Final phase in the plan for this As You Like It takes place where it all began. Where the audition took place all those months ago.
It’s a great big building, an extension of the Notre Dame campus in Indiana, but located here in London. It’s more or less opposite the stage door of The Haymarket Theatre, from whence I would emerge every night when I was working as an usher there. Just by The National Portrait Gallery.
Up in Trafalgar Hall, we put down our ivy boundary and covered it with our purple material. That’s the stage. And then we worked out how to cut the hell out of the script. We needed to hack about half an hour off it. Somehow we did it, mostly from the middle. They need the start to establish things, WE need the final scene intact as it was such an almighty headfuck to make it work with just the five of us and every character on stage.
I honestly don’t know how we did it but we did. Loads of stuff went, whole scenes went. We would honestly have cut All The World’s a Stage if we could. It doesn’t further the narrative in any way. But it’s too famous to slice. “Kill your darlings,” I was taught at drama school. Just because you love doing a scene doesn’t mean it is necessary. We all lost bits we love today, I have no doubt, but now we have a version running at one and a half hours with no interval. I don’t think we could have been able to do that at the start of this process, but we know it now and thankfully the dynamic makes it possible.
First ever show from this company in that hall and they have been angling to do it for ages.
The audience was a load of American students from having grad school at the London campus. Closed shop. The front row of the audience was almost completely empty on both sides, which is never a good sign. They were all on the same level. Owing to the room configuration, we played it in a diamond shape, like we were the altar in a cruciform church. Some audience were there for the extra credit, some were big Shakespeare fans. It landed very well, although we had to work harder for reactions than ever before, but largely that was because they didn’t feel certain they were allowed to laugh. They did though, and they invested and they went silent from time to time.
Early class tomorrow, too early. I’m getting my head down now. Can barely keep my eyes open anyway. I will miss this when it is over … Zzz



