Hello Again!
Somehow I’ve blinked, and there are only five days left in my time at Bristol Old Vic Theatre School.
A lot has happened since my last post, so below is a (fairly haphazard attempt at a) summary of the major things I have been up to.
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Firstly: a selection of photos from our seven-show season of Caucasian Chalk Circle at the Tobacco Factory Theatre. The show was a great success, and I was thrilled to finally have a tangible theatrical product to show to friends and family on this side of the world! It would be impossible task to describe the two-and-a-half hours of organised chaos that we put onstage, however I can reveal that the show included: five different musical genres (drum ‘n bass, western/country, house, acapella vocals, and soundscape), a live band, two hopper bikes, a supermarket trolley, an onstage orgy, multiple raves, a rope swing, faux cocaine use, a big jar of peanut butter…and a truckload of other weirdness. The general consensus was that we rejuvenated a theatrical classic in a way that audiences had never seen before. That’s about as much as you can ask for in my books!
Here a few of the reviews the show received:
https://www.intermissionbristol.co.uk/arts-coverage/caucasian-chalk-circle
https://www.britishtheatreguide.info/reviews/the-caucasian-c-tobacco-factory-17743
https://stagetalkmagazine.com/?p=20348




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Next: Over the couple of weeks that followed our production, much of our time was spent writing our ‘marketing reports’. This assignment was essentially our Masters thesis – even on a practical acting course a post-graduate qualification has to be include some vestige of written work! In any case, the marketing reports were left fairly open to personal interpretation and style, but were essentially the culmination of years work on our brand, self-marketing, casting types, and industry prep. My report included sections on figuring out my personal brand, logistical plans for tackling the industry after finishing my training, how to go about supporting myself as an artist in London, a bank of audition monologue material, plus a load of other waffle.
It may or may not have ended up at over 19,000 words…
Shades of the undergraduate history major for sure.

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After finishing our marketing reports, the next big focus was shooting show-reel material. For those who are completely unaccustomed to the ins and outs of the acting profession, your show-reel is essentially an extension of your performance resume. It is customary for young actors to put together a written resume (with show credits, physical details, performance skills etc), but in a profession fundamentally driven by what you can do onstage or in front of a camera, words on a page only mean so much. Hence, show-reels: collection of short scenes or clips of an actor ‘doing their thing’ to be able to send to potential agents and casting directors. And being that the majority of the actors coming out of Bristol Old Vic (and indeed most drama schools) do not have professional material to put together a show-reel, the school does a wonderful thing in allocating time in our final term for filming scenes to use for just such a purpose.
Serious time and consideration was put into selecting two scenes, with different partners from our class. The goal in selecting a scene was to find something that could showcase the abilities of both actors, with enough going on to be an engaging watch, but without being grandiosely dramatic. While we were fortunate to have five-person film crew and a professional director (plus a high-quality camera) there wasn’t much of a budget for the shoots. So no heavy action scenes, Sci-Fi, anything requiring masses of extras, or anything really well known (i.e. not trying to remake Travolta and Thurman’s diner scene in Pulp Fiction).



In the end I shot a scene from the film ‘50/50′, and one from ‘Like Crazy’. Each scene took half a day to shoot, with roughly three hours actually spent filming on-set. Of course there were twelve other scenes for the rest of our class, so the whole process took a week-and-a half.
What was I doing on the five days where I wasn’t needed for filming you ask…?
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Showcase.
The final task!
Like most drama schools in the UK, Bristol Old Vic organises an industry showcase for its graduating students at the end of their final year. The general idea is that the school uses its resources and connections in the industry, sending out invitations to agents and casting directors to come and see the graduating actors perform.
The actors want representation, the agents want to sign the ‘next big thing’- pretty simple equation.
But time is money, and industry big-wigs don’t want to sit through a whole show, so showcases typically take the shape of monologues and/or dualogues. For our London Showcase at the end of September (because agents are shlepping it down to Bristol for a forty-five minute gig) the seven of us who are able to work in the UK are each preparing two monologues, both approximately ninety seconds long.
That’s it.
Three minutes of ‘performance time’ to do your ‘acting stuff’. No pressure at all.
So, picking the right monologues was obviously a pretty crucial step. Researching pieces for showcase started waaay back in the second term, around March (I think). This entailed looking through the BOVTS play library, taking trips to London to browse the huge theatre sections at the National Theatre, and Foyles’ bookshops, and scrolling through the THOUSANDS of online plays on the DramaOnline database. With a task like this, I thought it was important to make a massive provisional shortlist. Basically anything that was moderately up-my-alley went into the big word doc.
Eventually, after a month or so, I decided that enough was enough (NO MORE LOOKING), and began…well…shortening the shortlist. I cut the options down to twenty-four (still an absurdly large number), then quickly went from twenty-four to twelve, then down from twelve to six in a single day, and finally down to the best two.
And this was all the way back in May! Thankfully I didn’t have any massive change of heart or late-onset paranoia about the pieces being crap in the last few months.
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I won’t go into the specifics of the pieces I have chosen, but its worth quickly explaining the thought-processes that contributed to the final selections.
1) It needs to be a slice of you.
– Strangely enough, showcase isn’t really about showing agents that you can act. In some ways that is kind of presumed. That you can, y’know, act. It’s more about presenting your personal, deeply individual niche. Showing the kind of person you are, flaunting your casting type, demonstrating what kind of roles are very…you.
2) It needs to make sense outside of the context of the whole play.
– Whatever monologues you choose have to work as their own entity. They can’t rely on storytelling that the audience would have had pick up on over an hour of a play’s narrative. The relationships and character development of your monologues have to be interesting without the subtext of the play, which the showcase audience does not have access to.
3) They need to contrast.
– Pretty simple really. You get two bites at the apple, so make the two bites different.
4) Open strong, finish strong.
– Again, it sounds pretty straightforward, but worth noting. When it came to picking my final two pieces, one of the key elements that made both stand out was that they both have great opening and closing lines. With just ninety seconds to make a statement, having a killer opening and closing remark can have a massive impact.
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We have been rehearsing our showcase pieces for the last four weeks, and we have something of a dress-rehearsal at school this Wednesday, for staff and any students that are still around in Bristol (the BA and FDA courses finished weeks ago). The weird thing about this showcase preparation is that the real event isn’t for another five weeks after we finish on Friday. Everyone splits and does their own thing for over a month, before we come back together (the seven of us doing London showcase- there is also a New York showcase in October) a few days beforehand to refresh the pieces. A bit bizarre, but that’s the way it goes!
I’ve rambled on for ages, so I think I’ll leave it there.
It is bonkers to find myself in the final week of school, forty teaching weeks after starting last September. The time has truly flown by. I’ll save the emotional sob-piece for the next blog, no doubt I will be a wreck in five days time.
Just five days, and then its off into the big, scary industry.
Scary, but exciting times.
J xx




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The last two weeks at Bristol Old Vic have been full of discovery.