious they really are (or what religion they are from, for that matter), they get that little Christmassy elf inside them to come out and party! Revamping the once dry and boring British Christmas pudding (a dried fruit bready like cake drizzled with some form of alcohol) into black cake. And well…. the best way to describe it would be to explain that its black because of the amount of sherry, wine and rum that has been poured into it for months (my grandma's process started in July!). I used to love eating tiny little squares of it as a kid, sneaking behind everyone, stealing more and more cause I couldn't think of a decent reason for cutting such a delicious cake into such small pieces. Lights up all over the place, and they shine on the palm trees outside, giving it a special glowing atmosphere that entices you to strip down to your bikini (because you can!) and slide into the pool with your 'punch a creme' (the more alcoholic and dangerous version of the innocent eggnog). Getting all dressed up for non stop invites to parties, without the excess mantel you've got to put on elsewhere. No more worrying about damaging your heels with the weather or carrying extra boots to trudge through the snow with (this is more for the ladies but i'm Canadian too). Christmas lunch with friends and family exquisitely and sexily dressed, liming (hanging out) around a buffet of lamb chops, pastelles, pork roast, scrambled spicy eggs, garlic pork, macaroni pie, curried shrimp, stewed chicken, spinach, pumpkin, pigeon pea stew….washed down with some ginger beer (not actually beer but still alcoholic). Someone's having a tassa band (an indian drum band) go play at their house tonight, "bring some sorrel (a hibiscus drink at Christmas..yes also with rum cause Trini's like their rum) and come lime with us". The excitement that came when my uncle would exclaim "Christmas eve… we go parang!!". My aunt, uncle and father were part of a parang band, where singers and all sizes of guitar came together to sing special spanish venezuelan Chrsitmas songs at friends and family when i was a child… the sound of the ukulele still reminds me of Christmas and makes me wanna break out in song and dance… it also brings with it the smell of palori frying in the kitchen…mmmmm.
 
 
Black cake
 

Sorrel


So even though all the wrapping paper rolls are covered in fir trees and snowflakes, and the carols talk about roasting chestnuts on an open fire… the spirit of christmas is what you make it. I like experiencing the essence of Christmas through different traditions and adding them onto my own celebration. Imagine if Chrsitmas had just withered away with the people who emigrated to Trinidad because they were missing a few ingredients. Imagine how much would have been missed or left uninvented…(oooooh the punch a creme would be dearly missed). So I guess what I'm trying to say is it's up to each of us individually to take the essence of Christmas (or whatever occasion) and make it our own. Make it work for you. And I will leave with an unusually un-Christmassy person to quote from, just because it's Christmas: “We must become the change we want to see in the world.” Gandhi. (I guess that means I secretly want everyone to do some internal searching and open their brains to become giant christmas confetti)
 
 
ps. this idea can also be applied to approaching any form of performance. take the essence, add your own personal touches in the details and make it your own. I'm just saying…. I mean it is a blog about acting right…

fade out…..
 
Here's a link to a parang song: Parang song




Advent Calendar - December 21 - Annika Groeneveld


An actor's dreams and doubts Advent Calendar proudly presents - December 21 - Annika Groeneveld from England and the Netherlands. Annika is a language genius, she even speaks Swedish after spending part of her childhood in Sweden. She has a sparkle in her eyes and you never know what to expect. The word is hers.

 
 

My first tentative steps on stage were in Pantomine. Playing Gianetta, Pinocchio's girlfriend. I was 28. I had always wanted to act, but shied away from the limelight during school. I thought the stage was for those kids who dared to speak up in class. Even the thought of just raising my hand would make my heart race. And – if I did answer a question – my tongue would go all thick and block any coherent thoughts in my mind.

 
So it took me until I was 28 to build up the courage. Gianetta may not have been the most glamorous role for a first introduction to theatre, but she gave me exactly what I needed: she wasn’t me. I realised I could be someone else. And gone were the sweaty palms and racing heart. It was liberating – and addictive.

 
And on the wave of this healthy addiction, I fell in love with many characters: from tragic heroines to the totally absurd (yes, I've played the back-end of a cow). Which quite nicely brings me back to what I told Lina I would write about: Pantomime. Not to be confused with mime, this bawdy British Christmas show is a far cry from a silent actor pretending to scale an invisible window.

 
It's noisy, rude and – in typically British Christmas tradition – has plenty of cross-dressing going on. There’s a man dressed as a woman (the Dame); a woman dressed as a man (the Prince); a man/woman – or a combination of both – dressed as an animal; a woman dressed as a woman; and a few token evil characters to boot. And the plot is so thickly and loosely entwined that by the end no one really knows what on earth is going on. But somehow that doesn't matter. It's not about the plot, it’s about it being Christmas. And it's about the lightness that theatre can bring (although there may be a moral message in there somewhere – if you dig deep enough).

 
The origins of pantomime lie in Commedia dell’arte: the theatre of the acrobatic Harlequin; the sad Pierrot; the stingy Pantalone; the beautiful Columbine; the bragging El Capitano; and the quack doctor Il Dottore. These characters have found their way from Renaissance Italy to figure in diluted shapes and forms in plays (Molière was a big fan; as was Shakespeare). And even contemporary comedy shows (Fawlty Towers, to name but one). Movement plays an important part in the actor’s expression of an emotion as many characters wear masks. It’s physical theatre at its comedic best: raw, gritty and entertaining.
 
 
So. What is it that draws me to this type of acting? It’s light, it’s physical, it’s a group thing, there’s always time for a beer (after the show, of course). But maybe most of all, because it’s revisiting my first role. Gianetta gave me a voice – or helped me find it. She wasn’t me, but at the same time she wasme. And there’s the attraction: each time I get lost in a character I find – or rather, reconnect with a part of myself. And, of course, it’s much cheaper – and more fun – than therapy.

 
Merry Christmas to all of you!

 
Annika x
 
 
 

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Advent Calendar - December 20 - Hector Urbina


An actor's dreams and doubts Advent Calendar proudly presents - December 20 - Hector Urbina from Mexico. Hector gives 1000% all the time. It is lovely to watch Hector when he acts and in the process because he cares more than most. The word is his.





Some years ago I received a pocket notebook with plain pages as a Christmas gift. I was not sure what to write on it, perhaps notes about work or meetings. But one day while drinking a good cup of Coffee I started to write on this notebook about big things I wanted to accomplish. I found that putting things on paper gives a good feeling; it feels like taking the first step to materialize something that was just an idea. December has a special atmosphere, and for me is also an opportunity to reflect on my experiences over the year. In this period I take a look to recent and old notebooks I wrote and sometimes I get surprised on how close I get to things I wrote or also get surprised on how my perspective on life and events has evolved over time. I highly recommend you writing your goals and dreams on paper, it worths the effort!

About studying acting, I did not though or wrote about it, it just happened. I wanted to improve communication skills and then joined an acting class and it was then that I became interested in this craft. One of the things I enjoy about acting is to study and portray characters.  Characters are people who want something in life and make choices about it, the more specific the choices the more interesting. Characters sometimes struggle and doubt about their choices but more important they embrace their decisions and deal with them moment by moment.  In real life I also embrace my decisions, sometimes things go as planned and sometimes things go in the wrong direction, but something I learned to deal with tough moments is to always be calm, remain positive and be open minded. You never know where great ideas or solutions can come from!


 
 

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Advent Calendar - December 19 - Cristina Bolis


An actor's dreams and doubts Advent Calendar proudly presents - December 19 - Cristina Bolis from Italy. Cristina is exciting and fun. She goes her own way and I am sure that she can make her dreams come true.

 

I Say ‘I’ll be home for Xmas’ and my mind goes instantly to the warm Bing Crosby’s voice.

One of the world’s most sold LP of all times, it is a Christmas classic in my family. You knew it was really Christmas when you were finally taking out the old vinyl and playing it.

TA DAA!!!!
 
 
that special atmosphere reveals, again,  year after year!
Tonight I am singing Christmas Carols, with Kim and some friends.
Tomorrow morning I am fling home to Pavia -my home town-, to stay with my parents and my sister. It is the usual Christmas, a repetitive tradition, really, so simple and yet it always finds ways to surprise you!
Just like the best of TV series: Ladies and Gents check it out, a new episode is coming soon!  
A glimpse of the last episodes, what was previously on “NATALE in CASA BOLIS”:

-Bing is gone!
An hilarious/delirious karaoke show is improvised to cover up the shocking and mysterious disappearance of the old vinyl from the shelf!
 
-Guess who is coming for dinner
How your Dad can get into a frantic three days house makeover to show off with your sister’s boyfriend.
 
-Le Poisson
A perfectly staged cooking show produced an astonishing 3 courses seafood menu that left everyone with the feeling of what it is to be a hot air balloon!
 
-Walt forever
Please do no disturb, we are having a Walt Disney marathon after lunch.
 
WHAT WILL BE THIS YEAR?
I will write down my list, Santa. My wish for this Christmas is: 
-Less presents and more presence.
                      (Great title for a new episode, huh?)
Since I started my acting training I have realized I have initiated a powerful and truthful journey towards the roots of inspiration. Gosh, it feels like being on an exploring expedition towards the sources of the Nile! In my ordinary everyday life I am (still) officially an architect, and that is creative enough to most of the people.
But it is not quite the same.

The performing arts, more then any other discipline I have tried so far, is the most direct, complete and bodily way of discovering the magic of the creative process.  At least to me. The endeavor of putting your self on a stage, learning the lines, embracing the character’s point of view, facing the other from a perspective of love corresponds deeply in facing your worst demons, your insecurities, your fears and your egocentric desperate need of consideration.
You soul shakes, pains and delights go through your body and mind (-and we know how much it should NOT be in the mind-) like electricity.
Then you stumble: why am I doing this?
Then you fall: I am never going to be able to do it the way it should be!
Then you rise: it feels so good, it feels so right!
Then you fall in love with your character again, you discover deeper nuances, more truthful meanings; the currents of emotion start supporting you in a stronger way but you have learned to steer the boat better:
you are not drifting anymore you are suddenly rafting!
God knows there are so many streams and rivers to navigate, the expedition cannot be stopped: the hunger will guide you and will make you keep going.
So Santa, please, let “presence” bring me on the stream I need to be!
Any river  will do, but I would really appreciate if could you seriously consider the Hudson  too ;-) ***MERRY CHRISTMAS TO YOU ALL***
               
 
 

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Advent Calendar - December 18 - Debby Mulholland


An actor's dreams and doubts Advent Calendar proudly presents - December 18 - Debby Mulholland from New Zealand. I am very happy that my teacher and friend Debby wanted to take part in this project. Without her I am not sure what would have happened to my acting. She has provided us with the best teachers and she has been teaching me for the last five year. I cannot say thank you enough. The word is hers.

Debby



I love my Mum’s stories, she’s full of them, and I can hear them over and over.

I love the one’s that begin… ‘When you were little’. 

‘Oh, one Christmas morning when you were really little…  we had only just finished wrapping your presents, and within five minutes of putting them under the tree you were awake, we hadn’t even put the glass of milk out for Father Christmas… you were up at 1am opening them’!

Or… ‘One year, we didn’t have a lot of money…. we bought a few small things for under the tree, and we decided to get some balloons to make it a bit more Christmassy, and we let them go in your bedroom. You woke us up with squeals of delight; there were coloured balloons everywhere around you and on the ceiling… Your brother was laughing and crying at the same time. I’ll never forget it.

And… ‘Your father and I had been out late one Christmas Eve…  And had come home with fish and chips, we’d finished eating them while wrapping your presents, and had put the left overs on the kitchen counter, it was well after three by the time we went to bed. In the morning we came downstairs to find that you had all been up, opened your presents, and fed the fish with the left over fish and chips! ....  And you’d added tomato sauce! the Fish tank was swimming in it! I couldn’t believe my eyes… There you were sat on a stool in the middle of the lounge buttering crackers, and adding cheese… to feed the damned gold fish! Your father went nuts; all the pots and pans were out of the cupboards lined up on the bench while he tried to save his fish. Honestly what a palaver. Okay well, your sister was the instigator there, you were too young. 

One year, your great auntie Eddie sent us the most exquisite box of Christmas decorations… Oh when I think back, they were beautiful. The tree looked gorgeous with the lights reflecting off them. In the morning I came down and there were bits of screwed up tinsel all over the floor…  your sister had figured out they were chocolates… every single one… gone.

‘Oh and… I’ll never forget the year we decided to put your presents in pillowcases at the end of your bed. We had only just moved into the house after living in that small apartment. And you were all, three of you, sleeping together in a double bed… and somehow during the night you had moved places.  Very early that morning we heard screams coming from your room…  we rushed in to see you had opened your pillowcase and pulled out a bow and arrow! You cried your heart out…  your brother had pulled out a doll, and the earth opened up and he fell into it… honest, I’ve never seen such a face…  such a sensitive boy your brother’.

‘So we decided the next year to wait till after breakfast. Robert was just a wee baby then.  Your Grandmother liked to have a cup of tea in bed, then an English breakfast. It was sooo painful watching you kids sit under the Christmas tree, you’d been up since 5 am waiting, and waiting, having felt every single present over and over trying to guess what was inside, until the paper had almost disintegrated’. One thing she did do, she did teach you how to open your presents without tearing the paper, and how to save it no matter how crinkled it was.

And it always puzzled me how the Christmas cards had scenes of snow covered villages with steeples, and people wore fur hats and ear-warmers, and gloves, mittens or muffs… when our Christmas was sun, sea, and sunscreen. It seemed the real Christmas belonged somewhere else.

And then I grew up.

And had Christmas’s away from the family… at the beach with bonfires, and BBQ’s, and camping, and dancing with friends

And then I went and saw the real Christmas, and it was a bonus, cause I had gone to study to become an actress, and to at last spend time with my Uncle and Aunt and cousins.

And I had Christmas’s with snow, and mulled wine. And massive awe-inspiring neon Christmas lights smiled across triple lane highways in the middle of cities. And the shop window displays were Christmas heaven. And I hunted out perfect Christmas cards in ancient churches, with the buzz and traffic all around, and stamped my feet against the cold while waiting for late night buses. And had champagne breakfasts on rooftops with flatmates, and friends.

And being a student was all, bits of paper with messages like…  ‘This Christmas certificate gives the bearer a free movie pass, paid by…(fill in the name) or…  ‘This is a Christmas reminder that … (fill in the name) will have a new second hand something…  as soon as I have money for it’.

I was a student of the theatre, and life was like living in my own movie, and every-day I became more me. And it was a dream so real I loved it all the more. With games and laughter and food and love.  And of course with some knocks along the way.

My enthusiasm was unchartered, my energy was good, and I know, sometimes annoying. And it attracted a gorgeous blue bearded prince charming. He became my life. I wanted our happiness to grow. I knew it could.  He was so sad. I would look at him and feel his sadness so deeply. His stories were horror stories. Then the slow realization hit one stone at a time. I had married someone who didn’t believe in Christmas, or children, or people, or love, at all.  I couldn’t breathe. I had arrived at the rest of my life… at forever… at ‘to death do us part’. And I was living in the stingiest place on earth.

It was the hardest lesson.

Life with someone who doesn’t share in your joy, but looks at it with derision and scorn is an enemy at the gate. A newspaper up in your face at Christmas without a word is a crime against the heart. And you send back the gift given you. Till scorn and derision become the hammer that drive the nails deeper… sealing the coffin that holds your love. Forever.  And like a cub being pulled away from a dying friend, it was hard to go.

I let go.

Silence.

And was a foreigner.

Lost.

For along time.

Silence.

So distant. 

Everything… so distant.

He was not your family.

‘Go to your Uncle’, your Dad tells you.’ Look after her for us’, he told him.

You got out of bed.

And slowly, very slowly, the fear, distrust, and alienation pealed away…  and past love fused with present, uncovered, shows you your protected soul.

My family know the games, and food and laughter and children, and being together. And they have that spirit every day of the year, and this is where I want to live, in this feeling everyday, forever.

And we had beautiful Christmas’s, with snow, and walk’s over peaks and through valleys, and snow balls, and games of soccer with the little ones on a white field in the middle of a Christmas card village with steeples, and snowmen, and pantomimes in Victorian theatres, and holding on to each other on slippery ice.

Oh and seeing my uncle carolling… playing the cornet in the brass band with sheets of music… and we the choristers’ singing along… the joy! We went from one old English pub to the next with huffed breath and snow covered boots… their fireplaces blazing, Christmas trees splendidly adorned and fern covered heaths and mulled wine and cheer.

They repaired my heart and my faith. Thank God for them.

And then I began to have my own Christmas’s with friends whose families lived somewhere else. We came together in the spirit of Christmas… at my house… at their house, bringing potluck’s, and presents. We met in bars…  in café’s….  in restaurants….  all woolly hats, and scarfs and mittens. In a white cottage on top of a cliff over-looking a wild Welsh sea.  Dancing in the square of a communist country whose government had given Christmas back to its people. And In Paris, opening presents on Christmas Eve, then heading out wrapped up against the cold, down ancient stairs from one arrondissement to another…. walking and laughing. This time up, climbing grooved stone stairs inside an ancient cathedral, higher and steeper, winding up, stopping for moments to peer through tiny medieval windows, to glimpse a diamond lit city below. And further we go, up, and into the bowels of a giant musical instrument… We spread out, feeling the space, and lay down giving ourselves to the centuries old wooden floor a mile above the congregation, and watched as the organ player danced on the keys and pedals like an acrobatic Mozart, every breath placed, poised, executed… and delivered…. the perfect olympic movement in harmony…. all of us spellbound by the magic, in tune with the vibration, of every beat…  till, we, he, the music, and the voices of the congregation below, lifted, mingled, and found each other….  to become one. And we looked over the edge of the pipes knowing no one could see us watching, and we watched the Parisian’s who had come to midnight mass to sing like angels.

And more.

And we lost loved ones along the way. All of us here have lost loved ones along the way.

And we couldn’t save them…  but in our hearts.

And now.

Today.

It is time.

I’m packed.

And am boarding a plane.

On my way… home … to have Christmas with my family. With my mum and brothers and sister and nephews… For the first time in forever, and it will be the best Christmas… cause I don’t know how many more we will have.

And it’s scary… cause I’m afraid to leave here… and then I will be afraid to leave there. 

I’ll take a deep breath and drop into the sky and hope like hell.

And we’ll wait till after breakfast to open our presents, even though the littlest have opened theirs.  And we’ll make snowmen out of sand on the beach.  The pohutukawa will be our Christmas tree, and the pukako will be on the Christmas cards, and we’ll have ham on the bone, and tomatoes fresh from the garden with our turkey sandwiches, and pavlova decorated with cream, strawberries, kiwi fruit and hokey-pokey ice cream for dessert.

And we’ll wash the dishes and dry them and put them away, all of us talking at once over top of each other.

And we’ll think of those who aren’t with us and we’ll send them love.

And we’ll go fishing.

 

I raise my glass with you all…

A toast to the spirit of Christmas… 

May it live everyday in all of us

 
Merry Christmas.

Kirihimete.

 
Love you and you and you….

Xxxxx Deb

 
And here’s my little surprise package…





Susan, Doug and Debby
 

December 18
 
 
 

Monday, December 17, 2012

Advent Calendar - December 17 - Francis Cox


An actor's dreams and doubts Advent Calendar proudly presents - December 17 - Francis Cox from England (the United Kingdom). Francis is very sweet and makes the best cheesecake ever.

 


Tis the season....for myself


 
I love Christmas. It feels a bit redundant to say that. After all, who doesn’t love Christmas? I have to admit though, that I don’t get as worked up about it as I used to and that always makes me a bit sad. I miss the excitement I felt as a child in the weeks leading up to Christmas. Looking forward to decorations, carols, festive food, ‘fizzy’ drinks (these were a special Yuletide treat in our house), the Christmas Morecambe and Wise Show on TV and above all, the presents stuffed into a pillowcase at the end of my bed on Christmas morning.

 
It’s an inevitable part of growing older that you take a more subdued approach to the festive season. That’s one of the things I like about living in Amsterdam. The Dutch are much more relaxed about Christmas. It doesn’t reach the same fever pitch here that it does in my native England where housewives battle to the death for the last Christmas pudding in Marks & Spencer.

 
This easy-going attitude is why for me, the best part of Christmas is not the day itself or New Year’s Eve but the five days in between. They’re my favourite time of the year. I fulfill any social or family obligations on Christmas Day and after that I’m free to spoil myself. I never work between Christmas and New Year and spend the time relaxing, reading, watching any DVDs I’ve received as gifts, hanging out in cafés, going to movies and of course eating and drinking a bit too much. It’s heaven. Thus refreshed, I’m ready for the New Year’s Eve celebrations with my friends. It sounds self-indulgent I know, but shouldn’t we all be allowed to do our own thing at Christmas?

 
So however you celebrate the festive season, I wish everyone a wonderful Christmas and a prosperous 2013.


 
 

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Advent Calendar - December 15 - Sema Tanrıöver


An actor's dreams and doubts Advent Calendar proudly presents - December 15 - Sema Tanrıöver from Turkey. Sema's smile make you warm inside and you have to know that she is a fantastic singer. The word is hers.


 
 
 
 

Bayram and Christmas

 
 
I loved the idea when dear Lina asked me to draft something about my country’s traditions of celebrating  religious holidays in order to be posted in her Advent Calendar and decided to tell you all not only the way my family celebrates the 2 Turkish holidays but my first Christmas in Amsterdam as well. The spirit behind “Bayram” and “Christmas” are quite similar unless you are one of those strictly religious types. I like the spiritual side of the religions rather than their institutional aspect which generally finds a way to create a conflict of interest. Therefore let’s get into a plane now and fly to Turkey in order to celebrate a Bayram together with my familyJ Ready to take off? On behalf of the humble author of this article and the crew, being my family here, I wish you a good reading, happy Bayram and merry Chrismas.

 

Let me start by introducing some useful definitions: Bayram means feast in Turkish. For instance “Noel Bayramı” is the “Christmas feast” which is only celebrated by the Christian minority there. In Turkey the majority celebrates 2 Turkish religious holidays. And although these are religious holidays there are thousands of families who celebrate them with a spirit beyond a religion because they reunite families and friends, siblings, let them wine (or Rakı which is the favorite drink of Turks) and dine together. Family rituals may be defined as behaviors or activities involving most or all members of the family which occur episodically, have a symbolic meaning for family members, and are valued by the participants so that they would like the activity to be carried on in the future. For my family like many other Turkish families as well a “Bayram” is definitely a very important gathering and ritual rather than a religious ceremony.

 

The first Bayram is Şeker Bayramı, which is also called the Sugar Festival, takes place at the end of fasting month of Ramadan and lasts for three days. This religious feast is celebrated with family reunions and giving the presents and sweets to visitors. During the feast of Şeker Bayramı older members of the family are respected by kissing their hands and many Turkish men if not most of them, attend mosques. (The male members of my family fall under this “If not most of them” category. Somehow nobody in my family likes any of the institutions such as mosques or churches to enter between them and the god almighty or you may call her/him or it a supernatural universal power.)  The second one is Kurban Bayramı which occurs two months after the Seker Bayramı, and lasts for four days. This feast commemorates the thwarted sacrifice of Ishmael by Abraham, which is a Koranic version of the Abraham-and-Isaac story, and used to be distinguished with the dispatch of a sheep. In recent years Muslims have begun to make donations to charitable institutions instead of sacrificing animals. Anyway, that much of general information will be enough I suppose. Now let’s go back to my family ritualJ

 

According to me family traditions are activities which are less culture-specific and more unique to each family. I have a big family which comes mainly from the maternal side. Many cousins,aunts,uncles and my dear nephew. When the whole family comes together, and that’s what more or less happens during bayrams, we can perform Nabuco with its extended Hebrew chorus since there will be enough number of people to fulfill the required vast cast of the opera! ( A bit of exaggeration would not hurt!:J) For a child bayram means joy, lots of fun, being spoiled, playing together with all the cousins, going to funfair…etc. For me and for my brother it had an additional meaning which was having a different costume for each day of bayram, meticulously designed and sewed by my mother who was a good and very well-known tailor in the city. I believe that I got my refined taste in outfit and garments from her. On the eve of Bayram I was going to bed with the excitement of the costumes and the fun of the following 3 or 4 days. In the morning of the first feast day after exchanging “happy bayram” wishes and kisses, we used to go to my paternal granmother’s house in order to have a Bayram breakfast. After the breakfast we the children (my brother and I) were kissing the adults’ hands ( this is a very well-known tradition in Turkish culture and is taken as a symbol of paying your respect to the adults, such as your grannies, aunties, parents…etc)  and taking our gifts or pocket money specifically attributed to Bayram and was supposed to be spent at the carousel later at the funfair. The paternal side of the family was not that big therefore the real big fun always started as of the afternoon at my maternal grannies’ house. All the cousins, aunts, uncles and other siblings ( the aforementioned Nabuco cast I meanJ)  sitting around the huge table and rakıing&dining&singing the whole evening starting as of the late afternoon was a beautiful scene which is engraved to my mind. At the end of the first day, which is the most important day of the Bayram, I remember going to bed happily exhausted due to the exuberant and joyful day and running around not only with my cousins but also with my grand father’s 2 dogs and 3 cats . My maternal grandfather was not a religious man. He was a very special personage to me and was a highly respected wise man among his friends and neighbours. In terms of belief, like all his children and grand-childeren, I follow him and his thoughts which made me the open-minded person of today.“The belief should spring and stay in your heart. It is not something that you should or are supposed to show off.The only thing that matters is being a person with good conscience.” He used to say. May him rest in peace. Actually from a child’s perspective it was an amazing feeling to observe him being a very respectful personage in the society while he was refusing all kinds of worshipping acts suggested by the institutionalized religion.

 

After I left Eskişehir, my dear home town, and went first to Ankara for university, then to Istanbul to meet with the finance world, finally to Amsterdam again for business reasons I could never have the chance to join that big and joyful celebrations every year on regular basis. Although I have always enjoyed and still am enjoying living in different cities of the world other than my home town and never feel homesick, only during the first day of Bayram’s I feel a kind of emptiness and longing for that special big gathering. Always missed the joy and spiritual enlightenment that came along with it.

 

It was 2002; my second year in Amsterdam but was my first Christmas. Because in 2001 which was my Christmas in Holland I had taken a four days of vacation like many expatriates doJ  I was again planning to take a short trip to Istanbul when my dear neighbour José asked me to join them for Christmas celebration at her place. Her mother in law was my next door neighbour who was a lovely elderly lady and whom I called “Tante Rini” and loved dearly. José told me how they celebrate the Christmas. All the family coming together, she and her husband, grandma, three sons and daughter-in-laws, grand and grand-grand children and of course their cats and enjoying the day with wining&dining&singing together! The same scene of Bayram with my family!  Merely with one difference; the wine was replaced by the rakı J.

 

When I received that sincere invitation  from my neighbour, I felt deeply surprised, genuinely happy and rather emotional. That first Christmas  day of 2002 was a very special day for me. Being a part of my dear Dutch neighbour’s family reminded me the Bayram’s  and brought me back to my beautiful memories. On that specific day I realized that the spirit behind the Christmas and the Bayram was the same. An open-mind and a loving heart were the only two tools that you need in order to discover that mutual spirit.

 

People are the same wherever you go. They have exactly the same needs. They need to get together, need to share the feeling that they are not alone. Perhaps due to that need of protection they “invented” the religion.

 

Listen to the Christmas bells merrily ringing and calling us to get together.

 

So cheers everybodyJ  Here’s to Christmas!

 

With love /sevgilerimle

 

Sema Tanrıöver

 

 
 

December 15
 
 
 

Friday, December 14, 2012

Advent Calendar - December 16 - Robert Montcalm


An actor's dreams and doubts Advent Calendar proudly presents - December 16 - Robert Montcalm from Canada. Robert has qualities that the rest of us dream of. He is ambitious, focused and great to work with. He is a sweetheart. The word is his.





A dialogue of bodies in motion.


There is almost nothing so fascinating as the unspoken story told between two people. I specialize in theatrical movement, or so I would categorize my approach to acting. I'm a Fight Director who approaches choreography the same way that a Writer approaches a text. I ask all the questions that are necessary for a fight or story, most importantly – Is this just in for effect or does it serve a purpose?

You see, a fight for me is not merely about flash – a series of actions made for an audience to be impressed by skill. Much more than that, I choreograph movements that connect to emotions and the broader story. For me a fight results from the boiling over of events that have taken place and must therefore relate to everything that has come before and influence everything that will go after.

A slap is not simply that, a slap.

I can give the same mechanical action to a hundred different actors and they will each do it differently, whether by small margins or great liberties of their own expression. As Jacqueline McClintock used to tell us, a hundred actors go in for a part, they only call back a few – they all had the same text, so what made those few special?

You have to live a fight the same way that you live a text, a dance, a song. It isn't enough to simply feel something in acting, as actors we have to show it, and when you are forced to do a choreography there isn't much stopping you from showing - living in the moment - other than being in your head about what comes next...

Being in your head.

Boy is it comfortable to be up there, that safe little bubble where you're free to direct yourself and miss everything else that's going on around you... but it sucks at the end of the day, when you realize that you haven't so much been on stage as you've been off in your own mind... and the audience saw it too, whether they knew what it was or not.

There is a difficulty here that is the same for memorizing text as it is for fighting and it's this – you must know your lines well enough to do them backwards, upside down, turned around and inside out (or any variation thereof). The challenge with being free enough to show your emotions in a text is made all the more difficult in a fight, when you know that if you swing too early your partner might very well lose an eye. So where is the balance?

Being present, connected, with the person across from you.

As an actor being alone on stage when your partner is right in front of you is an awful feeling, made all the worse when they are brandishing a weapon. So how do you get around this, in fighting we build in cues that the body and muscles train themselves in response to, the same way that if someone suddenly tossed you a chocolate bar you would instinctively grab it out of the air (I use chocolate as an example because... well, it's chocolate and shouldn't need more explanation).

Once you lay the ground work for movements to be free, actors can actually be in the moment, in place of just moving to a choreography, the same way they can live a text truthfully once they no longer have to think of what comes next. If the fight choreography is done well, there should always be moments of discovery to be played, and when you're connected with your partner the audience will not fear for the safety of the actor that you're fighting but they sure as hell might fear for the character across from you.

If you're interested.

I'm a certified Advanced Actor Combatant and serve as the Combatant Representative on the Board of Directors for Fight Directors Canada. If anyone is interested in certifying in stage and film combat there is a 2 week intensive in 2013 in Montreal! I'll be certifying to become an Instructor (I will have completed a 3 year apprenticeship under Canadian Fight Master Jean-François Gagnon.

For more information, please visit: http://www.fdc.ca/academy/

This is one of the greatest experiences that I think an actor can have and I would love it if even one person reading this blog registers.



December 16