ext_107666 (
auroryborealis.livejournal.com) wrote in
fandomhigh2006-03-17 11:23 am
Entry tags:
MSND [slowplay]
The sets are up, the house lights are dimmed, and the play is ready to begin.
[Actual production will be SP'd here. There will be an audience post tomorrow night, so the audience can react to what's going on onstage then. Have fun, go nuts, guys. Chat room is: MSND, but I have school and won't be on until tonight or so. Outline. Please use the scripts you were emailed. Important:DO NOT SKIP AHEAD IN THE PRODUCTION. THERE ARE EVENTS PLANNED OKAY I LIED. Please just post Acts I-III for right now, as there is something planned to happen at the end of Act III. Please just check in on this post to check for a cue.]
[Actual production will be SP'd here. There will be an audience post tomorrow night, so the audience can react to what's going on onstage then. Have fun, go nuts, guys. Chat room is: MSND, but I have school and won't be on until tonight or so. Outline. Please use the scripts you were emailed. Important:

Re: ACT III, Scene I
Still, lines were lines, and directions were directions. With a yelp, Pip ran off stage, the other mechanicals following in mock panic.
Re: ACT III, Scene I
She turned to look at Niall, and stifled a smile at the contraption on his head, then let her expression go gleaming and speculative with glee. She swung one long leg over the edge of the couch, and straightened, one arm draped along the back of the black settee.
Re: ACT III, Scene I
He sang it to another tune, low, old, and plaintive. Those who had ears to hear beyond the daily sounds of man might stare a little harder at the stage, he supposed, but from the surprise in Xander's mind, Niall suspected they'd be staring just as hard at him singing anything in tune at all. The voice was nasal, hardly strong, but it would do for the purpose.
The finch, the sparrow and the lark,
The plain-song cuckoo gray,
Whose note full many a man doth mark,
And dares not answer nay;--
for, indeed, who would set
his wit to so foolish a bird?
who would give a bird the lie, though he cry
'cuckoo' never so?
He moved toward his queen, and by the end of the song, he knelt at the foot of her lounge.
Re: ACT III, Scene I
This is Xander! Xan. DER. Cut it out! Stop being flirty and sexy at him!An image of another youth in her host's mind, who had sung this song, and been amply rewarded for his time, only for the child to flee. And stop looking at what I'm thinking!
Do you hush, then, and I shall not witness. Or stay to taunt, and suffer the consequences.
Titania lowered her voice, but made sure it still carried out to the audience as she growled, lounging forward to toy with one of the costume's ears. "Mine ear is much enamour'd of thy note; So is mine eye enthralled to thy shape." And attractive it was, with Niall putting the boy through his paces, and matching the seeming to the substance. "And thy fair virtue's force perforce doth move me On the first view to say, to swear, I love thee."
And would, before the end of the night.
Not with my body you don't! Another flash, of that other boy, and a gathering rage.
Impatient, Titania sent a sharp reproof. No. But by our leave, and of our will, not through your protests. Do save your energy for this our play.
Re: ACT III, Scene I
"And yet, to say the truth, reason and love keep little company together now-a-days."
Oh boy did we ever say a mouthful there came from Xander, and Niall let it pass, as it was nothing that had not strayed through his own thoughts time untold.
"The more the pity that some honest neighbours will not make them friends."
There, perhaps, was Bottom's one moment of unfoolishness, and yet Niall, looking on his queen in the body of this girl-child, could not help but think reason ought best stay a stranger, tonight.
"Nay, I can gleek--" He couldn't help looking offstage after the departed players, at that, and biting back a laugh. "--upon occasion."
Re: ACT III, Scene I
"Out of this wood do not desire to go:
Thou shalt remain here, whether thou wilt or no."
She pushed him down upon the lounge, and stalked around the couch, her fingers never leaving his hair, the costume, or his shoulders, for more than a second.
"I am a spirit of no common rate;
The summer still doth tend upon my state."
The girl -- Parker--was yelling again: my lines! I worked on this, please, please let me do this! Titania tossed her head, and to silence the girl, let her say the words.
"And I do love thee: therefore, go with me;
I'll give thee fairies to attend on thee."
She was thinking again of the other mortal, her voice coaxing and seductive, warmer than Titania would have it, but perhaps a good choice. "And they shall fetch thee jewels from the deep--" Gifts given, over and over, time and again: a pet, a room, a keychain, a kiss.
"And sing while thou on pressed flowers dost sleep;
and I will purge thy mortal grossness so
That thou shalt like an airy spirit go."
Titania took control again, letting the dulcet tones trail away as she reassumed command, and curled into Niall's young body, hooking one leg behind him, and reaching up a hand to hold him in place as she pressed herself to his side, then called for her retinue.
"Peaseblossom! Cobweb! Moth! and Mustardseed!"
Let Oberon be watching, and make of this what he will. Or if not, then she would tell him later, what sport he missed.
Re: ACT III, Scene I
Re: ACT III, Scene I
Re: ACT III, Scene I
A second later, Quinn comes out all twirly and fairy-like, so they can all say their line: "Where shall we go?"
Of course, Quinn is the loudest and most dramatic. There may be a hand held up to her forehead.
Re: ACT III, Scene I
"Be kind and courteous to this gentleman; Hop in his walks and gambol in his eyes."
She allowed Parker her voice again, to say the next part, since she seemed determined to scream if Titania did not.
"Feed him with apricocks and dewberries, With purple grapes, green figs, and mulberries; The honey-bags steal from the humble-bees
And for night-tapers crop their waxen thighs
And light them at the fiery glow-worm's eyes,"
No, we never were that small or tiny. Shakespeare was a fabulist, not a historian. How foolish are you?
I wondered, that's all!
"To have my love to bed and to arise--" A kiss on Niall's cheek, soft but lingering, in memory of the one the girl gave her friend, "--And pluck the wings from Painted butterflies
To fan the moonbeams from his sleeping eyes: Nod to him, elves, and do him courtesies."
Titania lolled her head against Niall's shoulder, silencing laughter that bubbled up at Parker's spluttering.
Re: ACT III, Scene I
"I pray you," he said to Peaseblossom, "commend me to Mistress Squash, your mother, and to Master Peascod, your father. Good Master Peaseblossom, I shall desire you of more acquaintance too."
And then the one that acted oddly, the girl who was none of theirs. "Your name, I beseech you, sir."
And how strange the time that's passed, that a stage once full of men playing at girls was now filled with fairies playing at mortals playing at fairies, and here was Niall an Glas calling a human girl 'sir.'
Re: ACT III, Scene I
"PRINCESS VIOLET BUTTERCUP," she says, loud and proud and NOT Mustardseed!
Re: ACT III, Scene I
Parker was laughing. Go, Quinn!
We shall remember that name...
And do nothing. Suck it up, Your Majesty.
Another, warning glare, and a warning tap of long, sharp fingernails upon Niall's chest, as if to scratch out someone's heart.
Re: ACT III, Scene I
"Good...Princess Buttercup, I know your sunny disposition well; full many of your sisters have I seen dancing in the meadow of a lazy morning. I desire your more acquaintance, good Princess Buttercup."
Re: ACT III, Scene I
Re: ACT III, Scene I