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“Old Times” is an intimate play in
more than one way. The plot involves a
married couple, Kate and Deeley, who
are entertaining Kate’s former roommate
Anna for a reunion fi lled with sexual tensions,
old connections, and a merging of
past and present that blurs the edges of the
characters’ realities. But the three-person
play, which runs through this Saturday,
becomes even more intimate after one
looks at the playbill and realizes that the
three actors—Julia L. Renaud ’09, Renee
L. Pastel ’09 and Daniel R. Pecci ’09—are
also the play’s three directors. The trio all
wanted to direct and act but realized the
logistical diffi culties in doing both in one
season. After reading and being intrigued
by “Old Times,” they decided to take on
what Pecci describes as “the impossible
task we are trying to achieve.”
All three have had much more experience
acting, and this is Pecci’s fi rst
ever directorial role. “It is hard to direct
yourself,” Pecci says, adding that his inexperience
made relying on his co-directors
crucial.
“We worked more on instinct than a
director would and were more analytic
than an actor would be,” Renaud says.
The trio rarely had to call on a fourth
set of eyes during rehearsals, in part due
to the actors’ openness to one another’s
suggestions—what Renaud calls getting
to know people’s rhythms.
“If someone wants to try something
in a scene, there is never a time we fl at
out say ‘no,’” Renaud says. Suggestions
often don’t work, but in the cases that
they do, all three actors say they can immediately
feel it. Although the three have
collaborated in the past, Renaud says
that the experience this time was different.
“We have learned things about each
other on stage that we didn’t know before,”
she says.
The three also say they helped each
other grow as actors and directors. After
spending so many hours in rehearsal
together, they have developed a kind of
shorthand, which Pecci describes as the
ability to “look at each other right after a
scene and be like ‘no,’ and fi x it without
having to ask questions.”
It is extremely helpful, Renaud says,
that the three are able to take risks around
each other. In fact, risks proved necessary
in “Old Times.” There were moments
when the three actors didn’t even agree
on what is happening in a scene, but realized
after discussing it that they were
really talking about the same thing. This
process mirrored the play itself, which is
driven by the merging of the three characters’
clashing psychological paths. “Because
the play is about these relationships,
it’s different every time,” Pecci said.
Interpreting their characters has challenged
the actors to expand the skills they
have developed in previous productions.
Renaud’s character is focal to the play
but very quiet, forcing Renaud to perform
what she calls “an exercise in being
still onstage.” As an actor, who generally
has the impulse to move and be active
onstage, it has been a way for Renaud to
learn how to simply sit and exist. Meanwhile,
the entrance of Pastel’s character
Anna into scenes often breaks the rhythm
of the married couple and initiates time
shifts. For her, playing Anna has been
about making that clear without being
overly explicit.
The three believe that the play is already
a success. Though they would like
an audience, they are more interested in
the process and feel they have already
learned much through it. But that doesn’t
mean the audience is unimportant to
them. “The audience is the fi nal piece,”
Pecci says. “[The ability to] audibly touch
the audience, it makes the whole process
more real and makes theater different
from movies...Theater is a living, breathing
organism.”
The trio is uncertain whether they will
pursue similar projects in the future. All
hope to continue in the dramatic arts,
but, Pecci says, like many students at Harvard,
they would like to try on different
hats. “No one wants to limit themselves
to one.”
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