Thursday, July 15, 2021

Scorpion's Nest: Jago, the Passion? Heart? Reckless? One

 So, you've met the Brains

And you've met the Brawn

Quite honestly, I don't know what the other crew member is, exactly. I mean, yes you have the Alpha, Female Alpha, Right Hand, Joker, Tech guy(thank you "Furious 7" for that list). 

But that's if you have a big heist crew. 

The Gutter Rats aren't a Big Heist Crew. 

So I'm not sure what exactly Jago's "role in the crew" is. 

But I do know he's reckless, and passionate, and the youngest, so I guess that makes him...the Heart? 

Maybe?

Anyway....

Jago LeValle is the final member of the Gutter Rat crew. Like everyone else, he has an animal parallel(because everyone in the Sherwood Cycle does). It's a squirrel.


 I know, I know, I've said before how I feel about these bushy-tailed--things but this particular animal fits Jago's persona. Squirrels are symbols of passion, preparedness, ambition, peace, joy, and lightheartedness). See? Perfect fit.

And in my head he looks like this:


This is Hnery Golding, from "Crazy Rich Asians", "Last Christmas" and most recognizable currently as Snake Eyes in  the "Snake Eyes" reboot (which BEAUTIFUL, by the way, I don't care what anyone says). Mostly it's the sound of his voice that I adore. There's something in his speech pattern and tone register that just seems to scream "Jago" at me. (Also, he's related to a certain person in the Sherwood Cycle, so that's cool)

Here's his soundtrack:

Push It, by Rick Ross

 


Kingdom (feat. League of Legends), by JAXON GAMBLE

 

Starts Right Here (feat. Kenny Mason & Foreign Air), by League of Legends


Caught in the Fire (feat. Sam Tinnesz), by Tommee Proffitt

Thursday, July 8, 2021

Scorpions Nest: Bellamy, the--erm--Brawn

I said Scorpion's Nest was a Heist Play, right?

And in every Heist, there's a "crew"

In every "crew", there's the Brains, and the Brawn. 

The Brains comes up with the ideas and gives instructions on how those ideas are to be carried out.

The Brawn carries out those ideas. 

The Brains is--usually--the one that everyone listens to. 

The Brawn is--usually--the one who protects everyone, including the Brains, and--sometimes--has the loudest voice or most intimidating stance. 

The Brains of the Gutter Rat Crew is Petra

The Brawn of the Gutter Rat Crew is Bellamy. 

Not because he's bigger or stronger than anyone else in the Gutter Rats (ok, fine, there's only three in the crew but still)

But because this is a man who has Intimidation down to an Art. 

You know those characters in films and tv shows that just stand in a corner and the first time you see them you think "oh, crap, that is so not someone I ever want to screw with"?

Well, that's Bellamy. 

To a T.  

He's one of those people who when they say jump, they expect to hear "how high".

Except the Scorpion's Nest isn't ever among those people, so that's fun!

For someone who's perfected the Art of Intimidation, Bellamy has an interesting animal parallel. It's--a rabbit.

Doesn't look very harmless, does it? But, if anyone has ever read or seen "Watership Down"(both the BBC/Netflix miniseries and the frankly terrifying 1970s animated film) you'll know that rabbits can be downright deadly. They have vicious little claws that can slice their attackers like nobody's business and are certainly animals you don't want to piss off even if they do look all cute a fluffy. 

Rabbits symbolize survival, divination, wit, psychic abilities, abundance and protection, which are all facets to Bellamy's personality. He might look totally harmless, but if you threaten the Gutter Rats, you're dead before you hit the floor(sometimes literally).

Bellamy's model is someone that I adore watching onscreen, whether he's running around in 16th-century leather armor, or disabling bombs in Iraq, or meekly helping a very creepy Ben Barnes carry out his plans to take over the world(I actually felt really bad watching him do this, poor guy).


This is Luke Pasquilino from BBC's "Musketeers", Netflix's "Shadow and Bone", and BBC's "Our Girl"--among other things. Having seen and loved him in all of these roles(including the meek crony of Ben Barnes, see above) I would love to see him lock horns with the Scorpion's Nest.

Also because seeing "D'Artgnan" go head to head with Declan aka "Aladdin", Enzo aka "Benny/Dr. Dre/Eric Carter" and Mai aka Awkwafina would be MAGICAL and make my little fangirl heart so friggin happy.

Bellamy's Soundtrack

Made For The Battle, by UNSECRET & GAITS(originally, this was just part of the soundtrack, but the more I listed to it, the more it sounded like Bellamy, so there you go)


  

Won’t Go Down Easy, by JAXON GAMBLE

 


Bad Boy For Life, by Black Rob, Mark Curry & P. Diddy

 


Battle Scars, by Lupe Fiasco & Guy Sebastian


Thursday, July 1, 2021

Scorpion's Nest: The Gutter Rats and Petra, The Brains

 So remember when I said that "Scorpion's Nest" had a heist type plot?

Well, one of the things in a heist-type plot has to do with rivalry either between the heroes and the villains or with in the heist crew, or with another crew pulling the same job. 

This particular plot deals with the latter. 

The Scorpion's Nests is going head to head with the Gutter Rats. Which is kind of amazing. The particular crew is rougher around the edges than the Scorpion's Nest, but they're also a bit more polished in terms of how they work together(since this is Declan/Enzo/Mai pre "Nottingham's Legacy", and all). They even have their own theme tracks:

Reckless, by JAXON GAMBLE


 

Dangerous, by UNSECRET and Manafest


 

Remember the Name, by Fort Minor 


 

Every successful crew has to have a leader--the "Brains" as it were. In this particular instance, the "Brains" of the Gutter Rats is:

Petra.

I love this woman. 

Ok, fine so I tend to "love" all of my women characters, so this isn't a new sentiment. I haven't written a female character yet that I despise(ok, some of the villainesses are kinds icky, but that doesn't mean they aren't fun to write).

Petra is shrewd and tenacious and level-headed and maybe just the tiniest bit self-sacrificing. She's protective of her fellow Gutter Rats and will do anything to keep them alive. 

Literally anything. 

In my head, she looks like this:

This is Anna Popplewell, known for the Chronicles of Narnia films, the television show Reign, and most recently as the narrator for AJ Pearce's Emmy Lake Chronicles(which--even though there's only one book so far unitl the second one comes in...August, I think?--are fantastic, by the way)

Petra's soundtrack is relatively short at the moment, but still pretty good. It gives a little insight to her personality:

Bad Girls, by M.I.A.


 

Wild Thing, by JAXON GAMBLE


 

If I Die Young, by The Band Perry


 

Never Say Die, by CHVRCHES 


 

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Sherwood Cycle: Scorpion's Nest

 Remember last year when I said that there was a certain group of characters that wouldn't get out of my head and demanded their own Soundtrack Within The Soundtrack?

Whelp. 

They're back with more demands, because of course they are. 

Declan was introduced in first play in the Sherwood Cycle(which has gone from being titled "Lure of the Fox", to "Locke and Cage" and is now permanently called "Beyond Sherwood"); and Enzo and Mai where introduced in the final Sherwood Cycle play(Nottingham's Legacy).

Now they get their own show. 

And I'm not upset about it.

Because, you know, Dark Horses and all of that. 

Only this time, it's the Scorpion's Nest before they were actually "The Scorpion's Nest."

Yes, I know I've said before how much I loathe The Origin Story, but this is one I can actually get behind, since it doesn't deal with Well Established Characters or any of that. 

Plus, the little devil in my head loves throwing people who have little to nothing in common into the same room and watching them hash it out. 

Because of course I do. 

Thanks to "Nottingham's Legacy" I have most of the Scorpion's Nest soundtrack figured out, but recently, there have been a couple of new additions which I love, such as

Here We Go, by Chris Classic

 

Who's Gonna Stop Me (feat. Yung Youth), by Tommee Proffitt 

 

Animal I have Become, by Three Days Grace

 

La La Land, by Adam Jensen


 

Gladiator, by Zayde Wolf


 

Running For Your Life, by UNSECRET 



We Runnin (feat. Beacon Light), by Tommee Proffitt 



Eat Them Apples, by Zuzi Woo



THE BADDEST (feat. Bea Miller), by K/DA, (G)I-DLE, and Wolftyla

 

Pain, by Adam Jensen

 

Here I Am(feat. Brooke), by Tommee Proffitt



Dangerous Game(feat. Sam Tinnesz), by UNSECRET


 

Lowlife, by Adam Jensen 

 

I Am Legend(feat. Colton Dixon), by Tommee Proffitt


Ain't About You(feat. Kiiara), by Wonho

 

Chills, by Why Don't We


 

Rescue(feat. Raine Wilder & Svcerina), by Tommee Proffitt 



 

Cocaine Shame, by Adam Jensen


 

Better Together(feat. Sam Tinnesz), by UNSECRET 

 

Undefeated(feat. Beacon Lights), by Tommee Proffitt


 

Wolves, by Coasts


 

Ok, fine, so apparently there have been quite few additions to the soundtrack and I'm not upset about that either 😜

So what is "Scorpion's Nest" going to be about?

It's a Heist Play

Which is fun. 

And they go head to head with another group of outcasts(more on them later)

Which is fun. 

Oh, and Malakai is in the play too

Also fun. 

I guess the thing I'm most excited about, though, is that I love these three so much I'm over the moon that I can write a play that focuses on just them. 

So for the next little bit I get to share little tidbits with y'all and this little playwright is very excited about that!

Thursday, March 11, 2021

Robbing Hoods: Beltane

 It's been a while, hasn't it?

Blame the Revision Cave and crazy Day Job(because apparently, the beginning of the year means it time for Massive Project Overhaul because of course it does). 

One thing I've noticed as I've been writing this Sherwood Cycle, is that they all take place at specific times of the year--in different seasons, which is cool. Observe:

Wolves of Sherwood: Midsummer

Beyond Sherwood(previously entitled "Locke and Cage"): Late autumn[November]

Nottingham's Legacy: late Winter[actually around Candlemas/Groundhog's Day]

And, my current project:

Robbing Hoods/Out of Nottingham(can't decide which title actually fits, so right not it's both--thank you ADD): Early spring[Beltane]

Even before I knew what it was, I loved that word: Beltane--so fun to say! I first got an inkling of what it was when I saw the mini-series "The Mists of Avalon"(based on Marion Zimmer Bradley's brilliant book of the same name, shot and released in 2001, but which I didn't see until 2012 or thereabouts.). Without spoilers, the festival of Beltane revolves around two significant events in the novel/mini-series and that's only one of the things that facinated me. 

The interesting thing about Beltane is that it's been confused with Midsummer--they're actually two different days. Beltane comes before Midsummer, and marks the beginning of the season, while Midsummer marks--well, the middle of the summer. 

Beltane is usually held on or around May Day, as a significant celebration between the spring equinox and the summer solstice.  It's also referred to as The Great Marriage, and this made it a popular time for weddings and handfastings, which involve the exchange of vows and rings.When a couple was handfast, it meant that they were together of their own free will(sound familiar Robin Hood fans? ok, fine, it happens in Outlander too, but that's not what this post is about)

The fires are very sacred during Beltane. All other lights are doused when the bonfire is lit. It's believed that the fires of Beltane can destroy harmful influences. Sometimes people jump over the flames or the embers and after it has died down, they rub ashes on themselves or sprinkle it over their crops or livestock to increase protection. 

Another part of the fire ceremony to ward off harm involves the May Queen and the Green Man. The May Queen is represented by a girl or a woman dressed in white to symbolize the stillness of nature as well as purity, strength, fertility and the potential for growth (now who does that sound like?)

 

The Green Man--yes, it's almost always a man--is usually a sculpture, usually of a face, surrounded by leaves or vegetation sprouting from it's head. Sometimes he's called "the keeper of forests and woods"(who does that kinda sound like?). And yes, he's green.

Both the Green Man and the May Queen are symbols of rebirth, both are asked to give up part of themselves in order to enter the human realm and start the growing season.

Other traditions of Beltane are May Games, Maypoles and May bushes. These were usually branches of a rowan or hawthorn tree that were decorated with flowers, ribbons, etc, and sometimes the May Bushes were burned in the bonfires. 

There are still Beltane festivals in Scotland and Ireland today. The Edinburgh Beltane Fire Festival is one of Scotland's major tourist attractions and it's very difficult to get into it unless you move fast and early. 

Doesn't that totally sound like something Robin Hood and Company would be in to?

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Sherwood Cycle: What's In A Title

 One of the things I occasionally do is clean out my "Writer's Closet". 

Except it's now more of a room than a closet. I always have a writing wall, where I write things about the project I'm working on--characters, scene outlines, music, bits of dialogue, etc--and that wall gets more and more full until I finish the initial draft of the project, when I pull all the 3x5 cards off the wall and start with a "clean slate", as it were.

 But because a wall has only a certain amount of space, I have to create files on my laptop and in various notebooks that are then stuck in my filing cabinet or my cloud drive or whatever because I'm the type of writer that keeps everything

And one of the things I keep is a list of possible titles for my project. 

I can count the number of times the first title for a project stuck on the finger of one hand.

That's one finger on one hand.



 One of my favorite authors once held a title contest for one of her novellas on her website(which was a really fun read), and another one made me feel even better when she gave some advice to her blog readers about writing any type of fiction. 

With the Sherwood Cycle, every single of the scripts has gone through at least three title changes, and not just because I can never make up my mind about anything(thank you ADD).

Recently I came across a little post-it note I scribbled on while writing "Wolves of Sherwood", and  there wasn't one title one it. There were four. 

Four different titles crammed onto this tiny piece of paper. 

I really used to bother me when a thing like this happened, but not so much anymore. 

Sometimes, my gut tells me the title doesn't work. 

Sometimes, my characters tell me the title doesn't work, and why(yes, I'm on speaking terms with all of them, it's an author thing, just go with it)

And sometimes it's just a Place Holder Title because you have to call it something other than that-one-project-i'm-working-on-but-can't-explain-cause-it's-complicated.

(Yes, I have called a few projects this before. Also a thing)

Another thing that I've learned over the past couple of years is that a title doesn't just have to work for you--sometimes it also has to give some kind of clue on how to market your project.

Don't believe me?

One of the greatest movies ever made, "The Princess Bride" was a box office flop for that reason--no one had any idea how to market it--even the trailer was a mess

Result?

Box office sales plummet, cast and crew suffers, and the film either "comes back via word of mouth/DVD(or in the case of "The Princess Bride", VHS" or disappears from existence except as an article on Google or whatever.

Because I'm the type of weird person who cares about that kind of thing, and I like to make things easier for all parties concerned, when I'm in the revision process one of the things I look at and constantly tweak and re-write is the title. 

Not even kidding.

And I'm glad that I'm not the only one.  

All part of the revision process.

Here's the next chunk of my current project's soundtrack, while I'm at it. 

Incidentally, it's not called "Robbing Hoods" anymore. 

Now it's "Out of Nottingham". 

Much better, in my opinion. 

Dear Agony(Aurora Version), by Breaking Benjamin & Lacey Sturm

 


Vivid, by Lemonade

 


Carry You (feat. Fleurie), by Ruelle


Are You Even Real?, by James Blake

 



Pull Me Down, by Mat Vansen

 

Far Away, by Breaking Benjamin & Scooter Ward


  

Never Too Late, by Three Days Grace


 

 

Game Face (feat. Sam Tinnesz), by UNSECRET

 


 

White Flag, by Bishop Briggs


Tuesday, January 12, 2021

"Writing Closet": My Process

 

 Over the weekend I had a reading of "Smoke and Mirrors", by a theatre company based in New York. 

As I've made it a personal goal to host/attend as many readings as possible

(currently over Zoom, but hopefully soon I'll get to do some in person, too) this was really cool.

 I've said multiple times how awesome it is for any artist to see his/her/their work come to life 

so I won't go into that here. 

But it was AWESOME!!!!!

One of the questions that was asked during the feedback session was about my writing process. 

Since this is the second time I've been asked this, and it probably won't be the last,

 I've decided to elaborate a little bit on this little blog. 

Because I can. 

And why not? 



Every writer has his/her/their process.  

When "Wolves of Sherwood" premiered at Brelby Theatre Company in Arizona,

 the Artistic Director asked me this same question, 

and I went into detail about some of the specifics of my writing process(detailed here)

If you've followed me for awhile, you already know that I use playlists for my projects, 

and I have celebrity and "real life" models for my characters---because of course I do. 

The scripts I write always start with a "what-if" scenario(like "Wolves of Sherwood"); 

or an image or idea that won't get out of my head

(like someone throwing someone else out a window/front door--the opening scene in "Angel's Alley");

 or a part of my person belief system or something else I want to talk about but can't in any other way, 

because for some reason I can be more articulate in my writing rather than vocally,

 I don’t know why("B/V" and “Smoke and Mirrors”--also, see image above)

Every initial draft of a script I write ends up being about twice as long as the final draft because:

1) My characters love to hear themselves talk, and more often then not will talk too much

2) I have this ridiculous need to please my inner critic before everyone else, and

3) Exposition bogs me down. EVERY. SINGLE. TIME.

Don't know if y'all have noticed, but I have a tendency to write scripts with massive casts. 


And part of a playwright’s job is to establish initial relationships between the characters.


Easy if you have a two to four person script, right?


Not so easy when the cast size is 10-15(Sherwood Cycle, I’m looking at you).


Don’t even get me started on the number of scenes that either disappear with each draft 

 

or I talk myself in and out of keeping. (I have a folder labeled “Scenes For My Eyes Only” 

that serves as a Scene Graveyard, 

 

and I already know there’s at least ten pages of “Robbing Hoods” that already need to be either excised

 

completely or cut down, but I haven’t even written “End Of Play” on that one yet, soooooo)


After I write the initial draft, I get to the Fun Part.


Revision. 


When I first started playwriting, I would procrastinate like nobody's business

 

when I got to the “revision” process(see “inner critic” on list above). 

 

My roommates and good friends would always know that I was in the revision process 

 

because I’d usually act like Ross Geller on “Friends” for days, as I’ve never liked killing my darlings.



Or my characters. 

One of my friends came home to me bawling like a two year old after I killed off one of my characters 

 

and she thought something truly bad had happened but I told her


And she said she believed me 

 

and then got me chocolate and sat me down in front of “Princess Mononoke” to calm me down😛

 

(have I told y’all this story before? If I have, then it’s worth a repeat, so there you go)


My inner critic didn’t help much either.


That is, until I figured out a way to turn the inner critic off.  


One of the apartment complexes I moved into in my early twenties had a cable subscription to TCM

(Turner Classic Movies, for those not in The Know)

 

 and, being a cinephile, I binged this channel multiple weekends while not working or studying

 

(ok, fine, sometimes I would forgo studying to binge TCM); and after awhile I started to notice things:


1) James Cagney, Ronald Reagan, Humphrey Bogart, Robert Cummings, George Brent, 

and John Garfield were gorgeous (and if you know who any of those men are, kudos! 

If not--look them up because--well, they’re 😍😍😍 !)


2) I wanted to look like a combination of Anne Sheridan/Audrey Hepburn/Lucille Ball/

Katherine Hepburn/Joan Blondell/Margaret Lindsay/Barbara Stanwick when I “grew up”

(see parenthesis above and substitute “women” for “men”)


3)The majority of the films I watched(usually filmed between 1930-45) were tight, clever, 

had snappy dialogue I really wanted to imitate(and did) and plots that I adored 

even if they tended toward the “formulaic”(The Gangster and Noir Films were my favorites)


4) I could watch a film and do something else at the same time--

not just baking or folding laundry or things like that(I’ve been doing that since I was little),

 but also while I was writing.



Which means that now I can pull out the latest draft of whatever script I happen to be revising

(in this case, “Nottingham’s Legacy”) and proceed to slice out chunks of dialogue and scenes 

with one part of my brain, and paying attention to something on the tv screen with the other. 


Usually throughout my writing process, I’m “theme watching” so there’s been a lot of 

“Robin Hood” adaptations that I’ve either bought or rented in the past two years.


 But sometimes I need something that isn’t related to the project I’m working on, 

 

so I’ve been switching between “Gossip Girl”, “The OC”, and “Call the Midwife”

--because that’s about a far away form swashbuckling outlaws as you can get. 


Also, for some reason, I can spot a typo while the tv is on, not so much when the tv is off. Weird. 


Once the initial revision/editing process is done(usually depends on how many characters I have), 

then I get to do the readings and post reading revisions and pitching for performances and all that stuff. 


Which is the Other Fun Part 😛