Stephen
House, Almost Face To Face.
Written by Lee Bemrose
Written by Lee Bemrose
Almost Face To Face is the latest dramatic monologue from peripatetic award-winning writer/performer Stephen House. It's been a couple of years since the South Australian drifter performed his quite powerful Appalling Behaviour here, so I caught up with him to find out what he's been up to in that time, what drives him, and what to expect from his latest work.
So, what have you been up to since your last visit to Melbourne?
My last show, Appalling Behaviour, kept touring. I did an Adelaide return (local council shows), a Tasmania Theatre Company season and a season at The Street Theatre in Canberra. I then spent some time in Sydney. I did an incredible writing development project with some blind artists at Tutti Ensemble SA, and had an extended stint in Whyalla SA doing a community youth theatre project for D-faces Youth Arts. Then as I often do… I disappeared from Australia and spent many months in Bali, Thailand and India – travelling, writing and existing.
How was Appalling Behaviour received in those other cities?
The
Hobart and Canberra seasons were both very successful and had
incredible responses and reviews. It was wonderful to see it sit in a
bigger company program at The Street Theatre (where it saw its 100th
show). It always astounds me how that show pulls people in and sees
them discuss what it means to them and what it says about our current
world. It still feels like it’s an important theatre piece for the
here and now. And that’s rewarding. Also, it was selected for
publication by The Australian Script Centre.
Have you ever taken Appalling Behaviour overseas? Or is it something you would contemplate?
Well no, I haven’t, but just recently I’ve been in a conversation with a company in New York who are keen – which would be awesome. Also, for the last year or so I have been chatting to a company in India who are also keen. And if I do take it overseas next year I’m pretty sure I’d head to Edinburgh Fringe. I’ve never done an Edinburgh Fringe. So yes, it is kind of looking like maybe travelling overseas in 2015.
How long has travel been important to you?
Have you ever taken Appalling Behaviour overseas? Or is it something you would contemplate?
Well no, I haven’t, but just recently I’ve been in a conversation with a company in New York who are keen – which would be awesome. Also, for the last year or so I have been chatting to a company in India who are also keen. And if I do take it overseas next year I’m pretty sure I’d head to Edinburgh Fringe. I’ve never done an Edinburgh Fringe. So yes, it is kind of looking like maybe travelling overseas in 2015.
How long has travel been important to you?
I’ve
been pretty much on the road since living in the back of my station
wagon for a few years when I was an 18 year old hippie surfer. And I
still am on the road (not in the back of the car... well, not too
often these days). That’s about 35 years travelling. Fuck… where
has my life gone! I’m always travelling. Though I do have
occasional bouts where I settle in somewhere for a few months a time.
Why is travel so important to you?
Why is travel so important to you?
I feel
alive, challenged, inspired, amazed, free, on the very edge
(sometimes), and excited. I’m addicted to being on the road, often
alone, but not always. I love new people that come into my world for
an hour, a day or night, or a month… or forever – crazy,
beautiful encounters that come along, like unexpected gifts. But also
sometimes I feel isolated, lonely, frightened, confused, excluded,
and wondering what the hell I’m doing with my life. But all the
feelings that go with just disappearing into the world and sometimes
not knowing where I’m going are real, and make me feel so very much
like I am living life.
In what circumstances do you feel excluded?Just now and then in another place in the world, watching locals go about their familiar lives, it hits me that I am often an outsider, a wanderer, a nomad… this isn’t my place, or my home or my way. I have flown in like a migrating bird stopping off on a long flight to somewhere else. Excluded kind of; but that doesn’t always mean feeling bad though, sometimes it means just being on the outside of, looking in. It can also be empowering, to not be a part of something.
Do you feel you are more creatively stimulated when in a foreign country?
In what circumstances do you feel excluded?Just now and then in another place in the world, watching locals go about their familiar lives, it hits me that I am often an outsider, a wanderer, a nomad… this isn’t my place, or my home or my way. I have flown in like a migrating bird stopping off on a long flight to somewhere else. Excluded kind of; but that doesn’t always mean feeling bad though, sometimes it means just being on the outside of, looking in. It can also be empowering, to not be a part of something.
Do you feel you are more creatively stimulated when in a foreign country?
I’m
quite creative wherever I am. Even in my new Melbourne life (a room I
just scored in Brunswick Street), I will feel inspired, I’m sure. I
often have a current project I’m working on when I travel. I’ve
just come back from several months Indonesia and Thailand. I was
learning lines for Almost
Face To Face while I
travelled. I was also thinking about my novel (still in thinking and
writing stage). Often when I’m in another place I do have a new
idea, so take a few notes. In fact the first draft of Almost
Face To Face, was written
years ago on an Australia Council Irish literature residency, then
put it away and forgotten about. Sometimes it takes me years to get
back to something that sprung into my mind while travelling around
somewhere.
You don't exactly do the tourist thing when overseas, do you. Typically, what do you do when in a new city? What kind of experiences do seek out?
You don't exactly do the tourist thing when overseas, do you. Typically, what do you do when in a new city? What kind of experiences do seek out?
I’m
generally looking for somewhere new that I want to live for a while,
or returning to a place from before. I have a few regular stops. One
is Rishikesh in India. In Rishikesh, I do Yoga classes with amazing
masters, I wander alone along the banks on Ganges and bathe in her
clean icy holy waters – direct from the Himalayas. I wander through
dense city throngs and lose myself, completely. I catch up with old
local mates, meet travellers from all over the world, and I write,
think, and wonder. In big cities, I usually have different routines
than in quieter places (more art, music, theatre, partying etc.)
After Melbourne I’m heading back to Bali, where I’m making a
life. My days there are often writing, swimming and surfing, and
wonderful mates from all over Indonesia… and the world, other
nomads. I also try to work out how the hell I’m going to survive!
But don’t get me on to that! How the hell am I going to continue to
survive, like this?
Your new play... tell us a little about it.
Your new play... tell us a little about it.
A
fragile travelling writer arrives in Dublin after a devastating stint
in Paris. His trip to Dublin is not without a few dangerous elements.
He quickly falls into a chaotic underworld, inhabited by off-beat
characters, and finds himself living in a small upstairs room with a
woman trapped there by the way her life has gone. But he ventures out
on to the street and falls further into the hidden underbelly of
Dublin. His creative muddled and indulgent life sees him fall into
this new world and write it all down (again). But nothing comes
without repercussions and consequences, and he is finally forced to
face up to what he has become in life. It’s a play about having the
courage to move on from what is no longer needed or valid, and having
the empathy and understanding to realise that not everyone else can
do that. Some of us are trapped by who and what we are, and always
will be. And that’s ok. The play hits that home, I think.
So how autobiographical is it?
There is a part of me and my story in every work I create. Even Appalling Behaviour had more elements of me in it than people could ever know. There are parts of me and my life in all of my plays, and there are parts that grew from those parts and took their own life. My characters are not me, but they are a big part of me and my life, and I’m a big part of them and their life. But I never reveal too much about what (exact) part is me and real. I fall into worlds and write about them. I utterly live the worlds I write about.
What kind of play is Almost Face To Face? Drama? Comedy? Other?
It’s a drama with elements of stream of consciousness story-telling and streaks of dark comedy. But others are better judges of that than me.
Given that Almost Face To Face is set in Ireland, a country famed for its story tellers, do you thing you will take it to Ireland?I would love to take it to Ireland, and have thought about it. If fact regarding your question, the story telling tradition of Ireland had an effect on the style of this play and my inspiration for writing it. I performed a story telling type piece in Dublin many years ago. That experience has always stayed with me and had an effect on me as a writer performer, as did my time living in Ireland.
The dramatic monologue (it is what you do, isn't it?) would appear to be the most difficult form of story telling. Why do you do it when you could simply write a story to be read or a play for actors to perform?
So how autobiographical is it?
There is a part of me and my story in every work I create. Even Appalling Behaviour had more elements of me in it than people could ever know. There are parts of me and my life in all of my plays, and there are parts that grew from those parts and took their own life. My characters are not me, but they are a big part of me and my life, and I’m a big part of them and their life. But I never reveal too much about what (exact) part is me and real. I fall into worlds and write about them. I utterly live the worlds I write about.
What kind of play is Almost Face To Face? Drama? Comedy? Other?
It’s a drama with elements of stream of consciousness story-telling and streaks of dark comedy. But others are better judges of that than me.
Given that Almost Face To Face is set in Ireland, a country famed for its story tellers, do you thing you will take it to Ireland?I would love to take it to Ireland, and have thought about it. If fact regarding your question, the story telling tradition of Ireland had an effect on the style of this play and my inspiration for writing it. I performed a story telling type piece in Dublin many years ago. That experience has always stayed with me and had an effect on me as a writer performer, as did my time living in Ireland.
The dramatic monologue (it is what you do, isn't it?) would appear to be the most difficult form of story telling. Why do you do it when you could simply write a story to be read or a play for actors to perform?
Each
time I embark on this journey with this form, I think why, why, why?
It is so hard to crack. You can’t tell, not completely. It needs to
be crafted in a way that some things are told, some are discovered
and that the story filters out through a range of forms working
together. Maybe the reason I do it is that it is such a challenge to
get right. I love literary challenges. I never know if it is working
until I get it in front of an audience. Its okay if they don’t like
it (not everyone falls into the unusual worlds that do), but if they
are with my story and engaged, then it has worked. That’s what I
aim for. That they follow my story and want to know what happens.
Dramatic Monologue for an hour alone on stage is a real challenge.
Ah, scary! Why am I doing this, again?
What
kinds of people will Almost Face To Face appeal to most?
I like
to think that it’s a moving, human, sad and sometimes funny and
beautiful story bubbling out of the underworld of Dublin. I think
(and hope) that most people who see it will be taken on a real ride,
somewhere special. My work is written for everyone; not only those
who like to take risks. People that are interested in the human
experience and condition should go with this work.
Do
you have a line or passage from the play that encapsulates its
spirit?
I
don’t know if it encapsulates the spirit of the play but it
encapsulates that moment of the play, and it’s a piece that often
brings tears to my eyes, performing it…
Don’t’
go, he says. His call is like a knife in my heart. I so want take him
away from this and them – from all that I am and have been too…
find some of what is dragging me to escape and try for change and
offer it up to him. But I can’t… I just don’t know how to give
him anything at all, except money… I’m incapable… because I am
struggling so hard to somehow help myself… to try to not be what
I‘ve been for so, so long… that I have nothing left to help him
along. And I’m nearly an old man. Fuck, what happened? Where do the
years go?
Almost Face To Face is part of the Melbourne Fringe Festival. Season is at La Mama theatre from September 17 - September 28, 2014.
Almost Face To Face is part of the Melbourne Fringe Festival. Season is at La Mama theatre from September 17 - September 28, 2014.
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