The simultaneously arranged and edited in short performance trailers, part is me. I have worked with Billy Mullaney since 2018, in the role of a live video editor (on-stage). In the Glory Machine, we see an ensemble of 6 performers including Billy (and excluding me). They are executing a series of 75 shots which is being made life for the audience. Receiving footage through SD Cards is my interaction with the ensemble.
When you are seating facing the main stage you will see a complex assortment of props. They are set on the perimeter of the stage and between the stage and the raised seating. To the left and to the right of the audience there are two projections. The one to the left of the stage is Camera 1 and the other projection is a mirrored image of my screen. Both projections are always on.
The ensemble set up sets, shoots, check the footage, (retake if necessary), cleans up, and calls up the next scene. This is how the work progresses. At specific intervals, I would get footage in. I edit following a (secret) storyboard on my desk.
There are 4 times in the performance when I am asked to share my progress. At the very end, Billy invites the visitors to stay for a little bit longer. We serve them snacks until I get a rough cut done. That usually takes me an extra 15 minutes to finish. Then we show the rough cut. I copy all the footage and the premiere file on a backup hard-disk and have a beer. The next day, delete everything and repeat.
Although I am facing the audience, I do not know how they perceive the work as I do not have the time to glimpse at them. I can only hear their reactions, the giggles, the laughter, the excitement. Sometimes I can feel the tension because it seems that everyone stopped breathing.
From my experience, this work is also about how and what we remember of theatre and how we see ‘things’. The choreography’s complexity. And the way the tasks get executed by the ensemble reminds me of the self-bureaucracy in which we live today. The exhaustion of accomplishing admin tasks in an everyday life especially online. Each shot is part of the cosmology of symbols and references to theatre and the society we live in. And what you experience from the stage most of the time is hilarious.