Glasgow public to become film stars for National Theatre of Scotland show
Members of the public will feature as unscripted co-stars in Super Night Shot, a multi-screen film “in which the city becomes a film star for a fantastical mission.”
It will be filmed on the city’s streets by four performers armed with video cameras exactly an hour before it is shown to audiences at free outdoor screening events.
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Hide AdDue to be staged over at least two nights in August, Super Night Shot, which is billed as “an experience halfway between theatre and film,” is among the first shows unveiled by new NTS artistic director Jackie Wylie.
Other highlights include a revival of Edwin Morgan’s version of Cyrano de Bergerac and a comedy-musical inspired by Oscar-winning film My Left Foot, starring disabled artists.
A new outdoor adaptation of best-selling book The Reason I Jump will be staged in a series of mazes created in a children’s wood in Glasgow’s west end, while the Traverse Theatre’s much-loved musical comedy hit Midsummer will be reimagined at the Edinburgh International Festival.
Created by Berlin-based collective Gob Squad, Super Night Shot has been staged early 200 times around the world since 2003. It celebrates “unplanned meetings with strangers and delights in the randomness of urban existence.” A member of the public will star in a climatic final kissing scene.
A spokesman for Gob Squad said: “Both comical and moving, Super Night Shot attempts to elevate the banality of everyday life into the glamour and glitz of a big screen blockbuster. It’s a completely unpredictable show that elevates the everyday into the epic and plays with your perceptions of the familiar. Anything can happen, and usually does.
“The film begins exactly one hour before you come to watch it when the four performers meet, arm themselves with their video cameras and start them simultaneously.”
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Hide AdMs Wylie, who was appointed last October, said: “The actors will be creating a live film starring the people of Glasgow, which will be shot all across the city at the time of night when that amazing energy happens. The point where the filmmaking ends is where the theatre begins.
“Were going to be reliant on the joyous community of the people of Glasgow. We can’t say where it will be shown, but it will be a free event and there will be an opportunity for everyone to see it.”
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Hide AdMeanwhile NTS said it believed the entrepreneur, author and broadcaster Mark Stevenson was possibly the first ever "futurist" to be embedded within a theatre company.
A spokeswoman said: "He will enable the National Theatre of Scotland to understand the questions the future is asking of them and help Scottish theatre and Scotland address those questions."
Ms Wylie added: "This is a wide-reaching year-long nationwide programme that builds on the National Theatre of Scotland’s founding principle to be a theatre for everyone with a renewed focus for 2018 on celebrating young people and their vital contribution to our nation’s artistic life.
"We want to thrill and entertain audiences in Scotland and beyond, to encourage participation in cultural life and look to the future of what theatre can be.
"At the core of our 2018 season is a celebration of the brilliance of Scottish work. We also welcome artists from beyond our borders who we know will excite Scottish audiences and inspire our local artists."