STAY IN-TOUCH
 
Join RSS Feed
Join mailing list






Cupola Bobber
Cupola Bobber
Share
Brief Encounter With … Cupola Bobber
Date: 29 January 2010

Founded in 1999, Cupola Bobber is a collaboration between Stephen Fiehn and Tyler B. Myers. They have created four evening length performances by working slowly out of their studio on the west side of Chicago. The company have performed in multiple venues in Chicago, Austin, Portland, and New York, and toured internationally including last in the UK with the acclaimed. In 2008 the duo were International Artists in Residence at the Nuffield Theatre Lancaster. Alongside evening-length performances, they have made video, durational performance, and published writing. Their latest piece, Way Out West, and The Sea Whispered Me comes to the Northwest later this month.



The production sounds intriguing, can you tell us the premise
?
This show builds what we call a poetics of the particle. Focused on the sublime experience of sitting and looking at The Sea, that it is powerfully beautiful and mystifyingly brutal, we invoke a loose narrative based on the persistent eroding action of the sea’s waves. We imagine Hallsands in Devon, most of which has fallen in the sea, and the town of Dunwich in Suffolk - as told by WG Sebald in Rings of Saturn - with its perpetual rebuilding westward as the sea slowly chases it, destroying it (nine parish churches have been lost.) Dunwich’s slow, perpetual westward reinvention struck a chord with us, as a story of perseverance and as a connection to the mythic aspect of our American historical westward movement. We imagine those parish churches being ground up by the sea into tiny particles and re-circulated by nature to become dust in the dust storms over depression-era Kansas, creating in dust drifts the negative (remembered?) image of the sea and its waves. The basic unit of nature - the particle of matter - constantly circulating, never still for long, playing both victim and aggressor; functioning as a complex allusion to individual existence.

All things within the performance reflect this basic concept. We perform like Laurel and Hardy, like Gilbert and George, like Morecambe and Wise, waves of a style being reinvented. Our set is a few simple tarps, which are at turns a mountain, the sea, a cloud, a storm. Basic units being recomposed, echoing, reconfiguring.
 
What inspired you?
In many important ways, work on this performance started when we did the Morecambe cross bay walk. At the time, we were reading WG Sebald’s Rings of Saturn, an account a walk he did through Suffolk. He told the story of a town called Dunwich which had lost a series of parish churches to the sea. This town’s story really interested us, a bizarre tale of a town repeating the same tragedy compulsively as it rebuilt itself west and The Sea, through erosion, followed it. We really identified with it as story, and as metaphor. So we came to Lancashire knowing of the cross bay walk, having read Cedric Robinson’s book Queen’s Guide to the Sands, and with the 2004 cockler tragedy still on people’s minds. In Robinson’s book he told of the many things lost to the sand. Mail coaches, cars, shoes, the list went on and on. And yet, we were drawn to it, to The Sea and the walk. And the experience of the walk was incredible, both in it’s actual experience and in the imagining of all the stuff that sand had taken as we walked over it. This sort of active paradox, between magnetic awe and terrible disaster encapsulates a basic theme we wanted to make a show about.
 
You have walked on some of the UK's beaches. What did you think of them?
We’ve visited a few coastal sites; Hallsands, Morecambe Bay, and Blackpool. We did a bumbling two-day research walk from Morecambe to Blackpool in  2008.  Except for a small rocky beach near Hallsands and a beach that we encountered just north of Blackpool most of the shorelines that we visited were without beaches and at the time of our visits our imaginations were filled with the erosion narrative in Sebald’s novel so we were coming from a pretty specific state of mind when we looked at these places. One thing that sticks out in our first glimpse of Morecambe Bay and how far the tide was out– the water was no where to be seen.  It was really something for us to be at the ”sea side”  where there was no water.  There is also something about the aggressive wind at Hallsands that sticks in our memory,  at times it was hard to breathe and all we could hear was the rushing of the wind in and out of our ears.

You have worked here plenty of times now. How do UK audiences compare with the U.S?
 It’s tough to make a comparison on a national scale because every time we perform the audience is different and made up of a combination of individuals who all have personal responses. However, one thing we’ve noticed while showing work in the UK is the way audiences are quick to pick up on the subtler humor in our work.
 
You researched Morecombe and Wise's act. As a double act, what do you like about them and which other duos do you admire?
 Before our time in residence at The Nuffield Theatre in Lancaster we had never really watched much of Morecambe and Wise, but when we were researching the town Morecambe their names came up – mostly because of the Eric Morecambe statue located on the promenade.  We found one statement where they had labeled Eric and a few others from the Morecambe area “ sand born stars”. We liked this phrase. After watching a few episodes of the TV show we became really interested in the fact that they ended every episode by singing the same song ("Bring Me Sunshine") and that you could watch these in succession and see changes in the performance, their age etc... If you think of stringing all of them together it becomes this striking document of the passing of time and physical change put to a persistently sunny soundtrack. We also liked thinking that Morecambe and Wise could be located somewhere in between the duos Laurel and Hardy and Gilbert and George, both chronologically and performatively, so they begin to function for us as a bridge between the other two… a continuum.

You founded the company in 1999, what have you learned about the business since then?
It’s best to keep your head down and challenge yourself everyday by focussing on the hardest work: staying intensely engaged with what work you are making and why. At every stage we have fought the pull to spend our time on the less emotionally dismantling business side of what we do. While also challenging and emotionally exhausting, it is sometimes easier to look for applications to do or to “grow” your organization than it is to look at a blank piece of paper and ask yourself what you want to say. We have done very little to become a business because we don’t want the work of maintaining that business to become our primary activity. Generally, when the work is rigorous and strong, the business side will sort itself out.
 
What are your future plans?
We’ve just started a new two-year work cycle (two years being the amount of time that we intentionally give ourselves to complete a new work)and we have a couple of projects that we are pursuing. The first being our fifth performance which we have begun by taking a look at Flaubert’s unfinished novel Bouvard et Pecuchet and by attempting to to visit the 6th largest library in the US located in Illinois (we couldn’t get into it so we sat outside and imagined the library).  The second, is a massive writing and collection project titled The Dictionary of Endurative Actions which will be introduced in The Drama Review’s Spring 2010 issue. Also, we’ll be showing our work The Man Who Pictured Space From His Apartment at the Plateaux Festival this spring in Frankfurt and are planning to return to the UK in Fall 2010 to tour Way Out West, the Sea Whispered Me some more.
 
Why should Manchester audiences come and see Way Out West, and The Sea Whsipered Me?
We think our shows offer a very rich experience powerfully built on the primary power in performance; that it’s live. Audience members can expect a contemporary performance style that takes cues from Gilbert and George, Laurel and Hardy, and Morcambe and Wise as it unravels the question; “what exactly is The Sea to us?” Is it a muse for existential contemplation, or is it only nature at its most heartless; destructive and terrible? The performance is a delight in its intellectual and formal rigor, its humor, and its visceral effect.



Tyler B. Myers and Stephen Fiehn (Cupola Bobber) were speaking to Glenn Meads

Way Out West, the Sea Whispered Me
is at the Nuffield Theatre, Lancaster from 22 - 23 February and The Green Room, Manchester on 26th February.


- by Glenn Meads

Related Content



Back to Northwest Homepage





Write a Comment
Give us your opinion on this entry
Comment:
Name:
Required, will appear on website
Email:
Required, will not appear on website
Confirm: Please type in
Please enter this number > SEVENTY-EIGHT < Just the two digits only, without any spaces.


buy tickets buy tickets
buy tickets
buy tickets
buy tickets




JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
Q Why join yet another mailing list?
A Because, if you visit the theatre more than once or twice a year, we could save you hundreds of pounds.



Tickets For Tonight


Special Offers

Theatre and Meal Deals

Click here for all meal deals


© Whatsonstage 1996-2012
SITE MAP COMPANY INFORMATION

Tickets
Buy London Theatre Tickets
Theatre Ticket & Meal Deals
Discount London Theatre Tickets and Promotions
London Theatre Ticket Hotel Breaks

Content
Theatre News
Theatre Reviews
Interviews & Features
Theatre Videos
Opera News & Reviews
Off-West End News & Reviews
Regional Theatre News & Reviewsl
Whatsonstage.com Awards

Meet the Editorial Team
Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com

Community
Discussion board
Community calendar
Theatre jobs
Theatre blogs

Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
Join the Club
Log in
Current Club benefits
How to get free theatre tickets

Group Outings
What's On Stage Magazine

Mailing Lists
Newsletter - weekly theatre news
Special Offers - discount theatre tickets direct to your inbox

Information Services
What's On - national theatre listings database

London theatre map
A-Z of London Theatres
A-Z of London Theatre Shows

London Theatre Show openings & closings
FAQ
Work for us - current vacancies
Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com
Find and Book cheap UK Hotels

Marketing Services:
Website design
Email marketing & CRM services

Content feeds
Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com

Whatsonstage.com - Discount London theatre tickets, theatre news and reviews, Theatre videos, Theatre discussion, National Theatre Listings. Covering London's West End, all of Theatreland and all UK theatre. The best for London Theatre Ticket Discounts.

Products
Whatsonstage.com
What's On Stage Magazine
Whatsonstage.com Awards
Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
Testimonials
Contact us
Advertise with us

Terms and Conditions
Privacy Statement

Loading...

Book by Phone:
London Theatre Tickets: 0207 492 1565

Outings & Club: 020 7317 9100

A Bowl of Cherries Tickets  |  A Tale of Two Cities Tickets  |  Abigail's Party Tickets  |  Absent Friends Tickets  |  All New People Tickets  |  Backbeat Tickets  |  Ballet Preljocaj Tickets  |  Ballet Revolucion Tickets  |  Big Pants and Botox Tickets  |  Billy Elliot - The Musical Tickets  |  Blood Brothers Tickets  |  Chicago Tickets  |  Compania Antonio Gades Tickets  |  Coppelia Tickets  |  Cosi fan tutte Tickets  |  Crazy for You Tickets  |  Dancing to Lorca Tickets  |  Danza Contemporanea de Cuba Tickets  |  Don Giovanni Tickets  |  Dr Dee Tickets  |  Dreamboats and Petticoats Tickets  |  DV8 Physical Theatre Tickets  |  Frank Skinner Tickets  |  Ghost the Musical Tickets  |  Hans Klok Tickets  |  Hay Fever Tickets  |  Horrible Histories - Barmy Britain Tickets  |  I Dreamed a Dream Tickets  |  Jackie Mason Tickets  |  Jersey Boys Tickets  |  Jose Merce Tickets  |  Juno and the Paycock Tickets  |  Legally Blonde Tickets  |  Les Miserables Tickets  |  Long Day's Journey into Night Tickets  |  Mamma Mia! Tickets  |  Manuela Carrasco Tickets  |  Master Class Tickets  |  Matilda Tickets  |  Midnight Tango Tickets  |  My First Sleeping Beauty Tickets  |  Naked Boys Singing! Tickets  |  Nederlands Dans Theater 2 (NDT2) Tickets  |  New Adventures Tickets  |  Noises Off Tickets  |  Olga Pericet Tickets  |  Oliver! Tickets  |  One Man, Two Guvnors Tickets  |  Pajama Men Tickets  |  Pet Shop Boys and Javier De Frutos Tickets  |  Pippin Tickets  |  Play Without Words Tickets  |  Rafael Amargo Company Tickets  |  Richard Alston Dance Company Tickets  |  Rock of Ages Tickets  |  Romeo and Juliet Tickets  |  Royal Ballet of Flanders Tickets  |  Rusalka Tickets  |  Scottish Ballet Tickets  |  Sex with a Stranger Tickets  |  She Stoops to Conquer Tickets  |  Shrek - The Musical Tickets  |  Singin' in the Rain Tickets  |  Stomp Tickets  |  Sweeney Todd Tickets  |  That Thing Friday Night Tickets  |  The 39 Steps Tickets  |  The Awkward Squad Tickets  |  The Ballet Boyz Tickets  |  The Comedy of Errors Tickets  |  The Complete World of Sports (abridged) Tickets  |  The Duchess of Malfi Tickets  |  The Importance of Being Earnest Tickets  |  The Ladykillers Tickets  |  The Leisure Society Tickets  |  The Lion King Tickets  |  The Madness of George III Tickets  |  The Marriage of Figaro (Le nozze di Figaro) Tickets  |  The Mousetrap Tickets  |  The Phantom of the Opera Tickets  |  The Phantom of the Opera Tickets  |  The Pitmen Painters Tickets  |  The Royal Ballet Tickets  |  The Tiger Who Came to Tea Tickets  |  The Wizard of Oz Tickets  |  The Woman in Black Tickets  |  Three Days in May Tickets  |  Thriller Live! Tickets  |  Top Hat Tickets  |  Travelling Light Tickets  |  Umoja - The Spirit of Togetherness Tickets  |  Vicente Amigo Tickets  |  Wah! Wah! Girls Tickets  |  War Horse Tickets  |  Wayne McGregor/Random Dance Tickets  |  We Will Rock You Tickets  |  Wicked Tickets