Zeroing In

Our recent events left us with much to celebrate, and think about. The ‘Naked Date’ was successful, went really smoothly, though admittedly for myself was eclipsed by putting on my first life drawing play, ‘Girl in Suitcase’. Lucy found all the models and many wanted to go into life modelling so there was less of a transformative angle, although still some, which I suppose made it slightly less moving, but far more relaxing. It felt more like we are an agency by which people may enter life modelling, so if it were to continue that way, I feel we would have to charge. Previously more women involved were overcoming body confidence issues so there was another satisfaction and a sense of giving back something of what we have gained not just in terms of know-how and encouragement, but also something that has helped us become who we are. The trickier task however of organising that sort of event, also requires funding, if not from the women themselves, then sponsorship, which while desirable, competes with my playwrighting/performing ambitions.

SB3 Naked Date

The play came together in a short space of time and managed to accommodate several cast changes. I drew heavily on scripts I’d written a couple of years ago, one of which about Mum struggling with MS, is a bit close to the bone. I had thought I’d prefer performing in Edinburgh to relative strangers, yet it was the home audience of family – including my parents – and friends that helped my personal piece to resonate. Technically Jaki, Aaron and I mastered the show more in Scotland, but I didn’t have the same adrenaline there. True, when we were streamed live on the Saturday evening some of those tingles came back, but I know a good live audience is of course what this play needs.

That’s not to say the Edinburgh audiences weren’t appreciative; they just weren’t large enough to really settle into. It felt like there was more room in the space for me to notice anything lacking, which while also being a state of mind, is nevertheless a factor when involving audience participation. The idea being that all the audience draws, so if only a few are present, it can be trickier to rally them on if they are unprepared for a good half hour of drawing. That didn’t stop me from accosting any unengaged hands during the show, but I guess if you’re new to it, it would be easier to relax with some charcoal if you felt surrounded by others in a similar boat. Still it meant I could spot the novices more easily haha!

The London venue, Mascara Bar, invited us back immediately and lots of people were very positive about it there. I’m not sure if I’d re-perform the play as it is, as I would very much like to write more of a fresh script, and have plenty new ideas.

One very valuable comment from an audience member at Mascara, was to include Jaki the actress playing my Mum in the modelling, and encourage the audience to draw her too. This made absolute sense with the meaning of the play and the fact that the character is paralysed, and was duly incorporated in Edinburgh.

Not having been told to draw Jaki didn’t stop my Dad from sketching a small army of her wheelchair-bound character! Indeed Jaki kept her facial expressions for the character Sara the entire time on stage so this was more character modelling than life.

Enter Jaki Loudon, my Motivational Guru & Fellow Actress

Jaki cheered me up today as we waded into the backlog of promotional activities I have let build up…

Here’s what she helped me come up with for Why You Should Come And See ‘Girl In Suitcase’!

“This comedy-drama is inspirational, mind-blowingly honest and touches on poignant, contemporary issues. It approaches the human form in a new light making it unmissable – providing a wake up call to do something while the opportunity is still there.

Enjoy this new play by a new writing talent.

Spirited Bodies (the presenting company) is all about encouraging women (and now men) to step outside their comfort zone, and bare all. This is about shedding our fears, inhibitions and hang-ups relating to body image. This is about tuning into who we really are. Very few of us are actually comfortable with our bodies. This show may unlock a hidden desire to be seen as a work of art.

‘Girl In Suitcase’ is an autobiographical account of the relationship between a Mother – played by Jaki Loudon – and her daughter Rebecca – played by Esther Bunting – on their journey through life. Sara is now in the advanced stages of MS (multiple sclerosis) and has been estranged from her daughter for many years. The approach of death throws a bold new light on their lives.

Controversial issues about life and death are addressed in the play while an undercurrent of dark humour is ever present.

Allow yourself to be entertained by the antics of the cantankerous Sara and her libertarian daughter Rebecca.

Enjoy the inbuilt life drawing class. Come along and we’ll give you some paper and a pencil; give it a try.

Our characters highlight the need to grab opportunities while they still exist – before time runs out.

Time is of the essence.”

CAST:

JAKI  LOUDON

Trained at Academy Drama School & The Bridge Theatre Training Company. Theatre credits include : Gail in Gail Can Sing, Rat King & Captain in Dick Whittington, Sheena in Aurora, Queen Margaret in Richard III, Anfisa in Three Sisters, Violet and others in Find Me, Marion in How Love is Spelt, Flora in A Slight Ache, Time & Paulina in The Winter’s Tale, Witch in Story of the Amulet and Mother Miriam Ruth in Agnes of God, and many more

Film and TV credits include: Vodaphone Codes TV commercial, Charlotte Pope in CryBaby, Journalist in Patient 17, Penny the Bric a Brac stall holder in Coldplay’s Music DVD Life in Technicolour 2.

My lovely friend Jaki

ESTHER BUNTING

Trained at Rose Bruford. Theatre credits include Sara in Assisting Sara, Protagonist in An Ordered Kaosz, Young Syrian in Salome, Rose in Remembering Rose.

Esther wrote Girl In Suitcase, Assisting Sara and An Ordered Kaosz.

She currently works as a life model and started the Spirited Bodies events.

Mother love and a tutor called Karn – Lucy Saunders asked me some questions about creating the show ‘Girl In Suitcase’

The show is very autobiographical, and while it is not especially about my Mother being from a different time with different expectations, I guess it also is. It is about a cross-generational clash, and the mending of this. It is about a character with little or negative outlook in life, made worse by her disability. It is about the parallels in the daughter’s life, and how through the Mother’s need, their relationship is softened and made closer. The Mother is approaching death, and this throws a bold new light on their lives.

Another inspiration is life modelling, and a particular tutor I worked with at Heatherleys back at the beginning of ’09. She walked with a stick and was totally eccentric. Visually she was striking, and her character had presence. She slightly resembled my Mother as she was over 10 years ago walking with a stick. As I modelled and listened to her meanderings to the class, I conjured up a fictional character of her, an evil version who continually shifts between trying to be sinisterly kind to the model (who may also be a trafficked woman) and being downright nasty and torturing. I was playing with the idea of being a model and feeling trapped in one’s role, particularly as a woman. Unable to move and when you might have an issue with your predicament, often you silence it under the guise of thinking it through more thoroughly just to be sure you really do have a problem before you tell anyone about it.

There was a link with women in the sex industry where I also used to work, and how many of them feel trapped. The play only touches on that aspect, but for me it’s a big link with making a living out of my body’s natural propensity to be attractive to men. I may be a good model also, but being honest and what I’ve learnt from doing SB, many artists are not very kind, they want slim, pretty women, not too old, and if not someone more unusual. I sent an older friend who has done SB to cover me at the Mall one week, and a female artist said after she’d modelled, that she may not be good looking, but at least she could hold the pose. I suppose that was meant to be an honest compliment.

A specific inspiration was having to take over caring for my Mum when Dad was incapacitated for a while. It shocked the hell out of me, what was involved and how much of the carer’s life it takes up, and how little I felt I could give, given that my Mum had never shown me love when I was young. It wasn’t until she nearly died under a year before this time of caring for her, that she started to tell us, her family, that she loves us and is sorry about not being kinder before. Now she tells me every time I see her, it’s the first thing she says.

Another inspiration was modelling for London Drawing at Battersea Arts Centre when I had to be Emmeline Pankhurst hacking her own clothes off in a minor hysterical fit! It was so performative and an interesting way to hi-light the significance of clothes to us as humans. Nudity is foregrounded by the removal of clothes.

I would have used more physical theatre if working with Szilvi, but with Jaki, the possibility of performing the script about Mum became obvious and she is a trained actress, not so much physical theatre performer. There are still elements of physical work in the more surreal/dream scene sequence, as in a few movements and gestures we are hinting at the emotional and psychological development of a character over the course of 20 years of her life say. It becomes symbolic and is a visual metaphor. I don’t want to spoon feed the audience!

The show could indeed be performed by someone else if they so wanted, and it is mostly quite straight forward and text-based. The part where I life model and instigate the audience to draw could be made individual to whoever was doing it, as I intend to partly adlib that part according to the audience response.

The themes are personal and female emancipation, also caring for the sick and elderly, mother/daughter relationships, and our relationship with our bodies. Also as you say how the onset of impending death may alter our fundamental view of life and throw everything into a sharp focus.

Caring for the elderly is poignant with our aging population.

Embracing our nudity is quite a popular theme at least in the West currently, and continues to shake dominant cultural beliefs. Talking to Anita the other day who was brought up Muslim in Malaysia illuminated that cross-cultural realm of women – from places where showing much skin is punishable or at least frowned upon – who then lead a Western life and may move between worlds. The world is changing fast and even her friends in Malaysia who cannot express themselves fully in their life in public, do so more and more online.

The show is particularly about my experience of feeling disenchanted with a conventional way of doing things/growing up, so rebelling; and then coming out the other end a bit more grown up. So in that sense it speaks to possibly people like me, who could just be anyone who’s ever been disillusioned (ok let’s keep this broad!) It’s about finding a salvation through some sort of patience and endurance. It’s about a positive outcome of a once negative situation so it’s quite optimistic. It’s about facing death so it’s realistic too, i.e. not just idealistic.

How does my experience translated through art help others connect? Not sure. Mum likes it because she feels represented on stage, but that’s a bit specific; more generally a main character is heavily disabled and faces the possibility of assisted suicide. Just showing some hard stuff, can be a relief to people who live that and could do with not feeling alone. Having said that there’s a lot of humour there, even if dark.

By being naked on stage and juxtaposing that with a clothed character and their interactions, that points up our awkwardness as a society or humanity, with facing ourselves as we nakedly are as humans. Also I start talking directly to the audience (whilst nude), so that’s a bit weird!

As for the place, well the burlesque bar in Stoke Newington is meaningful because it’s through an old contact of my drugged-up sex industry past as she works there. And it’s in an area where lots of that old group of friends live and I once lived. Many of the girls in that group work in burlesque, domination, stripping… So I am revisiting my past with a new edge. The nice thing is this bar is run by women and they are right into promoting female-led performance.

As for Edinburgh, the origin of the contact is through the same group of friends, and the guy I have been introduced to there runs a programme to promote free education. He is quite inspirational, though far too academic for me, but he likes Spirited Bodies as it sort of covers a feminist/evolutionary development angle that he digs but cannot encompass in his own projects… or who knows, maybe he will! So the gig has come about through a desire to promote Spirited Bodies, and the enthusiasm that generates with like-minded, socially conscious (if that’s the word) people.

I sorted out a London show so I could practise on friends and anyone else who comes along.

Not working on any other projects currently. Would like to develop this show after I’ve seen how it works and doesn’t. Show could evolve dramatically according to cast, funding, will…

There will be charcoal, pencils, paper etc and boards for people to draw with at the show.

Breaking the Muslim Tradition & Celebrating Transformation

Anita was brought up in Malaysia as a Sunni Muslim, where women have some freedom of choice about whether to cover their heads and faces.

As a young person her parents brought her to London and throughout her 20s she chose a conventional path; marriage, university, career in a bank and the birth of her daughter. At 30 she felt the need to reassess her circumstance; she knew she wasn’t happy and wanted to address who she really is to find her true happiness. Divorce and a desire to celebrate her body with tattoos and piercings followed, as well as taking a step towards one of her dreams – she joined an amatuer theatre company. When she took on the role of director there a couple of years ago, she chose the play ‘Les Liaisons Dangereuses’. Anita felt strongly about pushing boundaries and didn’t skimp on the nudity, indeed she took on the part of the courtesan who appears naked, herself.

She met her partner Steve at the drama group, and a mutual friend Julian invited them both to take part in Spirited Bodies. They each individually decided to try it, and feel glad that their interest in this activity is naturally matched in the other. It will be something to share.

Steve has been through quite a physical and indeed internal transformation in the last few years. He used to be a large man but lost a quarter of his body weight in a fairly short time, though this he explains is a minor matter compared to the real shift that took place within him. He had become very tired of being an underdog who lacked confidence in the extreme, and decided to do something about it. He wanted to come out of the shadows, and once he held this vision of certainty and strength in his mind, the rest followed easily. Anita thinks taking part in Spirited Bodies will allow him to acknowledge this powerful transformation in his life and share it with her. For herself, Anita wants to embrace expressions of independence and liberation. Her next ambition following Spirited Bodies, is to perform burlesque.

I ask how it is to be a Muslim woman with a Western lifestyle and what it’s like going home to Malaysia, seeing her female family and friends. She says she likes to have a chance to talk to them on their own, because then she gets hints of their independent aspirations, which are starting to show themselves more in the younger generation. Anita doesn’t think they may truly assert their womanhood in all its fullness whilst in Malaysia as the dominant culture is deeply embedded and restricting. She is grateful to live in England and bring up her daughter here. Anita still considers herself a Muslim, and appreciates that women gain a great deal from covering themselves and communing in single sex groups. It is the choice afforded her by living here that gives her the best insight, however. She is in the enviable position of experiencing the best of both worlds! While she cannot be truly open with her own Mother about her lifestyle now, she endeavours to foster a relationship with her daughter that nourishes truth and speaking freely.

can’t buy love

Megan Morgan follows me as we cycle over the bridge to the Mall, I want to show her where it is. I tell her what it’s like to model naked all the time and why I love it. How the artists, some of them, know a part of me neither friends nor family do. How it’s a performance of self expression in the moment, and while you could get self absorbed, you also get beyond the self, and beneath layers. It may be hard sometimes, but when you enjoy it, it’s a pleasure to be drawn. After a difficult spell in another part of my life, modelling can take me back to a happier place in myself, what a treasure. I love sharing this knowledge with someone who wants to take it on too. Feels like something I ought to do.

Glyn Howard makes me look cooler than Top Cat!
Glyn's groovy cartoon style, i dig it