Monday, May 24, 2010
Chuck`s first Rock and Roll Musical!! ...with Katana fight scenes (?!)
So after the success of the short film, Miki asked me to join her again for an up and coming rock and roll musical she is co-producing called AWAY IN THE LIFE. Having very little theatre experience, I jumped at the chance, and so far, it has been a ton of fun to work on.
Insomuch as I can piece together without reading the script, (all in Japanese) it revolves around the formation of a rock band with a bunch a wild characters (an old narcoleptic woman, an ex hard-ass turned flaming drag queen, and a former super-nerd... turned hard-ass). Apparently, Miki's character is based off of a really famous old school Japanese rocker who will actually make an appearance during the show. Thus far, it looks hilarious, and I wish I had some way to show it to people at home.
As for myself, I will be playing a security guard (/ninja?) and I don't have any speaking lines, and am mainly there as an extra comic element.
Initially, as I was only brought in at Miki's request, (and the director had never heard of me) it seemed like the director didn't know what to do with me. As such, for my first scheduled practice (which I cancelled another job to go to) all I did was sit there. I was barely even acknoledged by him, let alone kept in the loop as to what was going on. Needless to say, my manager, Taka was none to happy about this, and after politely politely mentioning it, I was given another practice day.
As I could understand the director`s reservation about using someone who 1) he`d never heard of, and 2) he hadn`t screen himself, I thought I`d have to really grab any chance I could get to show him what I could do. Finally, after I was allowed to join a practice, he had asked me to do a certain scene where I usher a woman off stage. Instead of simply doing as he said, I picked her up, threw her over my shoulder and carried her off-stage. It completely caught her off-guard, her reaction was hilarious, and he loved it. As did everyone else. At that point, he seemed to take a liking to me. And he started expanding my role to the point that now I'm in 4 different scenes. He even asked me to go to Osaka with them for the Kansai shows. (Which regrettfully I had to turn down because I'm working full time).
I really feel like I've melded fairly well with the rest of the cast as well, and for the scenes that I am in, we've gone past just 'doing' and has actually started 'creating'. It feels good to know that I can have synergy with an all-star cast of Japanese talent, and that they could feel so comfortable working with me (especially since my Japanese still has a way to go). My agent Taka said this musical is going to be really really big, and he will be shocked if I don't start getting a lot of work from it afterwards.
As a live stage necessarily means no retakes, it`s both a bit scarier and more intense as compared to working in front of a camera, but I also think it will be more fun, as we will have the energy of the crowd to feed off of. I`m looking forward to the challenge. Should be fun!
Insomuch as I can piece together without reading the script, (all in Japanese) it revolves around the formation of a rock band with a bunch a wild characters (an old narcoleptic woman, an ex hard-ass turned flaming drag queen, and a former super-nerd... turned hard-ass). Apparently, Miki's character is based off of a really famous old school Japanese rocker who will actually make an appearance during the show. Thus far, it looks hilarious, and I wish I had some way to show it to people at home.
As for myself, I will be playing a security guard (/ninja?) and I don't have any speaking lines, and am mainly there as an extra comic element.
Initially, as I was only brought in at Miki's request, (and the director had never heard of me) it seemed like the director didn't know what to do with me. As such, for my first scheduled practice (which I cancelled another job to go to) all I did was sit there. I was barely even acknoledged by him, let alone kept in the loop as to what was going on. Needless to say, my manager, Taka was none to happy about this, and after politely politely mentioning it, I was given another practice day.
As I could understand the director`s reservation about using someone who 1) he`d never heard of, and 2) he hadn`t screen himself, I thought I`d have to really grab any chance I could get to show him what I could do. Finally, after I was allowed to join a practice, he had asked me to do a certain scene where I usher a woman off stage. Instead of simply doing as he said, I picked her up, threw her over my shoulder and carried her off-stage. It completely caught her off-guard, her reaction was hilarious, and he loved it. As did everyone else. At that point, he seemed to take a liking to me. And he started expanding my role to the point that now I'm in 4 different scenes. He even asked me to go to Osaka with them for the Kansai shows. (Which regrettfully I had to turn down because I'm working full time).
I really feel like I've melded fairly well with the rest of the cast as well, and for the scenes that I am in, we've gone past just 'doing' and has actually started 'creating'. It feels good to know that I can have synergy with an all-star cast of Japanese talent, and that they could feel so comfortable working with me (especially since my Japanese still has a way to go). My agent Taka said this musical is going to be really really big, and he will be shocked if I don't start getting a lot of work from it afterwards.
As a live stage necessarily means no retakes, it`s both a bit scarier and more intense as compared to working in front of a camera, but I also think it will be more fun, as we will have the energy of the crowd to feed off of. I`m looking forward to the challenge. Should be fun!
Labels:
action,
Away in the Life,
Comedy,
Engeki Rock,
Japan,
katana,
martial arts,
Miki Mizuno,
Rock,
stunts
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment