| PI ONLINE: 9-12-03 | |||
| Kate
Buckley BY LUCIA MAURO
Like
the Bard himself, Kate Buckley embarked on her 'seven years' of self-examination
and filling her creative coffers with life experiences. Now one of the
most sought-after directors of Shakespeare'and of fierce, contemporary,
ensemble-driven dramas rooted in ethical struggles'Buckley has found a
provocative forum (directing) for her technically adept but honest gut
approach to theatre. It's
hard to imagine that one of the founding members of Chicago Shakespeare
Theater'and CST's ongoing resident text coach'was once 'terrified' of
the Elizabethan scribe. 'I
used to wake up with sweats and had nightmares about performing Shakespeare,'
admits Buckley, who initially experienced Shakespeare as an actor. Her
fear arose from a belief that 'you need training, and you don't mess with
the god.' So,
after she decided to stay in Chicago in 1981 following Great Lakes Shakespeare
Theatre's touring production of Nicholas Nickleby (in which she played
multiple roles) at the Blackstone Theatre, Buckley took classes with CST's
founder-artistic director Barbara Gaines in the basement of the old Organic
Theatre. 'Barb
said something I will never forget,' she relates. 'I was doing a Viola
speech, and she felt I was terrified. So Barb told me, 'Never forget,
the playwright needs you.' I overcame my fear of the playwright, thanks
to Barb.' As
she eventually gravitated to directing over acting, Buckley became known
as a definitive interpreter of Shakespeare'an artist who could elicit
from her actors the ability to speak iambic pentameter with natural grace
and believability. Without drowning the plays in concept, she pulled the
script's contemporary resonance directly from the language. 'My
approach to Shakespeare'my teaching and directing,' explains Buckley,
'is the practical application. I personally wasn't taught from an intellectual
or academic point of view. I was taught the common sense of it all. But
I'm also well read in the matter.' She
cites actor-director Bob Scogin as one of her great mentors of the classics. A
proponent of Shakespeare's First Folio'a technique she teaches'Buckley
refers to it as 'an actor's manual.' She points out that, when people
started reading Shakespeare (as part of the school curriculum), the notations
changed from dramatic to literary. 'I
always go back to Shakespeare's actors,' the director continues. 'They
had two to three days, at the most, to rehearse a play. So there wasn't
a lot of time to develop a back story. It's what's immediately on the
page that will get you there. The clues in the text include: punctuation,
antithesis, alliteration, spelling and repetition.' She
acknowledges that it's a rare actor who can make Shakespeare's language
sound natural. To further impart a sense of realness to these scripts,
Buckley is 'not interested in actors who 'act.'' She says, 'I'm interested
in actors who have great voices, presence and confidence'without being
arrogant.' She
is so committed to the Bard that she regularly lectures on Shakespeare
at universities and arts organizations nationally and abroad. When we
spoke, Buckley had just returned from directing Much Ado About Nothing
for Utah Shakespeare Theatre and finished teaching a class on using Shakespeare
as a directing model for Roosevelt University's 'Fast Track' program. Buckley
was also the assistant director for Romeo and Juliet at the National Theatre
of Slovakia. For CST's Short Shakespeare and educational outreach programs,
she has directed Shakespeare's Greatest Hits, Willpower on Tour, Romeo
and Juliet and Macbeth. She
served as artistic director of Evanston's Next Theatre from 1998-2002.
Her productions have won four consecutive Jeff Awards for Best Ensemble.
Directing
credits include: A Christmas Carol (Goodman); A Few Good Men (Theatre
at the Center); The Last Night of Ballyhoo (Peninsula Players); Talley's
Folly (Northlight); Among The Thugs (Goodman and Next); Cherry Docs, The
Laramie Project, The Incident, Are You Now or Have You Ever Been?,
Stonewall Jackson's House, Cardenio, Macbeth and, co-directed with
Steve Pickering, Henry V (Next); Butley, Dear Master, Niedecker, Dear
Liar The Beats (Writers' Theatre). Quite
a list for someone who never took a theatre class in high school or college.
Buckley, who hails from Aurora, Ill., got a taste of the limelight in
the second grade as the narrator of a Christmas pageant. She performed
in a few high school productions as an extracurricular activity but didn't
think she would pursue a theatre career. Buckley also played various instruments,
like the piano, cello, guitar and bass fiddle. In
the early 1970s, her school counselors and parents recommended she become
a teacher'a secure job for a woman at that time. So she enrolled at Illinois
State University on a teacher's scholarship. But during her freshman year,
she wanted to open herself up to the 'possibilities in the world.' 'It
was the 1970s,' she recounts. 'I'm protesting and marching against the
war. I stopped going to classes and started doing a lot of reading'Buddha'peaceful
resistance. [Later] I took junior college classes in black history, women's
studies'It was kind of like my year abroad. I just studied on my own and
read about philosophy and history and worked in a flower shop. I was seeing
what the world had to offer.' Her
journey through ideologies, history, art, literature, etc., later filtered
into her directing. For instance, she could present a balanced political
point of view in Are You Now or Have You Ever Been?, based on Senator
Joseph McCarthy's Hollywood blacklisting campaign; for Cherry Docs, she
could collaborate with the sound designer about the irony of using a Hindu
flute juxtaposed against the violence; her interest in sports complemented
the British soccer-themed Among the Thugs. Yet,
although she says she 'always had a hankering about theatre,' Buckley
finished her undergraduate degree in 1978 in elementary education at Aurora
University. She landed a full-time teaching job in Aurora and, during
her summer off, decided to apply for work at the town's Paramount Performing
Arts Center (in its pre-casino days of major Broadway touring shows).
The Acting Company brought its production of Romeo and Juliet to Paramount,
and they hired Buckley as a production assistant. Her duties included
receptionist, subscriptions, gopher, crew, dresser and the one who shuttled
actors in and out of Chicago for interviews. 'I
learned how an organization works from all different aspects,' she says
with visible understatement. Buckley
later went on tour with The Acting Company and worked at their New York
office. While there, she sat in on rehearsals with directors Jack O'Brien
and Daniel Sullivan. At the same time, she was temping for People and
Sports Illustrated magazines. 'The
Acting Company was my grad school,' says Buckley. 'But I had to get out
of New York. I didn't see myself working in an office in Manhattan.' So,
now sufficiently bitten by the acting bug, she applied for and received
an internship to Great Lakes Shakespeare Theatre'the troupe that led her
to Chicago. Once here, Buckley immediately got an agent and made the rounds
of commercials and industrials. During acting downtime, she temped at
an agency'where she learned about casting and what directors look for. Now
involved with Gaines' then-fledgling CST (formerly Shakespeare Repertory),
Buckley performed in a Shakespeare showcase at the Body Politic and another
sold-out one at The Second City e.t.c. It was Buckley who found the rooftop
space at Lincoln Park's Red Lion Pub, where CST's first historic production,
Henry V, was staged in 1986. She also co-produced it. Shortly after, Gaines
asked her to be the company's casting director. 'That experience,' says
Buckley, 'put me in a director's sensibility.' She
got her start directing an abridged version of Macbeth for CSTs young
audiences. 'When
I got to that rehearsal process,' shares Buckley, 'I felt like I had come
home. It took me 15 years to realize this. When I was acting, I was fearful
all the time. I never felt comfortable in an actor's skin. The administrative
jobs didn't feel right either. 'With
directing, I had a language with the actors. I could teach them a technique.
I liked the bigger puzzle of all the elements; I adored the collaborative
aspects.' Buckley
got involved with Next Theatre through former artistic director Steve
Pickering. They co-directed, what remains for me, a definitive staging
of Henry V'whose dark minimalist palette brought out the striking complexities
of the words. Here, Buckley perfected her skills at ensemble directing.
'In
terms of ensemble directing,' she comments, 'I think the best work that
comes out of Chicago is when the actors are allowed to take ownership
of their performances. During rehearsals, I'll get questions from the
actors, like 'Gee, Kate, what do you want me to do?' 'But
I ask the actors to make the choices. And we work together to see what
works best for the individual artists and the production as a whole. I
want people to take responsibility for their art and not hand it over
to somebody else. Those ideas inform an ensemble without my working toward
it.' As
Next's artistic director for four years, Buckley had the opportunity to
grow as a director and administrator. But, ultimately, her directing won
out. Last year, she left her post to become a freelance director. And
she is booked with projects a year to two in advance. Independent directing
demands a firm sense of priorities. How does she choose projects? According
to Buckley, there are a number of things that happen when she reads a
play for the first time: 'I need to visualize a portion of the play or
a color or the set'the visual elements become palpable. I must understand
the characters' struggles. There has to be some lyricism in the writing.
That's my Shakespeare coming out to bite me. Dialogue should be very speakable.
I also look at the reputation of the theatre itself and the fee'I have
to be practical about it.' Upcoming
directing commitments include The Credeaux Canvas at Madison Rep; Goodman's
A Christmas Carol; productions at Writers' Theatre and American Players
Theatre in Spring Green, Wis; and directing CST's Tim Gregory in a one-man
show, Bonhoeffer: The Cost. Buckley
glows when she says, 'My greatest joy is in the rehearsal room.' And she
refers to dramaturg Sarah Gubbins' remark that Buckley 'gives good room.'
That enthusiasm can then transfer to theatregoers. 'The
greatest joy I get in theatre is the ability to affect an audience,' she
stresses. 'when we make a decision in rehearsal and the audience responds
to it and is talking about it at intermission. I've gotten love letters
and hate mail from patrons'I love that! I love engaging an audience.'
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