The Making of JBBSQ
by Arthur Meiselman
John Brown's Body-Stage To Screen
John Brown's Body At San Quentin Prison
focus
Part 2
John Brown's Body At San Quentin Prison
redux

Four days before the first on-site rehearsal, a production studio was secured in San Francisco (San Quentin is North across the bridge in Marin County, ironically set on one of the most beautiful promontories in the Bay Area.) The idea was to recreate the tour location in detail and test the production. Of course, this had to be done without the actors. An elaborate bridge-work truss was brought in, lights were hung, projectors mounted, cameras set. We worked on the details; it was an awkward, unrewarding task. On Tuesday night, all of the studio-placed production had to be dissembled, packed, loaded on trucks and brought to San Quentin the next day at 6:00am. What the four days gave us was some working view of what had to be done and a blur of details which we couldn’t quite organize. The trucks arrived early Wednesday morning; the rest of the production and staff shortly thereafter. It took half of the day to clear security and arrive at the space. Half of the “day and a half”. The afternoon and early evening were spent setting up, struggling with those unknown details, trying to get to a tech rehearsal mode. There was a short one, with the actors (their first time on the space). And that brings us to the witching hour on Wednesday evening where I had my epiphany at the West Gate. Tomorrow was opening night.

Opening-night day... under the circumstances, the professionalism was redeeming. The haul through the stone wall continued and we reached a run-through tech rehearsal that was marred by many interruptions. By 5:15pm only Act 1 had run with a only a few key cues set. That meant that no production people had ever seen Act 2; it was to be “winged”. Suddenly, at 5:30pm, the prison guards began to bring in audience. At 6:30pm, it began.

A fact... in my long theatre experience there were less apparent-to-the-audience mishaps in this Opening Night performance than in any other I can remember. Not sure why. What did happen is what continues to make live theatre the treasure that it is. The actors, bonded to the beauty of Benet’s words, absorbed the production and made it their own. They were blessed with little theatrical baggage, so they didn’t know nor were concerned about the tense chaos that preceded their performance. They believed in the reality they were creating and they poured that belief into the audience. They deserved the standing ovation they received from the 250 invited guests and 75 inmates.
Another fact... as far as we or anyone else knew, this was the first time that John Brown’s Body had ever been staged with the actors working off-book. In its 50-year theatre history it has always been performed as a reading.

The second-and-last-performance day... Friday, had been set aside exclusively for taping, to pick up shots that were not available during performance. It was also an opportunity to do a full run-through in order to pin down cues. It didn’t happen. We never completed a full rehearsal. At 6:00pm, it began again. It was a different performance, as it should have been. Generally, not quite as good as the Opening, but better production values, and a new array of special acting moments. Ken Beckman, who handled the video engineering, remarked: “I finally liked what I saw.” Again, a standing ovation from a full house.

The post-production strike was probably one of the fastest on record. When it was all clear, it was as if it had never happened. It was all in memory (and on tape), never to be performed again in this situation. 

When he began, De Francesco set out three objectives for the project:

He accomplished all of that.
How it will finally appear is, fortunately, in his award-winning, film-editing hands.

Hyperbole aside, this was a unique event and for some of the artists a unique experience -- certainly for the actors and certainly for the audience. I am left believing that almost everyone involved in the production would do it again even under the same circumstances. I know I would.

Postscript... if you can’t wait for the documentary and need to know the rest of the story, I can be had for an extended conversation. as long as you bring a gift... I have a fondness for Courvoisier.
                                                                            am

Editors’ Note: As of this date, the long and often tortuous process of bringing the film and its companion documentary to life is well underway. It is a process of market-reality versus the filmmaker’s art. The candles are lit and so far, the wind has been gentle.

CREDITS

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