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Two incidents in Fall 2005 provoked the writing
of two (actual) letters.
The offensive-to-Italians material in a TV script (Rent
A Goalie), and a set of equally offensive reviews of a
theatrical production (The Amourous Servant, a “commedia
dell’arte” play by Carlo Goldoni) left actor/writer
Tony Nardi with this:
How can otherwise intelligent, opened-minded and skilled screenwriters
reflect (define) a slice of the Canadian mosaic in this way?
How can otherwise intelligent, opened-minded and skilled critics,
belonging to ‘ethnic’ communities, and writing for
Canada’s two largest English-language newspapers, reflect
& define a centuries-old theatrical tradition in this way?
(The reviews of the Amourous Servant were – in
a sense - more offensive than the theatre production; their
capacity to perpetuate misconceptions, falsehoods and theatrical
stereotypes was far greater - more people read papers than attend
theatre.)
Nardi copied the letters to friends in theatre
and film (from different cultural backgrounds). Equally distressed,
these friends encouraged him to publish the letters, to not
let them die. Nardi decided to go public: not in print …
but ‘on stage’.
Nardi was faced with a dilemma: The letters were dramatic in
tone, true. But if read out loud, would they sound “preachy”?
(a question he still asks himself today).
In February 2006 a reading of the two letters for a handful
of people was held at The
Columbus Centre. The reactions were strong, often
vitriolic. They also (and unexpectedly) offered a dramaturgical
approach and narrative.
Nardi decided the controversy – and its
progress - would be the foundation upon which Two Letters
would be built – as a two-part ‘performance’
piece. Anna Migliarisi
joined the project as co-producer. In July ’06 Lisa
Pierce came on board as Publicist.
Since February 2006, weekly (private) readings
were held where space could be found for people (fifteen on
average) from different professions and cultural backgrounds:
Grano
Restaurant; U
of T’s Robert Gill Theatre
and Carr Hall; Italian
Cultural Institute in Toronto. The weekly readings
continued right up to November 2006.
From the outset there was a clear, pronounced
line between two camps: those who believed Two Letters
should be presented publicly, and those who believed it should
cease and desist. Even the ‘for’ camp was divided:
more play/less letter vs. more letter/less play.
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Interestingly, and predictably, those ‘against’
were mainly from the theatre/film/tv community. Those not involved
in theatre/film/tv - for the most part - supported the project.
Interestingly, and surprisingly, some of those initially ‘against’
the project were later ‘for’ it and saw validity
in what they had previously dismissed. This openness to a change
of heart and mind, and willingness to cross the floor, attested
to the relevancy of what the piece provoked.
Why was Two Letters developed
(partly) through readings?
The controversy Nardi imagined he would face during the public
presentations is what he faced at the readings.
Nardi, trained in the technique of commedia
dell’arte (where actor and/or writer incorporates the
‘what is’ of the authentic present - the theme of
Letter Two), could not possibly ignore the
controversy. If the essence of the craft (commedia) epitomizes
being in the “authentic present” the actor cannot
ignore it – at any stage. The controversy had to be incorporated…
at every stage.
The process also confirmed that there is no
real distinction between a reading, a rehearsal or a performance
at a fundamental craft level. Engaging an audience, a listener,
another, is, at its core, theatrically one and the same, whether
that exchange occurs around a kitchen table or in an amphitheatre.
The tools are fundamentally the same; fitting it to size is
the singular difference.
From November 6, 2006 to December 4 2006 Two
Letters was presented in sets of two consecutive evenings
in seven venues: U
of T Scarborough; Annex
Theatre; National
Film Board Screening Room; Canadian
Film Centre; Robert
Gill Theatre, Columbus
Centre; Grano
Ristorante.
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On Dec. 19 & 20 two readings were held
at The
Factory Theatre, with all proceeds going to the Actors
Fund of Canada.
Notable absentees from the public presentations? Too many members
of the acting and Italian-Canadian communities.
The fall ’06 edition of Two Letters was
produced thanks (mainly) to the in-kind contributions by many
(including Columbus
Centre, Grano
Ristorante, Italian
Cultural Institute in Toronto, University
of Toronto, and the Factory
Theatre), a handful of cash donations, a $5,000
donation by TLN (including on-going coverage and
promotion), and a creative team that used its own money to cover
production costs (this, unfortunately, is not a first in Canada
and, unfortunately, it won’t be the last).
Two Letters owes much to the following people
who were indispensable to the process: Anna Migliarisi, Lisa
Pierce, Howie Wiseman, Nick Mancuso, Martin Stiglio, Carlo Coen,
Agi Gallus, Fernando Curcione, Damiano Pietropaolo, Jean-Stéphane
Roy, Wayne Mckinnon, Rocco Galati, Amina Sherazee, Claude Guilmain,
Louise Naubert, Janne Mortil, Francis Ellington Nardi…
and many others who participated in the Pre-readings.
And last, but certainly not least, Dennis O’Connor, who
sat through more than 60 readings – more than anyone!
A special thanks to him for being a huge moral and critical
support Two Letters could not have done without.
Past Moderators:
Russell Smith
Wodek Szemberg
Amina Sherazee
Rocco Galati
John Doyle
Damiano Pietropaolo
Adriana Monti
Pierluigi Roi
Hilary Doyle
Larry Gaudet
Alison Smith
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