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#elinor frazer
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A Kind of Spark fanart
This part made me cry so much
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ml-quinn · 1 year
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A Kind of Spark Parallels
Elinor Frazer is Autistic || Addie Darrow is Autistic
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softsyoungk · 1 year
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elinor fraser is so me (sapphic & autistic big sister)
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the-fangirl-diaries · 11 months
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I finally finished A Kind of Spark and I HIGHLY recommend it! I can’t tell you the times I teared up, smiled, gasped, wanted to slap my computer screen (not a good idea since I just got this one a few months ago, lol.) 
I also wonder how on earth Mrs. Murphy (the teacher) is even qualified to teach children in the first place. I’m not gonna spoil it, but she made me SO MAD! 
Again, I could go on and on and on about it, but while I would love a second season, I am actually happy with the way season one ended, so I’m good either way. 
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maiisbored · 1 year
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Okay but now I feel like keedie was with the battle of Killiecrankie, I still have so many questions!
Why does a portrait of Maggie exist (someone who couldn’t return to Juniper) but not one of Elinor (respected in Juniper)? And What happened to Frazer manor? Why is it a forgotten ruin instead of a cared-for historical site? Did something bad happen with Elinor or someone else down the Frazer line? Does that have something to do with how Audrey, and thus her mum, is connected to the Frazers? Where did the line of frazers go? Mrs Jenson, who pointed out that Audrey is from the Frazer line, acted like it was an obvious fact, which implies that the Frazer family didn’t leave Juniper … was it just simply that there was no son to continue the family name? But hold up wait a second! Elinor & Maggie were women so they couldn’t have carried on the name either! Did Frazers move down from the north to live in Juniper? If not, how can mrs Jensen have remembered a family name that disappeared all the way back in the 1500s ??? Aaaaaahhhhhhh
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thewidowstanton · 7 years
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Tessa Blackman, hand-to-hand and acrobalance artist, Josh & Tess, Living Room Circus
American circus artist Tessa Blackman – who is from Chicago – trained as a dancer from the age of five. She specialised in classical ballet at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts, and also did tap, jazz and contemporary. She went on train at Chicago’s Second City and has also studied holistic energy and worked with InVision, a school of psychic abilities.
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In 2016 she graduated from the National Centre for Circus Arts in London with her hand-to-hand partner Joshua Frazer. As Josh & Tess, their acts are an enticing fusion of ballet and circus. They are members of Living Room Circus and appear in its show The Penguin and I from 29 June – 2 July at The Dairy at Springhill Farm, in Forest Row, Sussex. It runs again on 25 July at Jacksons Lane in London, and the duo appear in Simple Cypher’s Cypher Stories on 26 July at the same venue during its Postcards 2017 season. Tessa chats to Liz Arratoon.
The Widow Stanton: Any there any other performers in your family? Tessa Blackman: Yes. My mum, Suzanne Lek, was a prima ballerina. My great, great uncle was Nicolas Legat, who was a really famous Russian dancer. He was kind of like in the beginning of the whole Vaganova technique. Back in the day there was the Legat School of Ballet and the Royal Ballet and they were kind of rivals. So my mum went there from ten to 18. But then Legat got shut down. She worked for the London Festival Ballet and then moved to Yugoslavia and worked in a company there. She also worked at Pineapple Dance Studio and then actually first brought Pineapple to New York. My dad isn’t a performer but he loves the arts.
Is your mother Russian? No. Our familly line is Russian but she’s actually Welsh… well, it’s all mxed up because my grandparents lived in Holland but when the Nazis invaded they moved to Wales, cos we’re Jewish. My dad is from Chicago, born and bred.
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Did you always want to be a dancer? Yes. When I was five my mother was teaching and I said, ‘Please can I come and take some classes with you?’. There was never pressure. She never pushed me to dance but it was kind of, ‘If you’re gonna do it, you’re gonna do it well.’ Then she pushed me pretty hard, but in a good way. It was tough at times and I danced from five years old up until 19. I went to North Carolina School of the Arts boarding school for ballet and yeah, I always wanted to be a dancer. That was my thing.
So why aren’t you a dancer? Yes, exactly. When I was 18, I had a really bad back injury; I had a herniated disc and that was the end of my ballet career. I kind of took about four years out. All the doctors wanted me to have surgery but there was something instinctual in me that told me not to do it, and I said I didn’t want it. I did holistic therapies and everything I could and essentially healed myself over time. During that time I went to art school, started painting, did a lot of energy work…
Did you do acting at Second City? Isn’t it an improv place? Yeah, they have a five-level improvisational programme and I did that for a year right after NCSA.
What made you move on to circus? Basically when I was living in Chicago and doing all these crazy things, I started getting romantically involved with a Circus du Soleil performer, who was a dancer in Dralion. [Laughs] I was like, ‘This is awesome!’. I was going to all his different shows around the States and he took me backstage one day and I got to meet all the performers. I was talking to them and was like, ‘How do you do this? This looks insane!’ They were like: “Well, you can train your muscles just like you train your muscles for dance.” They gave me this conditioning programme that I started doing on my own. 
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Then because I have a UK passport, I decided that I was gonna buy a one-way ticket and move to England. I did that – it worked with our relationship because he was travelling everywhere too – and I researched where I could take circus classes. I found Circus Space, which the National Centre for Circus Arts was at the time. It said, ‘Degree auditons in four weeks’. So I was like, ‘Maybe I should do this’. [Laughs] I trained for four weeks and I got in, which I still can’t believe. I couldn’t believe it happened because I had only really been physically training hard and getting back into shape since my injury probably for six months prior to the audition. I did a dance performance for my audition piece; I’d never done any circus before, I couldn’t even do a handstand. [Laughs]
This is marvellous, almost like running away with the circus… Yeah, I always describe circus to people as like one of those claw machines at fairgrounds that pick up toys. [Makes a claw hand motion] Circus just sort of picks you up and you’re like, ‘Oh, how did I get here?’. Everyone’s story is just completely different. What made you choose hand-to-hand? I was trying a bunch of disciplines and because I had no gymnastics background I had zero upper-body strength. I found aerial quite challenging. Then I started doing acrobalance and me and Josh paired up and started working together. It was really interesting, because we were similar in size and I was basing him a lot and he was basing me, and I realised that actually hand-to-hand was closer to dance than I thought and it felt really good. And we were dating, so it seems as if my romantic life takes me in the direction of my art forms [laughs]. We just dove into it together and started training and we loved it.
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Your degree piece, Bound, was so distinctive and really impressive. How would you describe your style? Where we started is kind of like gender neutrality and not being confined to our genders in the way we express ourselves as artists. So we wanted to bring in a fluid movement quality and not have that be distinctly feminine and bring in a raw quality and not have that just be male; how we can both move in-between that language together and display a woman strongly and maybe display a man femininely.
Since our devised piece we’ve developing a lot with the knotted ropes – Shibari – moving more towards this raw, more aggressive style at the minute. I’m seeing that Shibari is getting more incorporated into circus now, which is really cool [see our interview with Hanna Moisala]; the whole self-suspension thing, having it be an aerial apparatus. We haven’t explored that as much but we’ve been using more the harness work.
Would you agree there has been quite a move to having women as bases? Is there a point to prove? Yeah, absolutely. I think for years we’ve been in that space as women of trying to prove a point, but for me I like to think of it, in respect to the feminist movement, that we’re not trying to be men, it’s more that we’re trying to display our strengths. The difficulty is that people are going: “Oh, you’re just trying to do the man’s job.” But it’s like, ‘No, actually these jobs are equal and we’re trying to show you that we are strong as well, that we are just as strong, we are built to do things like that, too’. It’s like: “Female bases, what’s this?” But it’s super-exciting to see and everyone loves to see it. I think it’s amazing that it’s happening.
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How hard is your ‘iron-jaw’ move? [Laughs] I think that like with every circus trick, it’s an illusion to a certain extent; you have the strength but there are ways of making it safe for your body. I would say it’s probably more like a neck hang than it is genuinely from my jaw.
You might be interested in the aerialist Miss La La… but tell us about Josh and why you like working with him? A lot of reasons. We’re basically best friends. We’re not together any more in a relationship so that’s been a difficult transition but the fact is that when you work so close with someone you become best friends. We were living together for three years, we saw each other 24 hours a day so I think my relationship with him is unlike any other I’ve had with anybody. It’s probably one of the most special relationships I’ve had.
The way I kind of describe our creative process sometimes is at times I throw up on the table and then he cleans it up [laughs, a lot]. I’m kind of like, ‘Wah, wah, wah, here it is, this idea, this idea’, and he’s like: “OK, but how can we make that all work and structure it together.” It feels like a good balance.
I’ve always loved adagio and hand-to-hand with the woman in pointe shoes. You support Josh on your shoulders while on pointe. It’s stunning but what does it do to your feet… [Laughs] It requires a lot of training with my legs. The strength isn’t all coming from my ankles, it’s coming from my entire leg, so I have to keep up on my physio with my ankles and then also the strength of my inner thighs and glute muscles so that the whole leg is working to lift the body rather than just my feet.
I’ve never really understood pointe shoes. Is the inside shaped to cushion your foot? Not really. It’s a really close fit but they’re made of papier maché and have wood around the block part. You mostly wear toe pads inside. Most people use cotton or little gels, so sometimes there’s a little bit of foam at the tip of the shoe.
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What have you done since graduation? I’ve mostly been working with the Living Room Circus, which is run by Elinor Harvey. She won the Deutsche Bank Business Plan Award in our year at NCCA. We did our first performance together last summer in a yurt in Forest Row in Sussex. We’re coining ourselves right now as an immersive experimental circus company. We mix circus, dance, live music and physical theatre, with an emphasis on audience interaction and involvement. We’re working on The Penguin and I, which Jason Dupree is directing.
Tell us a bit about the show… We’ve been creating a series of scenes that we can then adapt into whatever space we’re going into. For the new show we have this bespoke sofa that we can use in different ways, to balance on, to hang from. We actually got the money to make it from a Kickstarter campaign, which was great. This coming week we are performing in a dairy farm again in Forest Row. We have the scenes all laid out and we’re going to see what we can do with the space. It’s going to be really, really cool. It’s Eli’s home town and it’s kind of like our starting place.
Can you pick out a career highlight or two so far? Right off the bat, I’d say how much Josh and I have travelled so far. We’ve been to Corsica, Israel, Belgium and around the UK, and that alone is pretty awesome and exciting. Then just working with the Living Room Circus has been amazing because it feels just like a circus family. It feels like we’re a bunch of kids making a company, because we haven’t really had that much outside help. We’ve had help funding-wise but yeah, we’ve created this family together and we’re trying to make it work and see what happens.
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The Penguin and I runs from 29 June – 2 July at The Dairy, Springhill Farm, in Forest Row, Sussex and again on 25 July at Jacksons Lane in London. Josh and Tess also appear in Simple Cypher’s Cypher Stories on 26 July at the same venue during its Postcards 2017 season.
Picture credits: Tessa’s headshot, Nizaad Photography; Josh on shoulders/iron jaw, Bertil Nilsson; The Penguin, Miriam Strong
For tickets for The Penguin and I at The Dairy and at Jacksons Lane, and for  Cypher Stories. click the links
Twitter: @LRCircus @jacksons_lane @SimpleCypher
Follow @TheWidowStanton on Twitter
Click the links to read our interviews with Simple Cypher’s Kieran Warner and Christopher Thomas
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nationalcircus · 7 years
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Living Room Circus – Lab:time and Lab:time² at the Broadway, Barking - The Penguin and I
Living Room Circus is an experimental circus company, creating and performing intimate and immersive shows. They devise and develop their own blend of circus, dance, live music and physical theatre - always with the emphasis on audience interaction and involvement. This is achieved by transforming any given space into ‘the circus’.
The collaborators of Living Room Circus are Laura Overton, Elinor Harvey, Josh Frazer, Tessa Blackman, Charlee Rico DeBolla and Jason Dupree; all of whom are circus performers and graduates from the National Centre For Circus Arts. The performers bring a mix of skills to the company, including trapeze, rope, straps, acrobatics, gymnastics, hand balancing, juggling, ballet, contemporary dance and theatre.
After receiving some initial funding from the Deutsche Bank award for Creative Enterprise, their first shows were unconventional in setting:
The initial performances were set in a yurt which had been transformed into an enchanting living room into which the audience was invited. We then had a four day run of ‘work in progress’ performances for the public which was received with much enthusiasm. We have since used the audience feedback to adapt and improve the show and were then able to take the Living Room Circus to a community in rural Wales, performing in a transformed woodland roundhouse.
Living Room Circus applied for Lab:time – funding and space at the National Centre for Circus Arts – to rig their new ‘circus sofa’. This is a custom-made, specially reinforced and durable sofa which can be used for tumbling, flipping and handbalancing. It also has the ability to be rigged high in the air, which means that aerial equipment such as a trapeze can be attached. This was successfully carried out and Living Room Circus were excited to be able to realise their ambition of an aerial sofa, a feature they hope to incorporate into performances going forward. 
The group completed their Lab:time² – a funded residency at a collaborating venue – at the Broadway, Barking. Lab:time² funds projects which have already undergone early stage research and development, so this enabled them to more fully explore themes for their upcoming show, The Penguin and I.
At the end of the week we had explored 10 scenes, of which we had finalised 3. We also managed to explore lighting for the first time. This bought a different element to our show and also created a final scene from the exploration at the Broadway theatre. … We co-produced a circus day as part of the Barking Folk Festival at the end of our week where we ran workshops and performed a work in progress. We also managed to explore our bespoke sofa, giving us time to play and create, finding out what it has to offer.
Living Room Circus took The Penguin and I on a short tour this summer to a working dairy farm in East Sussex, Redbridge Drama Centre in Essex and Jackson's Lane in London. They will shortly be announcing their next tour.
Follow Living Room Circus on Instagram, Facebook or Twitter.
Lab:time² applications are currently open and will close on 13 November 2017.
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ml-quinn · 1 year
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A Kind of Spark Costumes || Elinor & Maggie
Requested by @the-princess-of-cats
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