Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Designing Mystical Places



 Brigadoon: Setting the Stage

Whenever we go to a play, we know we are entering into a world that created on a platform to help tell a story. Living rooms, street corners and even magical places are built to compliment the character roles that are acted out. They are also developed – more importantly, I think- to set the stage literally for us, the audience.

Actors are trained to ‘be in character’ regardless of the furniture and flora around them. It is the audience that depends most upon the consistency of visual cues to tell the story. When it comes to telling stories of imagined times and places the physical landscape matters. This is what quietly keeps us connected enough to believe in these strange and exciting lands where tales of fantasy unfold.

Can you imagine, for example, the Wizard of Oz without a yellow brick road of some kind? Or the heather-covered highlands of the Scottish hamlet Brigadoon which arises only one day every hundred years?

I recently asked Elizabeth Bazzano, set designer and lead painter for Spreckels Theatre Company's upcoming production of "Brigadoon" (directed by Gene Abravaya) about what it takes to make a mythic placeslike Brigadoon feel real enough for the audience to believe it exists.
Q/A:

Q: What are the most important differences between fairytale/mythic stage settings and those of plays set in factual times and places?

A: We can get a lot more creative with shows set in mythical places.  We aren’t stuck in reality, trying to make everything as realistic and accurate as possible.  We can do a lot more with color, texture, and shapes.  It allows us to create our own world, our own reality. 

Q:  What do you like most about mythic/fantasy set design work?

A:  I like the freedom of creativity that designing a mythical set allows.  It opens up a world of possibilities where we can push the limits of imagination and turn magic into reality.   There must still be continuity within the world we create, of course, but we get to decide what that means for our show.   

Q: What is the purpose of plays that take place in “once upon a time, in a land far away”?

A:  These are the things that make us dream, either of a much better place or of great memories from childhood where there is magic, fantasy, imagination, and almost always a happy ending. 

Q:  What do you like most about mythic/fantasy set design work?

A:  I like the freedom of creativity that designing a mythical set allows.  It opens up a world of possibilities where we can push the limits of imagination and turn magic into reality.   There must still be continuity within the world we create, of course, but we get to decide what that means for our show.   

Bazzano who has been involved in Sonoma County theater for almost 20 years including Santa Rosa Players, Sonoma State University, and Cinnabar Theater is also a stage manager and props master at Spreckels.

She told me that musicals like Brigadoon – which was first performed on Broadway in 1947 -offer audiences a chance to step away from everyday life in order to experience the magic of true love, mystery and adventure. This Rohnert Park premiere runs October 11 through October 27.

Show details: 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays/Saturdays, 2 p.m. Saturdays/Sundays. Tickets: $22- $26 ($22 Youth; $24 Seniors; $26 General). 
Spreckels Performing Arts Center, Codding Theater, 5409 Snyder Lane, Rohnert Park. 

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