We sat down for a chat with actor turned writer/director, Tiwalade Ibirogba-Olulode ahead of the opening of her play RUSH. We talked about the creative process, the difference in roles and tackling mental health.

Hello Tiwalade, as an actor turned writer, what was it that made you want to take the leap into playwriting?

I honestly didn’t see it as me transforming or becoming a playwright, I just knew that there was a story I had to tell and I have told stories for as long as I can remember. I prefer to say that I’m an artist; acting, writing, dancing and singing are all my passions. I couldn’t identity as one. That wouldn’t be true to me, Tiwalade.

How do you feel that your acting experience informs your writing? Any elements you’ve wanted to include? Or any pet peeves you’ve wanted to avoid?

Being an actor has helped me shape the text tremendously. I always write for it to be performed. So after I finish writing a page or two, I’ll get up and act out the characters. If the words move me, I know it’s real. If not, I’ll scrap it. Then the second stage is getting the actors to read it out and seeing if they are moved too. It can be a long process of trial and error but it’s worth it in the end.
Also, directing RUSH has been a bonus because I am able to shape what was in my mind when I wrote it. I am lucky to be working with a talented group of actors and team, they are making my dream come true.

How do you begin to tell a story? Do you start with characters, a topic or a situation?

I was originally inspired by this idea shortly after I was diagnosed with anxiety. From the age of 16 I started to have panic attacks, I didn’t understand what it was, so I kept quiet about it, until 21 when I got a really bad attack on the Subway in New York and thought I was going to die, I was alone. It was only then I spoke up about it, found out what I’d been suffering with for years. It was a bittersweet moment as I now knew what I was dealing with, but on the other hand I thought if mental illness had been spoken about more openly, I wouldn’t have felt alienated for 5 years. So I started writing, RUSH was born.

What has been your biggest surprise in the process of writing your own script?

How much I laughed! I didn’t intend on RUSH being a comedy. But I guess one can find humour in the darkest hours.

Any advice for other actors who want to get into playwriting?

I started writing RUSH 3 years ago and it still feels unfinished, but it gets to a point where you must click send!

Who has been your biggest inspiration as a writer?

Life inspires me; people and moments.

As well as writing you are also directing, how are you finding the energy to do two incredibly stressful jobs?

Surprisingly not as stressful as I imagined. But, as I say this, we’re still over 2 weeks away from opening. So I’ll probably have a different answer as the 21st comes closer.

How do you manage to maintain an outside eye within the process while you are working?

I have an Assistant Director- Sophie Franklin and my close friend/Movement Director- James Monckton who are always in the room with me, giving suggestions and honest feedback. Every audience member will have different perceptions in each scene. But, there will always be a message that I want told, so it’s great having people watch to see if that’s coming across.

Talk me through a day in the rehearsal room, how do you structure your creative process?

With this being my directorial debut, I started this rehearsal process off with what I had experienced. I had the pleasure of being in Ned Bennetts’ cast in National Youth Theatre. We spent so much of the rehearsal process playing games! It was the most fun rehearsal process I have ever done! It enabled us as actors to let go, we weren’t afraid to make bold choices and I left that experience with life long friends.

I’ve brought that same energy into my rehearsal process. And now, I feel a warmth from the whole team, we laugh a lot! Saying that, we have found a great balance between work and play.

At the end of the day. Coming into this as an actor I know exactly how it feels being on the other side. That has helped to empathise with the cast.

Having now experienced three very diverse roles in the process (as an actor, writer and director) do you have any strong leanings to a path? Or do you wish to combine your talents?

From a young age when people asked me what I wanted to do, I had a list; Actor, Singer, Dancer, Playwright… Some people saw it as a joke. But now it’s all coming to fruition! I couldn’t see myself directing until recently. I was lucky enough to work with the incredible director Anne- Louise Sarks at the Lyric Hammersmith, she sat me down and asked ‘Why not?’. Throughout the rehearsal process, she was an advocate for building women up. That was a pivotal moment in my life!

I’m part of a very hardworking and creative generation. My friends inspire me everyday! The industry is evolving and changing so rapidly, as an artist it is imperative that you adapt. We have to wear many caps and I’m enjoying that. Don’t get me wrong, it’s tough! You’re having to learn a lot, but it’s fun if you’re investing in projects that you really care about.

So to answer your question, I see myself as an all round artist, I still have so much to learn but I sure am enjoying the ride!

RUSH opens Tuesday 21st of August until Saturday 25th.
7:30pm
£12/£10

Book Here

Phase2WebsiteWeb

Following on from the success of phase 1, the company we’re joined by Lighting Designer Anna Sbokou, Sound Designer Keri Chesser and Set/Costume Designer Faye Bradley for the technical brainstorming phase. Our aim was to explore the different production challenges, coming up with different solutions to each one. What would our lighthouse look like? How could we create the iceberg, sleigh and boat? Magic sack anyone? (more…)

alex web

The Lighthouse, an original play by local playwright Rachael Claye, is being workshopped by the Space. The project has three phases, with the first being a few readings of the show for feedback, the second a tech brainstorming period, and the third a production of a twenty-minute section of the play. We completed the first phase recently, and we are looking forward to the second and third!

An original Christmas story, The Lighthouse sees St Nikolas crash his sleigh on an iceberg far out at sea on Christmas Eve. Deprived of his ancient powers, Nikolas is forced to accept rescue from a little girl in a rowing boat, Rose. When she takes him to the lighthouse where she is living alone, he begins to question his life at the frozen edge of the world.

We asked the Lighthouse’s director Alex Crampton (pictured above), writer Rachael Claye, and producer Adam Hemming, about the show and their experiences with theatre and Christmas. Here’s our exclusive interview!

Alex, can you tell us a bit about your experience with new writing over your career as a director? What makes this show particularly exciting?

Alex: My very first production was at University – ‘Whoreticulture’ by friend and long-term collaborator, Sam Haddow. I loved the intensity of that experience, how Sam responded to me reading his text so deeply and developing it alongside him, supporting him but also enjoying a certain amount of creative ownership as well. New writing is an unfinished product – you get the excitement of working on something in a raw, malleable form, with all the freshness, innovation and immediacy. I’ve worked with Isley Lynn, Jon Barton, Nick Myles, Laura Jacqmin, Cat Kerridge and had work performed at Southwark Playhouse, Soho, Arcola, Gate, Theatre 503, the Pleasance – and of course, the Space. I’m particularly excited about the Lighthouse because it’s big on visuals and design – the environment is a character in itself and a trigger for Rachael writing the play. I enjoy epic, fantastical settings so my fingers are crossed we see this all the way through to full production. It’s also a luxury to have an extended development process for a new script … having it staggered means that the team has been able to pull it apart, have some digestion / thinking time, and return to elements that are troubling us. We’re still unpicking and trouble-shooting.

What is something you are looking forward to as this show progresses?

Alex: Absolutely its seeing our ideas and thoughts take on an increasingly 3D shape, finding the solutions to our problems.

What got you working as a director? Did you always want to do it?

Alex: I remember my drama teacher at school – an amazingly inspirational and influential woman called Brigid Doherty – said to me: ‘you should direct. You have the vision.’ (!) I’ve always had a strong sense of what I want (those are my words for being naturally bossy and a control freak) which are put to constructive use with directing. I’d always performed, but at university I suddenly got stage shy. I had a first stab at directing and it went amazingly well. My lecturer (another marvel named Richard Rowland) told me I could do it professionally. I resisted committing fully, battling for about 2 years after graduating with ‘why start a career that is financially insane? It’s not sustainable’ etc, but after being deeply unhappy in a ’real world’ job I just quit and went for it. I got myself into a theatre environment full time (community engagement alongside directing) but have focused on directing itself for the last two years as I went freelance. Things have really escalated in that time … I got some advice (Steve Harris, another legend) that you’ll only make it if you do it full time. I agree with that – it’s so hard, it needs full focus. I still question what I’m doing on a regular basis, it is financially difficult, but I love it, and can’t seem to stop …

Adam, can you tell us about your involvement in the play’s journey – from your first reading of the script to taking it through the current R&D process?

Adam: The play was initially read at one of our ScriptSpace play development readings and I was alerted to it by a playwright who regularly attends. He really enjoyed it and told me that if I was looking for a Christmas play then I should definitely consider it! I was equally enchanted when I read the script, it’s such a beautiful piece of work. The play has some fairly substantial production challenges, not the least being a multi-level lighthouse as the setting! I met with Rachael and discussed the script and we decided that research and development of the script and how it might be staged was the best way forwards. I applied to the Arts Council and here we are!

What do you think the Space offers to new writing and emerging playwrights?

Adam: The Space has always offered a safe and supportive environment for playwrights to get their work staged. In recent years we’ve evolved from being just a receiving house to really thinking about how we can support and develop new work and playwrights of all levels. ScriptSpace was a feedback service for playwrights with a first draft, Script 6 challenged six playwrights to alter their approach to writing and Space Productions has realised some fantastic new plays in the past. What will we do next? Stay tuned for some exciting announcements early next year!

What is something you are particularly looking forward to as this show progresses?

Adam: I’m very excited about the next phase – bringing our designers in and coming up with different ways of tackling the lighthouse/reindeer/iceberg/magic sack!

Rachael, can you tell us a bit about The Lighthouse’s genesis? Where did the inspiration for this alternative Christmas story come from?

Rachael: When my youngest daughter was just a few months old, I was in my kitchen listening to a play on the radio that was set in…. a kitchen! I so badly wanted to be transported somewhere more surprising, somewhere that set my imagination going. I thought I’d have a go so I signed up for a beginners’ playwriting course with the playwright Jemma Kennedy at Cit Lit. Just a few weeks in she set us a homework looking at dramatic setting. We had three lists of options from which to choose a place, a character and a theme or emotion, and come up with just an opening moment. The aim was to look at the way place shapes the story that you tell. I went away having picked an iceberg, a young child with a secret, and salvation. I jotted in my notebook something that made me laugh – Father Christmas crashlands on an iceberg far out at sea and hears oars pulling towards him through the fog – a young girl who lives all alone in a lighthouse…. It sounded silly but then I wrote a bit of a first scene and found I enjoyed making things real – ignoring the usual tropes around Father Christmas and (as I love Arctic/Antarctic adventure stories, especially Shackleton’s South) putting him on a real iceberg with the terrifying cracks in the ice and that sense of isolation and the power of the natural world. A saint is someone we mythologise – rather like a modern celebrity – and debunking the myth was fun. The other character, Rose, stepped straight out of my head and onto the ice. I enjoyed going back to the lighthouse with her and showing Nikolas round – her captive saint, though she doesn’t know it yet.

What has the research and development process been like so far?

Rachael: Fun! I loved rehearsing with the actors and director, going through the text line by line. Their ideas and responses brought out things I hadn’t known were there. I also learnt a lot about the process – so much of writing is sitting on your own and being in your own head, but this is the moment when the moveable, rewritable thing I’ve been mucking around with becomes something solid to a team of people and they bring their own creativity to it. I found that a real thrill. I have no idea how anyone is going to make an iceberg, a lighthouse interior, a magical sleigh for the stage… That’s the next challenge.

Is there a particular moment of the script that you’d be most excited to see on stage?

Rachael: Hmm. I have always wanted to just be taken inside that lighthouse far out at sea…. There’s also a point near the end of the play, just before the final crisis, when Saint Nikolas’s dysfunctional sack suddenly starts to work in its curious way and produces a gramophone. We hear a lovely lilting song to which Rose dances while Nikolas pulls all sorts of other strange objects from the sack. I’d love to see that, it’s a wistful, romantic moment so different to their dangerous world.

How much research did you do for The Lighthouse? Did you discover any interesting facts you’d like to share?

Rachael: Saint Nikolas was Turkish and the only child of wealthy traders – and they really did recently discover the remains of a lighthouse that existed in his hometown when he was a child. I did a fair bit of research but in the end the story is a made-up one and I used historical accounts/facts as something to mine for useful ideas rather than as a narrative guide. Accounts of Nikolas’s life are very varied, and some are even confused with stories about another Saint Nikolas who also lived in Turkey. Whatever we know about him we can’t be certain of – although it does seem probable that he really did punch one of his fellow bishops at the council of Nicaea! Our cuddly old fella in red seems to have been pretty hard on heretics, an absolute hardliner in religious terms. I read a lot about lighthouses and in the summer took a boat out to the Farnes islands off Seahouses in Northumberland to see the lighthouse where Grace Darling lived with her mother and father. They were a lighthouse family – her brother manned a lighthouse further down the coast. Whole generations lived out their days at sea, the land just within sight but a world away. I saw the neighbouring island to which lighthouse keepers would row because it had enough earth – unlike their own barren rock – for them to grow vegetables and keep rabbits there (for eating).

How is the St Nikolas of the play different to the Father Christmas we might be familiar with?

Rachael: He doesn’t have a red coat or a jolly chuckle. He’s shabby and spends too much time by himself. He has developed the habit of talking to his reindeer; faced with a real person, he would rather they just went away and stopped bothering him. He reckons he can manage best by himself but he’s hopeless at DIY. He doesn’t want anyone getting under his skin.

What would you like for Christmas?

Adam: Socks. No, really.
Alex: A massive ‘reset’ button for how we’ve screwed the planet and each other, and everyone to sign a declaration that we all promise to be better and won’t make the same mistakes again. Posh chocolate. A nice old-world looking table lamp.

If you had to stay in a lighthouse for a year, what is one thing you would bring with you?

Adam: My family, which is really three things so I’m cheating a bit. My wife Catherine would keep me sane, my daughter Phoebe would keep me entertained and Margo, our dog, would protect us from troublesome saints.
Alex: Ooh … it would have to be my laptop with an endless self-generating power supply. I feel like I’m amputated without my laptop. That way I can watch films and play games with the outside world, keep a sense of connection. OR I’d bring a trunk of all the books I never have time to read, because I’m watching films or playing games on my laptop ….
Rachael: Tea bags and a hot water bottle.

 

Summer Interns 2014 Web

 

As summer interns our lives are filled with work, friends, and most likely a class or two. If we’re lucky we are given a chance to combine a couple of these things to make our time more interesting. One of our current wonderful intern team, Taylor, decided to answer some questions for a report in poetry form for a class presentation about her internship here at The Space. Her amazing presentation was met with rapt attention and thunderous applause (some students actually paid attention)! The instructor who had assigned the presentation was left flabbergasted too. We hope you enjoy Taylor’s poetry as much as the rest of the Space team have!

 

1. LIMERICK- My Workplace

I work at a theatre, The Space
Getting work done is never a race
Community project, non-profit
10 years strong, can’t stop it
I’d be proud to call it home base

We put up a number of plays
Two weeks is the average length of stay
The theatre’s a community
So we put up with impunity
And egos as large as the bay

It’s worth saying the staff it is small
Down to three when we leave in the fall
My boss has been there a decade
As a man, he is self-made
He should be put in the fame comma hall

The building it was a church
Within, the Lord’s name we besmirch
We don’t watch our language
Our sailor mouths we can’t vanquish
But we’ve yet to be smited, or worse.

How else can I describe this place?
The kid’s class I’ve wholly embraced.
There’s workshops for adults
That produces great results
Like new members to work at The Space.

 

2. SONNET- My Responsibilities

What I like best is planning events
Picking the flowers, the music, the pace
My boss gladly listens to my two cents
It makes me feel valued at The Space

But I also love working with the Cadets
The drama, the tears, and the laughter
I hone their acting skills, they fall I’m their net
I make sure there’s a happily ever after

On Mondays I feel like an adult in my profession
Understand London theatre through participation
Attend workshops, takes notes on the session
And put theory in motion by application

Often the work is secretarial
Paperwork, phone calls, the like
The finance reports are my burial
Another set of press releases and I’ll go on strike.

Integral to my experience is my show
With Shakespeare, my favorite playwright
A working actress, my dream is to know
The human experience inside and outright.

I feel lucky to have such responsibility
And hopeful I’ve gone to asset from liability.

 

3. HAIKU- What Challenges Have I Faced?

My work runs smoothly
Not bumps; rather tidal waves
We ride together

 

4. VILLANELLE- What Have I Learned About Cultural Differences/Myself?

Treasure the diversity in art,
Where differences are an advantage
You close your eyes and I open my heart

To the possibility of my philosophy torn apart
While you focus on minimal damage
Treasure the diversity in art.

The Space breathes life and a new start
to the Greene Card, brandishing cultural baggage
You close your eyes and I open my heart

and accept that the culture of business wants you marked
But you’re not a stereotype to be managed
Treasure the diversity in art.

Because cultural history isn’t data you chart
Or a particular point of vantage
You close your eyes and I open my heart

To our similarities, surely closer than far apart
Meager tolerance is no cure but a bandage,
You must treasure the diversity in art
Else close your eyes while I open my heart

 

5. FREE VERSE- Use Cultural Toolkit

Expression comes naturally to a person like me
Who fidgets and grimaces and beams
Whose every flitting thought
Inane, Selfish, Private, Thoughtful
Shows on her face.

It is dishonest, disrespectful, and unimpressive to me
To meet with people more reserved
It makes sense you’d hide behind a mask of Neutrality
But it’s braver, better, behooving to level the playing field

It’s hard to trust a person you cannot read
But instinct tells you to look closer
But the pushback is harder to receive
When your book’s bound so tight
And I shouldn’t have to tear the pages out
When I have so willingly broken my own binding
So that you may read my words

When I have chosen my language so carefully
Adapted to your slang, your vernacular
Called back your experiences so you could better understand
Mine

I am Direct, in large print that some might call childish
But what’s wrong with wanting yourself to be known?
What’s wrong with expressing your needs, your hopes,
When waiting just grates on you day after day
until only the edges your pages have yellowed from sitting on shelves
Unread
The indirect may be called selfless, but they don’t know
What kind of havoc is wreaked from not showing themselves completely
To hide their messages in riddles and codes

Or writing in a language long dead
Hoping that someone has that magic decoder ring
But they’ve stopped putting them in cereal boxes since it’s a choking hazard

And it fits you Indirect because your words are
caught
in your throat

The communication at work is how I like
We work so physically close that it’s hard to hide
Our irritations, what projects we want, what excites and moves and keeps us up at night

So the typecast of the typical Indirect Neutral Brit thankfully doesn’t hold true
Which is excellent news for a person such as myself
Full to bursting with excitement over a half eaten mars bar found at lunch
Or nearly in tears over a fictional character’s plight

I am direct and expressive in a profession that allows me to do so
But my gratitude is yet limited by my expectation of it as a human right
It’s dehumanizing to act like we aren’t aching and deceitful to be aloof, apathetic, anything but awed by the long road ahead and the task at hand
It’s our lives, our stories, we’re meant to care about the words we write.

 

Poetry by Taylor Walters-Chapman
Introduction by Kit Baumer

 

Photo: The Space’s intern team take over the box office!