Diary of a producer, part 2 [updated]

8th December 2012

For yesterday’s post I scribbled some notes about our filming this week for the research project Shakespearean London Theatres. With a company of nine actors we have been staging scenes from four early modern plays and filming both the rehearsals and the scenes themselves. It’s been fairly stressful and at the same time a lot of fun, and it has been particularly interesting to see (and hear) how words that may seem to a degree impenetrable on the page make perfect sense when spoken. All of this is one strand of six short films, to be completed next March, that will also feature contributions from academics and elements of archive material. Read on for further notes from Thursday, Friday and today. read more »

Diary of a producer, part 1

7th December 2012

So, you know, what does a producer actually do? Well, judging by the paucity of posts this week, when he’s filming he certainly doesn’t have time for his blog. Since Monday we have been shooting short drama scenes for the research project Shakespearean London Theatres (ShaLT), and for this producer the past four days have included hanging an actor (intentionally and safely; see above), making a lot of coffee, finding locations, finding crew, recasting a major part with less than twenty-four hours notice, acting as a first AD, composing and sending out call sheets, explaining the project (over and over), disbursing petty cash (and collecting receipts), sourcing swords and worrying – a lot. Worrying about money, worrying about whether everyone is warm enough (they haven’t been), worrying about noise, and most of all worrying about time. Oh, and directing the films. We have one further day of rehearsals today, and then our last drama shoot tomorrow morning. So maybe now I have time to tell you a bit about what we’re doing. read more »

Bach, Shakespeare and space for Advent

3rd December 2012

Time was in our house when the Advent calendar was the centre of the world right through December. But now our eldest, Nicholas, is studying at Ningbo in China (and blogging his time there), his brother Ben is reading geography at Nottingham, and even their sister Kate is in the process of putting away childish things. So forgive me if transfer my Advent attentions here with recommendations (albeit three days late) for three daily online offerings: A Bach Christmas calendar from BBC Radio 3, Sonnets for Advent from Blogging Shakespeare, and the 2012 Hubble Space Telescope Advent calendar from The Atlantic. read more »

Links for the weekend

2nd December 2012

At London’s The Photographers’ Gallery there is a compelling exhibition called Shoot! Existential Photography (until 6 January). Trouble is, the idea behind what’s not in any case a great title is a bit tricky to explain. Here’s the gallery’s set-up:

In the period following World War I, a curious attraction appeared at fairgrounds: the photographic shooting gallery. If the punter’s bullet hit the centre of the target, this triggered a camera. Instead of winning a balloon or toy, the participant would win a snapshot of him or herself in the act of shooting. Shoot! Existential Photography traces the history of this fascinating side-show – from its popular use at fairgrounds to how it fascinated many artists and intellectuals in its heyday, including Simone de Beauvoir, Jean-Paul Sartre [that’s the two of them above], Man Ray and Lee Miller. read more »

Britain’s wonderful worlds of colour

1st December 2012

While I have been reading (and enjoying) Colour Films in Britain: The Negotiation of Innovation 1900-55, a major new book by Sarah Street from BFI/Palgrave Macmillan, two key posts have appeared that render a touch redundant what I might have written. Samuel Wigley posted at the BFI an introduction to the book, A glorious adventure: colour films in Britain – with wonderful images (including the one above from the wartime docudrama Western Approaches, 1944). Then earlier this week Luke McKernan drew together numerous strands of scholarship about colour film in a major post, How colour works, with a cornucopia of additional links. So before you go any further, look up those two pieces.

What I can offer here are complementary clips culled from YouTube of eighteen British films made in colour between 1925 and 1955. These are embedded below, annotated with quotes from and thoughts about Sarah Street’s book. Read on for some vividly colourful treasures… (and wait a moment – or refresh – if the clips do not immediately appear). read more »

Links for mid-week

29th November 2012

So keen was I – and am I – to see Phyllida Lloyd’s new production of Julius Caesar at Donmar Warehouse (until 9 February) that I booked tickets for the first preview. The production stars, among others, Harriet Walter, Frances Barber and Cush Jumbo (above, in rehearsal). That preview was to have been Thursday night, but then the team decided that they needed more time and the first preview was cancelled. So I am re-booked for 12 December and like the rest of you I have to make do with the press previews, which include Can an all-women Julius Caesar work? by the Guardian’s Charlotte Higgins; Shakespeare’s sisters force their way into the Bard’s boys’ club by Matt Trueman for the Independent;  Women trouble in Evening Standard; and an interview with Harriet Walter with What’s On Stage. Meanwhile, I have been collecting other links on other stuff, and offer this week’s mid-week selection here, with thanks to @emmafgreen, @brainpicker and @UCLAFTVarchive, among others. read more »

How to look (again) at Barbara Hepworth

28th November 2012

One of the ways in which I’m keen to continue refreshing our blog is by beginning to make better use of selected – and updated – reprises from our archive. There is a good deal of interesting stuff buried away in there and each week I intend to revive an earlier post, starting today with one from May 2011 that was pegged to the opening of The Hepworth Wakefield. Designed by David Chipperfield Architects, this gallery has proved itself as a spectacular success, and until 3 February it has on show a well-received presentation of The Hospital Drawings by Barbara Hepworth. Richard Cork in the Financial Times described this as ‘a superb show’, and said that in these ‘redemptive images, the surgeons’ devotion to their tasks ends up charged by an almost sacramental significance’. read more »

Links for the weekend

25th November 2012

As detailed on Thursday, I am posting my links twice a week from now on – on Thursdays and on Sundays. Today’s lead is the excellent news that images from the Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts at The British Library are now provided under a Public Domain Mark. This means that – as the library’s Medieval and earlier manuscripts blog explains – ‘within certain restrictions of reasonable use, images from this catalogue are freely available to the public’ (details of the one above are below). Which is exciting, truly enlightened of the library, and a MAJOR shift in the provision of museum images in this country. There are more than 35,000 images in the database from 4,231 manuscripts. Bravo BL – and let’s hope other institutions follow your lead. Across the jump, more links, collected with the help of – and thanks to – among others, @filmdrblog, @emmafgreen, @AlxButterworth and @mia_out (each of whom more than deserves a “follow”). read more »

“Time is come round”

23rd November 2012

The Julius Caesar DVD has arrived! The disc includes a new 40-minute documentary Julius Caesar: Behind the Scenes with location footage and interviews with cast and crew. We will be presenting parts of that here over the next month. But for the moment watch our new trailer and go here to order.

Links for mid-week

22nd November 2012

On reflection, my idea last weekend of splitting the week’s links into two (here and here) is probably not the way to go. Simply put, I like the eclecticism of a single list; plus, one post is easier to promote than two. So in another attempt to avoid an elephantine offering, and at the same time to keep the links current, I’m going to try posting a list mid-week as well as one for the weekend. Which is what I’ve done here – any thoughts on which approach is better would be much appreciated. Let’s start with How art history is failing at the internet in which President and CEO of the J Paul Getty Trust James Cuno laments that ‘scholars, curators and conservators of art are not exploiting the new technology to research differently.’ Take a look too at the fairly astonishing web application that he references, Closer to Van Eyck (above). As usual, there’s much more across the jump, with hat-tips for links due to, among others, @gkllday, @Chi_Humanities, @hannahrudman, @gilesedwards and (inevitably) both @filmstudiesff and @TheBrowser. read more »