Perseverance to Do 'Macbeth' in Tlingit (fwd)

phil cash cash cashcash at EMAIL.ARIZONA.EDU
Wed Mar 7 17:05:45 UTC 2007


Perseverance to Do 'Macbeth' in Tlingit

By STEVE QUINN, Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, March 7, 2007
(03-07) 05:10 PST JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) --
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2007/03/07/entertainment/e051057S55.DTL

Jake Waid rubbed his bloodshot eyes, blankly stared at a script for
Shakespeare's "Macbeth," then resumed an unfamiliar struggle with a set
of lines.

"Tleil tsu tlax yei l kusheek'eiyi ye yageeyi kwasatinch, ch'a aan
yak'ei," he read slowly of what would normally be, "So foul and fair a
day I have not seen."

Waid, a 31-year-old who has been acting since he was 15, faces his most
daunting stage assignment to date: performing Shakespeare in Tlingit,
an American Indian language unique to southeast Alaska and Canada, and
in which fewer than 300 people are fluent. Its words are difficult to
translate into English sounds.

The role calls for mastering new sets of pauses, sounds and pitches —
first with his ears then with his voice — in delivering the lines.
That's not all.

He and 11 other Perseverance Theatre actors had less than one month to
learn a story many knew by heart — but that was in English.

"It takes 10 times longer to learn just one line," said Waid, who plays
Macbeth and has performed Shakespeare in theaters worldwide with
various production groups since he was a teenager. "As far as the
structure of the language and the grammar, it's still a mystery."

He reprises his role as Macbeth for Perseverance, which was founded in
1979 in this capital city of 30,000. It's also where Paula Vogel's 1998
Pulitzer Prize-winning play, "How I Learned to Drive," was written and
developed.

Since the early February start of rehearsals, actors, stage crew and
directors have been on a harried pace to prepare for a March 8-18
engagement of "Macbeth" at the Smithsonian's National Museum of the
American Indian in Washington, D.C. It is part of a six-month
"Shakespeare in Washington" celebration conceived by the John F.
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and Washington's Shakespeare
Theatre Company.

It wasn't just actors facing challenges. Costumes had to be redesigned
and stages rebuilt to accommodate this third and final Tlingit
production by the Alaskan theater group.

A truck carrying the stage sets were put on a barge — no roads lead out
of the Alaska state capital — then driven cross country and rebuilt in
time for final rehearsals. Meanwhile, cast members were pulling
all-nighters learning to speak Tlingit with integrity, honoring not
only the language's heritage but the play's adaptation.

Twice in 2004, Perseverance actors performed Tlingit versions of
"Macbeth," but it was retold primarily in English and featured
indigenous Native American dances, music and clothing.

But this time the 12-member cast, whose ages range from 15 to 42, has
agreed to perform most of the play in Tlingit (pronounced klink-it).

"It's like running a marathon, without training for it," said actor
Ishmael Hope, who plays Malcolm, the son of King Duncan who is killed
by Macbeth. "But we're doing the work to make it happen.

"None of us is going to sound like a fluent speaker, because no matter
how meticulous we are, it's a difficult language. But we'll still be
able to convey meaning."

Director Anita Maynard-Losh first developed the idea of producing a
Tlingit version of "Macbeth" while living in the predominantly Tlingit
village of Hoonah, about 50 miles west of Juneau 25 years ago. She
conducted artists workshops throughout Alaska when she began seeing
connections between the Tlingit culture and "Macbeth" — the
relationships with the supernatural and the history of fierce warfare
found both in the Tlingit culture and in "Macbeth."

The first production, performed in Juneau, was almost entirely in
English as was a subsequent showing in Anchorage, both three years ago.

After the Anchorage show, the Smithsonian invited Perseverance Theatre
to perform its "Macbeth" version and is underwriting most of the costs
for a production that exceeds $200,000.

This time, Maynard-Losh wanted to illustrate how Macbeth puts individual
gain ahead of the good for the whole, breaking Tlingit tenets. So when
characters adhere to tribal values, cast members speak Tlingit; when
they espouse individual beliefs, they speak Shakespearean English.

For Waid's Macbeth, this occasionally means pursuing a seamless segue
from English to Tlingit and later back to English during the same
scene.

"It's no judgment on English speakers; it's just the concept of the
play," Waid said. "It's still one of the demands of the play. Once it's
all in there, they are all just lines."

Not only did actors have to learn lines in another language, but
Maynard-Losh had to direct a cast without understanding what's being
said.

To help compensate, she concentrated on the characters' physical
features — posture, proximity, facial expressions.

"You've guys have got a lot going on with your face, which is terrific,"
Maynard-Losh told Hope and cast member Andrew Okpeaha MacLean during a
recent rehearsal. "But you've got to get the bodies going."

The cast features nine original members and three new actors, all of
whom are of Alaska Native descent. The cast includes a mix of seasoned
performers, high school students and one actor making his theater
debut.

As in most small productions, many cast members perform multiple roles:
one actor writes Tlingit songs for the play; another doubles as
choreographer; a third serves as the much-needed language coach.

The cast drew former theater member MacLean, a New York filmmaker whose
last play at Perseverance was "Moby-Dick" in 2001. MacLean said he had
no plans to resume theater work, until Maynard-Losh decided to tweak
her own incarnation of "Macbeth."

"It's been one of the focuses in my adult life, to work with the
languages in theater and film," said MacLean, who plays Macduff. "It
bothers me that indigenous languages in general are threatened. So,
I've been trying to do things to take a stand against that, by doing
plays and films. Maybe this play is a small thing to do, but it's a
step in the right direction."

Translation began last summer when Hope, an actor who also oversees the
theater's education outreach programs, sought the help of Alaska Native
elders. The result was a script that initially made the actors' eyes
glaze over while reading the lines, made up of underscored and accented
letters and words with periods in the middle.

Help always seemed within reach.

The wall to the left of the stage is decorated with colored construction
paper featuring single words of Tlingit translation, somewhat akin to
flash cards.

Sitting on the director's table are two Tlingit dictionaries, one
listing nouns and the other verbs.

Lance Twitchell, who plays Ross, serves as the cast's language coach and
is constantly tweaking the script and assisting with pronunciation.

Rehearsals lasted close to nine hours a day, six days a week. Breaks
were really just another chance to review the lines. In the waning days
before the cast left for Washington on Feb. 25, they were getting close,
but still forgetting some lines.

George Holly, who plays Lennox and wrote the play's songs, reminded the
exhausted cast of the significance of their work.

"Who ever hears Tlingit spoken, even for more than 30 seconds, it's just
a phrase here and there, or it's from some elders," he said. "This is so
much more.

"This is not really a premiere of a different take on a Shakespearean
play; it's a premiere of a language on the world stage."



More information about the Ilat mailing list