Goode For a GiggleJACKIE GOODE supplies the run down on her Goode for a Giggle company and her activities as an actor |
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| Mission Statement Goode For A Giggle started in 2002. I had worked on a very part-time basis with another Murder Mystery company in Inverness, but the owner (Martin Carr) left Scotland and asked if I wanted to carry on where he left off. |
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| So I approached RACE and did a Business Plan, got Business Start-Up funding, and followed up 3 enquiries that Martin gave me before he left. One of these contacts was the organiser of the Centenary Celebrations for Hugh Miller, in Cromarty House in Cromarty. This was our first event, which was a great success, and really gave me the confidence to carry on. Another of these contacts was Julia Garrison at the Craigdarroch Lodge Hotel in Contin, and since 2002 we have been entertaining people there on most Saturdays for all sorts of occasions – Birthdays, Hen Nights, Staff Nights Out, you name it. We have also done lots of nights for local organisations, charities, companies and hotels in around the Highlands, Grampian and Perthshire. |
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| I have a small team of talented witty actors, a lot of whom are HNC/HND Drama students from Inverness, and together we have now entertained a few thousand people in and around the Highlands and Grampian. I am so appreciative of their collective input in making Goode For A Giggle – my present team are Julie McLennan, Greg Geddes, Calum Urquart, Jean Martin, Heather Hastings, Amanda Chisholm and Kirsten Stoling. We have such a great time working together; we have so many laughs with each other and the audiences. Unfortunately due to the lack of acting-related employment in the Highlands, the students usually leave the area at the end of their courses to either further their education or find work. As an actor I have worked with some companies in the Highlands. In 2002 I did “Elsie and Norms’ Macbeth” by John Christopher-Wood with Roadrunner Theatre Company, where I played Norm, an older man who re-writes Macbeth, since “that Willie Shakespeare cannae rhyme”. |
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| Norm himself pens some stunning lines - “Is this a knife I see before my hand, or have my eyes gone funny, it might be swollen glands”… we did a Highland tour of ‘Elsie and Norm’s Macbeth’ which went down really well in the seven or eight venues we went to. We rehearsed in my front room and Ally MacLeod’s spare bedroom, with no funding, and pootered about in Ally’s 2-door Citroen. |
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I learnt so much from Ally – she had lots of experience in all aspects of theatre and was one of the founding members of Visible Fictions Theatre Company. With ‘Arts in Motion’ I did a piece of theatre called ‘State of the Art’ in 2005, in which I played ‘Rose Peppers’, a stand-up comedian who was not very happy with the state of her art. Dave Smith, John McGeoch, the writer John Harvey and Eric Le Tessier Lavigne all contributed to the direction of my character – an experience which was confusing but absolutely delightful! |
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But I realise that is probably a fantasy, as I don’t have much formal training – half an HNC in Acting and Performance! I didn’t finish the course because I had a chance to do “Elsie and Norm’s Macbeth”, had our three year old son to look after (with the help of my fantastic husband, Ian, who assists tremendously in all aspects of what I do - from childcare to making props and an ear to bend – “Is this funny?”), and I had just started the Murder Mystery business, so the course had to take a back seat. I don’t have an agent and trying to find someone to take you on is difficult. I am thinking of it, though, as it is one way of branching out. But even then I know it can be difficult to get work – if you don’t have RSAMD or the name of a well-known college or university in your CV, a lot of people won’t give you a second glance, understandable to a point. Anyway, I feel incredibly lucky to have had the opportunities I’ve had, which has enabled me to make some sort of living in the Highlands. I’ve learnt a lot from people along the way – Ally MacLeod, Dave Smith, Euan Martin, John McGeoch, Brian Gorman and Scottish comedian Paul Sneddon, who I worked with in doing a short comedy character as part of the HI~Arts Laughing Matters Comedy Mentoring Project, which culminated in a few wee slots at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2005. Golden Moment With Goode For A Giggle – our first Murder Mystery at the Centenary Celebrations of Hugh Millar in Cromarty House in Cromarty. It went really well – lots of smiling happy faces, great atmosphere and location, laughing in all the right places, and great feedback at the end. My personal best moment has been as a participant in the Northern Connections project, working with some of my fellow HITN members and members from Vasterbotten Theatre Company and Profilteatern Theatre Company in Sweden. We met up in Ullapool, then four months later, in Sweden. I was asked by Profilteatern to perform a Murder Mystery with some of their cast as entertainment for the Scots and Swedes whilst in Sweden. I flew over a few days prior to the rest of the Scottish group arriving and rehearsed with Profilteatern. It was fantastic fun and to have the chance to work with another experienced company was amazing. I still hope that a large collaborative production will happen with the two Swedish companies and the HITN members in 2008, funding dependant. And Not So Golden Moment With Goode For A Giggle - we’ve not had too many bad moments, but we’ve had drunken abusive hecklers, I’ve been groped by various men and women, we’ve been offered to go to London for a “private party” for some ex-cons who sold helicopters, been asked to accompany guests to their bedrooms after the shows, and had the offer of money to be “entertainers” on a Stag Night bus to Edinburgh. I said no to those offers, but in hind sight maybe they would have been quite lucrative?! Our only real worst moment was when I forgot the caps for the starting pistol – no big bang finale as the victim croaks it, so he did a lot more screaming, and we had to change tack during the interrogation and mention “That silencer – you seen it? Must have fallen off the gun…….can’t find it anywhere……seems to be missing………” |
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| And we’ve put up with a few grumpy hotel staff and owners – who should be named and shamed here, but I’ll save their reputations! We’ve had cramped, leaking, smelly laundries to get changed in, a tiny room full of broken chairs and tables which nobody had even bothered to move for us so we spent half an hour of our set-up time shifting everything out, being charged for glasses of tap water, etc … not exactly A Hundred Thousand Welcomes. |
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My own personal worse moments were at a local Festival doing ‘Illicit’. The first was forgetting where I was in the middle of a monologue – I do a lot of miming phones etc so the technician (Brian Gorman) played the phone ringing effect to try to help me remember where I was in the story but I still couldn’t think what the line was so I picked up my imaginary phone and said – “Sorry I’m too busy to talk right now! Bye!” Links |
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16 Mar 2010 | |
09 Mar 2010 | |
19 Jan 2010 |
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March 2010 Editorial |
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