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Welcome to the Arden Theatre Company blog, where we share behind-the-scenes stories and current happenings with you. You will hear from the Arden staff as well as actors and other visiting artists, and we hope to hear from you, too. If you have an idea for a topic, please post a comment about it. We can't wait to hear what you think!

By Bryan Kerr, Arden Professional Apprentice

Recently, we received an audio clip from one of our visitors on Opening Night of The Borrowers. She sat down with her daughter, Tori, who is 5 and talked a bit about the show they had just seen. Tori really enjoyed the show, especially Spiller and his battle with the wasp. And who doesn’t, am I right? As someone who has seen the show many times, that scene is quite the crowd pleaser and usually gets a rousing round of applause.

But she did have one question that was bothering her a bit. How did Eggletina escape? And how did her parents do the same when she realized she had left? What a great question! As she pointed out, we spend the whole play thinking that this awful thing has happened to this poor girl just to find out that she was able to make some fantastic escape…but how? Unfortunately, I can’t really answer that question. I know! You’re thinking that the whole reason I set this up is to answer questions just like this when you have them. True. But the answer to this question lies not in asking a director or someone who helped to build the set, or even with the person who wrote the story. No, the answer lies only in your own imagination.

So what I can answer for you is why the writer might have left this unanswered for us all to think about. As an aspiring writer myself, I know the value of not giving everything away to the audience. Readers and theatregoers alike need something to think about after the story is told. Something that they can fill in the blanks on, so to speak. Perhaps the writer offers up Arrietty’s story of adventure first in the hopes that those watching will pull from that to create a story of Eggletina’s amazing escape from the cat! The great thing about storytelling is how it continues beyond the actual story itself. It inspires us all to create more adventure, work through more conflict, and discover our own solutions…

Inspired by this idea, then, I offer up a few places to start some really great stories!

What was Spiller like as a little boy?

How could you make Mrs. Driver really happy?

Where would Arrietty go on her summer vacation?

The possibilities are endless! Start a story here for everyone to see and then finish it up on your own. Storytelling can be exciting, fun, and really easy if you just go for it!

By Allen Radway, T. Stedman Harder in A Moon for the Misbegotten

As we roll into previews, the Moustache Blog continues. Disturbing as it may be.

On Tuesday, January 4th it was off to the barber’s with my beard! And by “the barber’s” I mean “the bathroom” of the Arcadia Stage’s green room, beard trimmer in hand. The preliminary shave, kindly documented here by Sean Lally (Mike Hogan in Moon), resulted in an elaborate handlebar ‘stache. Hm, perhaps Harder briefly spent time in a biker gang? Actually, I just wanted to mess with with Grace and Michael on my next entrance. And…I succeeded too!

The prank, oddly enough, had a positive effect on the top of the scene; and after an amazingly fun and productive work-thru rehearsal with Pfeif, Grace and Michael, I finished the trim with a straight-razor on our dinner break.

In the coming days I will continue to chip away until all that remains is a savy, thirties ‘stache reminiscent of Errol Flynn and Doug Fairbanks. Alas, if only Harder were that valiant!

More anon.

Read Allen’s first Mustache Blog entry here

By Grace Gonglewski, Josie in A Moon for the Misbegotten

12/31/2010
eating sleeping dreaming moon.

I speak in an Irish brogue to my family. Haven’t gone on Facebook or had a glass of wine in weeks. I fall asleep with the script in my hands and my peepers on my nose and my teeth whitening thingy on my teeth. I am whitening my teeth for Josie – it says in the script she has even white teeth and coarse black hair. Got a perm last week and will get it colored black next week. I swear I never do anything to my hair unless a theatre pays for it. My daughter is starving for my attention, my husband is so ready for a break when I walk in the door.

I wish I had more time to just run lines, but I have no time off stage! I go to the theatre and stay all day- pack a lunch and nap during breaks. Ten and twelve hour days this week.
no life but moon….

1/2/2011
Feel sick. Throat sore, head splitting. lines lines lines. I feel like I am behind a train trying to jump on, it is just out of reach. I can’t even do my work really because the damn thing is so big, I am just trying to keep up, just trying to…it is overwhelming.
Dirt all over my legs and feet, fingernails. I guess I will have to bathe nightly when I get home.

Alison [Roberts, Costume Designer] opened up my blouse, moved things, shifted things. Meredith [McKewen, Properties Master]‘s props are amazing- really this whole crew is astoundingly talented. And Courtney [Riggar, Production Manager] keeps it all running smoothly.

feel so behind!

©2009 Arden Theatre Company, 40 N. 2nd St., Philadelphia, PA 19106. For tickets, call 215.922.1122.
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