While most 窪蹋勛圖厙students have been retreating to the library to prepare for exams, the fourh-year acting class has been working away on the next DalTheatre production.
Associate Professor Roberta Barker directs The Mill on the Floss, adapted by Helen Edmundson from the George Eliot novel of the same name. The play centres around Maggie Tulliver as she comes of age in a 19th-century town along the River Floss in England. (George Eliot was, in fact, the pen name of 19th-century author Mary Anne Evans, who used a male name so her work would be taken seriously.)
Its the story of her struggling with the things that come at her in life, which include some pretty big cataclysmic events, says Dr. Barker, but also her struggle on a deeper, more personal level.
The three Maggies
Dr. Barker says that the key to this adaptation is having three different actresses portray Maggie at different stages of her life, from childhood to adolescence to adulthood.
In a minor piece of typecasting, student Maggie Hammel plays First Maggie. Hammel experienced some initial difficulty adjusting to the role, as her character is meant to be between the ages of 9 and 12.
I struggled with getting into that mindset, but its been a really fun exploration, says Hammel, who throws tantrums so artfully in the play that you nearly forget shes a fourth-year acting student and not an actual 9-year-old girl.
Elspeth Bullock, who plays the more restricted Second Maggie, said that it was less of a stretch to get into her characters head.
Its very emotional. You dont have to do a lot to feel what Maggie is supposed to be feeling, says Bullock, who connected with her characters idea of trying to find out who you are while also pleasing other people.
Third Maggie, played by Erin Johnston, experiences much of the same inner struggle.
Says Johnston: This is one of the first characters Ive related so well to, just the idea of trying to find your place in the world, while at the same time being torn between family and two different loves.
Floods and fancy dress
窪蹋勛圖厙profs John Pennoyer and John Dinning designed costumes and sets for the play, respectively, but the majority of them have been made and built by students.
Of the 19th-century garments, Bullock says, Its really exciting once everything comes into costume.
Adds Hammel: The costumes are fabulous. Theyre really beautiful. The costume department has done a great job.
Dr. Barker notes that the set is an expression of the mill and has many different acting spaces.
The multi-level construction allows for seamless transitions between scenes, and is only one of the ways in which the creative and production team has had to be inventive with design.
We have fabric thats representing the water. Without any spoilers involved, the play culminates in a flood, so weve needed to find ways of representing that visually, says Dr. Barker.
Halifax actress Ann-Marie Kerr aided the actors with scenes involving physical theatre.
But what exactly is physical theatre? Explains Johnston: We tell a story with mostly our bodies as opposed to anything scripted. Theres a boat sequence and a dream sequence that arent in the text, but weve created them.
Close to the heart
If theres one thing everyone can agree on, its how relatable the play is.
Its extremely human and its very pertinent to university now because its about discovering who you are as a person within the structures that exist in your society, says Dr. Barker.
Weve got a lot of stuff going on, but its not a show about the lights and everything; its a show about the heart, says Bullock. Its about love between siblings, parents, family and lovers, and I think its something that everybody can see themselves in.
嗨硃梭啦堯梗硃喧娶梗s The Mill on the Floss runs through Saturday in the Dunn Theatre at the 窪蹋勛圖厙Arts Centre, with an 8 p.m. show each night and a 2 p.m. matinee on Saturday. Tickets can be purchased from the .