Exploring the Story NationHAMISH MACDONALD is the co-founder and joint artistic director of Dogstar Theatre. Originally from Clydebank, he has lived in Inverness since the late 1970s, and has written several shows for The Collectors and its successor, Dogstar Theatre. They include Redcoats, Turncoats and Petticoats (1998), The Captain’s Collection (1999), Seven Ages (2001), The Strathspey King (2003) and the company’s current production, The Heretic’s Tale. His novels are The Gravy Star (2001) and The Girnin’ Gates (2003). |
|
| NORTHINGS: Hamish, we’ll get to Dogstar’s current production, ‘The Heretic’s Tale’, in a moment, but I understand it had its origins at the other end of Scotland in the couple of years you spent holding the Robert Burns Writing Fellowship in Dumfries and Galloway – what was your remit down there? |
|
HAMISH MACDONALD: It had two distinct strands to it over the two and half years. One was to take language and literature into as broad a spread of the community as possible, including area resource centres, special needs, primary and secondary schools, setting up new writing groups, and working with existing groups. That was the community strand, if you like, and the other was that they wanted a project at the end of it that spoke something of the region. I was asked to decide what I wanted to do, and Dumfries & Galloway Arts Association would do their best to support it. |
|
I think Dogstar kept going because we have always had ideas, and the will to make them happen
Her most devoted follower had spent his final days not far away from the village, so there was a lot of fanatical history alongside a lot of interesting history to do with achievement – James Clerk Maxwell’s family had lived just over the hill, and a lot of his early fascination with things like electro-magnetism were formed there. Thomas Carlyle had spent nine years further up the glen, writing his famous history of the French Revolution, and there was a Covenanting site nearby as well. There was an amazing clash of conflict and achievement in a tiny little area, so it was a fascinating place to explore. N: How did you approach turning the story of the Buchanites into a play? |
|
| HM: It was really a matter of how to economise the story. The Buchanites had something like 80 followers at their maximum, and they were virtually under siege at one time. To refine it down for the stage I opted to have two voices, an actress playing Elspeth Buchan [Annie Grace] and an actor playing her most devoted disciple, a man called Andrew Innes [Matthew Zajac]. That allowed me to bring the whole world of the cult into a performance space in a refined fashion, and I think that it works better as a two-hander than with a bigger cast – otherwise it was going to have to be an epic movie! |
|
| N: And I guess the budget wouldn’t quite stretch to that … HM: No. This production is about a third longer than the original in Galloway. The first version was done quickly as part of producing four plays in three weeks, which was madness, and we have had a little more time to develop it. We have shifted the music from fiddle accompaniment to cello accompaniment. We are lucky to have Christine Hanson on board for that. Gillian Frame really enlivened it in the Galloway version, but I think the cello gives it a different texture, and maybe introduces something more soulful as opposed to the lively lines of the fiddle. N: Tell me about the set and staging? HM: Again economy was the thing. We have two platforms connected by a walkway, and the audience are seated on either side, so it is a wee bit like a congregation as much as a theatre audience. It’s important to have a direct communication with the audience in this play. There is lots of movement in the play, it’s a very dynamic production. The Buchanites did lots of travelling and were chased from one place to another a lot, and one thing that the director, Stephen Docherty, decided at an early stage was that he didn’t want this to be an end-on, proscenium arch style of production. He wanted it in the middle of the audience, and we came up with this combination to achieve that. N: This is Dogstar’s first production since you did Ali Smith’s ‘The Seer’ earlier this year, which was the first time that the company had staged a play by a writer other than yourself – how did you feel that worked out? HM: It was very well received, I would say. It got mixed reviews, and we thought that might be the case, but the feedback we got was fantastic. It was an unusual piece that took a few risks, and that wasn’t going to suit everyone, but I believe it was a play that was well worth doing, and I think by and large audiences enjoyed it. We had really vibrant nights in places as different as Stornoway and the Traverse in Edinburgh, and we felt it was successful in both drawing and pleasing audiences. N: How did you get interested in writing in the first place? HM: I guess I’ve had a deep interest in literature since I was quite young. I think it was probably song-writing that I first got into, turning out three-chord songs when I was younger. I then got into poetry and literature as I grew up, but I grew up not really knowing about Scottish literature. It was something that nobody told us about at school – we had to discover it for ourselves. I grew up knowing more about American writers than Scottish, and it was the same with Scottish history. I grew up in Clydebank practically on top of the site of a Roman encampment, but in school all they taught us was the Romans in Chester and London. I think it is better in schools now. That was quite negative, but it meant that as I got interested I had to go on a wee voyage of discovery to find out what it was all about. I think all of that was quite influential on me when I did start to discover it. What I did get on Scottish literature actually came from home – my father was very keen on Burns. I suspect it is more accessible now than it was in the 1970s. It used to be an event when a Scottish novel was published, and now you can’t keep up with them. It started to dawn on me that you could write about Scotland. I was reading James Kelman and Alasdair Grey, and realising that where I lived wasn’t just a place to go to work and come home at night and go to the pub, there was this amazing other fictional dimension going on and being exposed. That was very influential on my own desire to write. |
|
|
N: You moved to Inverness in the late 1970s and got involved in the Faultline Festival? HM: When the Faultline Festival started in Inverness in the early 1980s, we produced a touring show called ‘The Kilt is Our Demise’, which was a kind of cross between ‘Saturday Night Live’ and ‘Calum’s Cèilidh’. It was the Thatcher era, so there was a lot of satire, and a lot of stuff about Highland history and economics and so on. We toured that around the Highlands for a few years, and took it down to the Tron Theatre in Glasgow as well. That led to being offered radio work. There is an immediacy about writing comedy and having to perform it that is always there, whether it's a full house in the Tron or a handful in a hall in Caithness. You learn a lot about engaging an audience and getting to the point, and it was all part of the learning curve. I think maybe sometimes getting thrown in at the deep end is the best way to learn. N: How did The Collectors and then Dogstar come about? HM: It really just evolved through the need to produce work. I did ‘Redcoats’ as a one-man show for the Highland Festival in 1998, and Alastair McDonald then commissioned us to do ‘The Captain's Collection’ the following year. There was a good buzz around the shows, and you either walk away from it or try to keep the momentum going. We did a short tour with ‘The Captain’s Collection’ in 1999, but we were keen to do a bigger one. It was a case of how do you go about that – how do you set it up, how do you get money, what kind of structure do you need to actually run a tour and make sure it is done right? It was another steep learning curve for me. I was able to start writing full-time from 1998 – I used to operate industrial machines, and I worked in shipyards and the oil industry. I was writing on the side until I started to get commissions, and it became more difficult to do both – doing a day job and then getting home and writing until one or two in the morning you can only sustain for so long. |
|
| We then did the ‘Seven Ages’ show, and I think it kept going because we have always had ideas, and the will to make them happen. Matthew came on board as joint artistic director two years ago. We were looking to share the workload, and to expand the ideas and not get too rutted in one genre or style of production. It would be easy to get focused on one mindset, and the danger there is that you get repetitive. Matthew had lots of experience in running companies in the 1980s and 1990s, and he is full of great ideas and energy. |
|
N: What is coming up next for Dogstar – is the MacBeth outdoor project for Highland 2007 still on the cards? LinksAssociated Pages |
|
25 Jun 2009 | |
15 Jun 2009 | |
08 Jun 2009 |
|
THIS MONTH'S EDITORIAL |
|
July 2009 Editorial |
Bookmark with:
What are these?