Apple Season

Dear friends,

I have a new(ish) dance-for-camera that’s now online!

Apple Season was created and filmed in the fall of 2010. It was edited in 2011. It took a long time to come together. It was a one-woman production, and it got put on the back burner for while things in my life shifted, and changed, and generally had to be sorted out.

Originally, this work was inspired by my love of mystery and detective stories. I discovered that the first story considered to be a murder mystery is “The Tale of Three Apples” from The Arabian Nights. It was very interesting (and troubling) to me that the first murder mystery was about domestic violence towards a woman. Apple Season came from my idea of the voiceless victim also acting as the detective – telling her side of things as the clues are pieced together, working backwards from the murder.

Original costume design – click to enlarge.

Another driving theme of this piece is how the body tells invisible stories. Detective stories from Sherlock Holmes to CSI are popular because we, the audience, are blown away by how much information can be gathered from simple (or high tech) observations of the body. As a dancer and choreographer, I am very interested in how the body tells these stories.

I created the storyboards, costume, and choreography. I experimented with creating a dye from beets to stain the dress. I filmed myself in my apartment, using my roommate’s camera.

The San Francisco-based band, The Definite Articles, gave me permission to use a song they thought would be perfect for the project – The Calm, from their latest album, King Merriweather. It was a wonderful fit.

In fact, I almost gave up on this project altogether. Luckily, when I saw a live performance of the song that I had been given permission to use by The Definite Articles and it re-inspired me to finish the editing.

I submitted this to the SF Dance Film Fest, but it didn’t make it in. So now, a long time in coming it seems, it’s public! I hope you enjoy it. I’d love to hear your feedback.

Thanks! – LB

Interloping

Dear friends,

It’s been a very busy couple of months. I just wrapped a big project and took a trip.

The big project was the filming of an indie short here in San Francisco. The film is tentatively titled Interloping. The story is about two young actors struggling in their relationship and their day-to-day, city lives. They decide to go out on the town one night, but without spending any money. They pretend to be a wealthy, married, British couple. But how far and how deep does their escapism run?

I was recruited by the director, Quentin Jones, and the producer, Nate Visconti, in January of this year. I know them both through a mutual friend, and I consulted on a short film they did last year. With that first project, all I did was read the script, then I sat down with them, and told them my thoughts on the costumes. Then they ran with my ideas.

For Interloping, at first, they asked me if I would do costumes. Then later they said they really needed an Art Director, and would I be interested in doing that?

Of course, I said yes.

Then I went home and called my friend in film and television, the glamorous Tom Mares of Denver, CO, and asked him, “Tom, what is an Art Director?”

It was going to be one of those projects.

I was in charge of managing the overall look for wardrobe, set, and props, in accordance with the director’s vision of the world of the film. I also had to find, buy/beg/borrow, organize, and make sure everything and every detail in these departments was accounted for.

My character and wardrobe sketches:

The production was slated for late April, early May, but due to complications, it was pushed back… then pushed back again… In May, I  started keeping track of everyone’s schedule and helped maintain communications between the various parties.

I’m not going to lie. This was one of the most difficult projects I’ve been on. I learned how hard it can be to keep going a project even when you are frustrated and feel like, “I am so over this.” I had to keep returning to why I wanted to be a part of the project in the first place. The power of the script, the story, was what kept me going. That was what had drawn me in initially, and I had to trust that if we could build it, it would be a worthwhile piece of art.

Everyone involved learned a lot on this project. It was interesting to see how pushing back our production and working on it longer actually made it stronger.

For me, I learned that I really enjoyed this work. My favorite parts were doing the set dressing and finally seeing the wardrobe pieces come together. There’s an indescribable moment that happens when you look over the cameraman’s shoulder and you see the world you’ve seen in your head fall into place and come alive, right in front of you. But I had to keep in mind that this wasn’t just “my world” or “my vision.” Essentially, it belongs to the director. It would be interesting to know more about how different directors work with the production design aspect. I’m sure some directors are more visually design inclined than others.

I’m very interested now in this work of “production design.” It makes a lot of sense to me, with my background in the performing arts and my plethora of interests. I’m curious to see if I could do this again for a different production. That being said, I also learned that I will never again do this work for free. And honestly, that’s a valuable lesson for an artist to learn.

Above all, with Interloping, our crew was amazing. Everyone we worked with really came through beautifully. I can’t wait to see the finished product and share it with you!

Production photography stills:

Until next time!

LB