Undoubtedly one of
the most talked about shows on the improvised comedy circuit, Austentatious:
An Improvised Novel is an
hour long comedy play spun in the inimitable style of Jane Austen and based
entirely on audience suggestions. Never has Austen been more hilarious! A seasoned cast
including: Cariad Lloyd (Fosters Best Newcomer Nominee 2011), Rachel
Parris (Hackney Empire Finallist 2011), Amy Cooke-Hodgson (Olivier winning
La Boheme), Joseph Morpurgo (Oxford Imps), Graham Dickson (UCB) &
Andy Murray (Private Eye) present an eloquent, irreverent, 100%
improvised take on the works of our beloved author. Performed in period costume with live
accompaniment, Austentatious is an immersive and hilarious treat for fans of
Austen and improvised comedy alike. Austentatious perform regularly at
The Wheatsheaf, Rathbone Place (London) but have
recently performed at the Edinburgh Fringe 2012.
I contacted Cariad Lloyd who kindly accepted to coordinate an interview with the rest of the cast via e-mail. This is the result of our exchange. It's time to meet the brilliant Austenacious and
enjoy our chit chat about Jane Austen and their own work.
Hello everyone! Glad you accepted to be my guests, Austenacious. My first question is why Jane Austen and not Dickens or Shakespeare
?
We all like Jane Austen a lot, and some of us studied her at University,
so it wasn't that we don't like Dickens or Shakespeare but it was a shared love
of Austen that made her become our chosen author I think.
Young Jane Austen loved to entertain her
family and make them laugh. Do you think
she might have enjoyed the way you entertain your audience through her
work?
We hope so! It's very loving adaptations, we often mock the
Austen cliches, of dashing gentlemen and ending on a marriage, but it's
definitely done from a place of admiration, so hopefully she would have enjoyed
it!
Who got the idea for such a peculiar show ?
When and how? How did you 6 come together as a cast for Austentatious?
Amy & Rachel came up with the idea nearly 2 years ago now, and
pulled the rest of us together. We'd all done lots of improv before, and Amy,
Rachel, Joe & Andy were all in a group together at University. We just
wanted to do a fun improv format, and we were all fans of Austen and period
dramas in general, and I think we all liked the idea of living in that world
for a while.
In your show you try even to Persuade Elizabeth Bennet that Mr Darcy is
an idiot. (LOL) Did you choose to parodize Austen work
because you couldn’t stand it or because you liked it?
Cariad : The audience suggest the titles by writing them on slips of
paper that look like Penguin Classic books, so that was a title suggested by
the audience! We get all kinds of different titles from, "Man-Filled
Park" to "North-anger Management" and "Crouching Darcy,
Hidden Bennett". So we just take the one we pull out of the basket. We are
all definite fans of Austen's work, I don't think you could do a show like this
if you didn't at heart love her writing and the world she creates.
She was a master of irony and wit but she
lived in a distant , different time like the Regency. How much has the way we
laugh and are amused changed? Do we still smile at her subtle irony?
Andy: I think the way we laugh is actually very similar – we laugh
at other people's flaws and when Jane writes very sharp, very funny lines they
still have the power to make us wince and laugh at the same time. Whenever I
read the works I find myself laughing out loud. Nobody ever gets tired of
laughing at foolishness, and all these character types – the Mrs Bennets, the
Aunt Norrises – are still very much with us today.
Which ones of the six major novels do you
include in your show?
We don't
automatically include material from any of the novels – we prefer to present
brand new works, with all new characters – but we can do if the audience ask
for it! So if (for example) we receive the suggestion for a work called 'Fifty
Shades of Mr Darcy', then our show will take place in the Pride and Prejudice
'universe', but it won't be the same as the novel everyone knows.
What is
the strangest, most bizzarre thing the audience suggested Mr Darcy or Elizabeth?
Andy: Well, I think the show title 'Darcy and Bingley: Forbidden
Love' comes pretty close…
Do they often suggest to mash-up Austen with
monsters, zombies and vampires show?
Andy: We
haven't had many suggestions like that! We have had "@Jane Austen:
#Zombies', which was a lot of fun. But we do like suggestions which allow us to
go beyond the normal Jane Austen world. Sometimes we stray into crime stories,
or gothic horror, but even so we try to react in the way that Jane Austen's
characters might have done if faced with these situations. I'd love to get a
suggestion which allowed us to go to space…
Can someone totally inexperienced with Austen enjoy your comedy?
Joseph: Absolutely. Austen's books are all about distinctive characters, quick wits and high tension - if you like those sort of things, you're as experienced as you need to be. Of course, people who are au fait with Austen and her contemporaries will be able to pick up on in-jokes, references and Austen-specific quirks, but, really, it's all about the story we're creating there on the night.
What’s the most amusing aspect of having to
improvise and what’s the hardest, instead?
Andy: The most amusing is being on stage with people whose company
you really enjoy and being able to have fun with them. Often it's so much fun
that you have to remind yourself there's an audience there, as otherwise you'd
just start laughing! As for the hardest, it's remembering all the details
people mention at the start of the show – if you hold on to them and bring them
back later, it's a great feeling for the performers and the audience, but it's
definitely difficult to do
This question is for Joseph, Graham and
Andy. Why are men convinced Jane Austen is for girls?
Well, considering two of the boys in the cast devoted half
a year to studying her at university, we'd beg to differ. Still, I think it's
fair to say they are, broadly, feminocentric books: full as they are of female
protaganists, they're largely ABOUT girls, even if they're not exclusively FOR
them. That makes a difference. More importantly, though, I think the way
Austen's books have been marketed in the last hundred years have probably
played a bigger role in forming that perception than any word Austen ever
wrote. They've got plenty to say to man and woman alike.
And next one is for Cariad, Rachel and Amy:
who among Jane Austen’s men would you elope with and where?
Darcy is
obviously a favourite, but we've all got a soft spot for Bingley and Knightley.
They're all rather lovely, unfortunately no one is too fond of Mr
Collins.
If you could get “lost in Austen” (like Jemima Rooper in the TV series), which scene
of which novel would you love to re-live?
The final
extant scene of Sanditon. Because then we could do literally anything we
wanted.
I know you have fun making them all comical,
but what are the most comical Austen characters without your intervention?
They're / have
been lots really, it's hard to pick one out. In the last show we had cousins
Genevieve & Francesca Larch, who lived with their over-doting Papa, and
longed to be courted by Wally the Duke of Marlborough and Lord Brackenbury, but
were thwarted by evil servant Smithers, and aided by Wally's housekeeper Old
Lady Thatch into a happy ending and a double marriage. And that was just one
show!
How was your experience at the Edinburgh
Fringe? It must have been special!
Edinburgh was
incredible! We were on the Free Fringe, and didn't know if anyone would come,
but they were queueing an hour early just to get seats! And we were squeezing
in 150 people a day, and turning away as many. We were all very overwhelmed and
very grateful and how lovely our audiences were and how well it all went.
What has been the most rewarding moment in
such an exciting experience?
I think just
doing shows that make people laugh and swoon. After most shows people come up
to us and say how much they enjoyed it, and that's really all you can ask for.
What are Austentatious’ s upcoming venues?
We are
performing at Leicester Square Theatre on the 15th September in the main space.
And we were perform twice a month at The Wheatsheaf pub off Oxford Street.
Check outwww.austentatiousimpro.com or @austenimpro for details. Please tweet us,
we write back to every tweet, and are happy to hear from everyone.
Thanks for being my guests and for anwering my questions. I hope to meet you and enjoy one of your shows in my next trip to London. Good luck to you
all with Austentatious, in your future
careers and in your private lives. We’ll keep an eye on you hoping to see you
live on stage or on screen one day. Fingers crossed!
Thank you! We
hope so too!
Austentatious (from the left ): Graham Dixon, Cariad Lloyd, Amy Cooke-Hodgson, Joseph Morpurgo, Rachel Parris & Andy Murray