Character Development: The Inspector and Mrs Grubach

From the very start of the company’s rehearsals I have found this production to be incredibly challenging to myself as an actor. I have never taken part in a production that has been so fast paced and has required as much from me physically as well as mentally and emotionally. The Trial necessitates fast moving scene changes and quick character transformations. This in itself is demanding but what adds to the pressure is creating and developing characters that fit within our production’s theme of the grotesque and non-naturalism. Except for Stuart who is performing the play’s protagonist, Joseph K, all actors are multi-rolling. It then becomes important for the actors to make every character they play completely different from the previous.

My first character within the play is that of the Inspector. The audience first see the character delivering news to Joseph K of his arrest but not revealing what K is under arrest for. Lucy suggested the idea of the Inspector displaying characteristics of an old, stereotype image of a school Head teacher. Using this imagery I found myself walking tall with my head held upwards and addressing K as though I was talking down to him. Lucy liked my characterisation, however, felt my movements were to ‘floaty’ and not grotesque enough. Lucy suggested that I re-consider the way I positioned my body and asked me to arch my back. Taking Lucy’s comment into consideration I acted out the scene again and exaggerated  arching my back. I found that keeping my body in this position effected the way I walked. With an arch back my legs became bent and spidery when walking which Lucy felt was perfect for the Inspector as it highlighted a clear difference from K’s natural character.

My second character required a completely different approach. Whereas the Inspector stood with an arched back , Mrs Grubach, K’s landlady, is an elderly, nosey, slightly frail lady. The physicality I created for her was hunched over her knitting needles whilst sitting on a chair. In my opinion there is something quite odd about the character, almost as if she is slightly deranged. Adding onto this I altered my voice to produce a sound which highlighted her elderly persona but also suggested a creepy and eerie quality. K himself notes a difference in the way Mrs Grubach addresses him, so I felt that it was then important to present a character that even the audience finds unsettling. Rodenburg states”Always remember that one of  the actor’s functions is to fill space with presence and with voice” (2002 Rodenburg, p.93). Following Rodenburg’s comment, I believe it is important to consider the voice in every performance. However, I particularly felt it was important in The Trial as the actors were required to present several different characters. The voice helps provide the character with more depth.  I also altered my face to present expressions that would unnerve K by making my eyes wide and exaggerating my smile. Lucy suggested that to make the character appear even more unnerving,  when Mrs Grubach begins talking of what the guards have told her I should to appear as if Mrs Grubach has become lost in her own world. To exaggerate Mrs Grubach’s hunched physicality Lucy directed me to use the chair I was sat on as a Zimmer frame as I exited the stage. I placed my chair several centre metres ahead of me and made small shuffling steps towards it. I did this several times before exiting the stage. When performing this for Lucy she felt I had really captured the grotesque quality of the character and also found my physicality particularly amusing.

Mrs Grubach

The Inspector and Mrs Grubach are just two examples of characters that I will be performing and both highlight the strong physical characteristic demands that this play needs. However, it is also important to consider that The Trial is not a play about the individual actor but a play where the group of performers must work together as an ensemble to successfully create the piece. This is a topic I will explore further in another post.

 

Thanks for reading,

Larissa

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Work Cited

Rodenburg, Patsy (2002) The Actor Speaks: Voice and The Performer, Palgrave Macmillan.

3 thoughts on “Character Development: The Inspector and Mrs Grubach

  1. Emma Robinson

    The transactions were smooth in the performance and there was a clear distinction between each character.

    Reply
  2. Emma Robinson

    You say that the production was fast paced, did this make the change in your characters and the speed in which you did it challenging and did you enjoy the challenge and having to focus on your physicality?

    Reply
    1. Larissa Oates Post author

      The changing to different characters was challenging, especially so with regards to the speed we had to do them. However, I found that by considering the situation one character was in and what my physicality needed to be for the next one, I was then able to find a smooth transaction between the two. For example: When I needed to change from Elsa the stripper to Mrs Grubach the old landlady. I altered my physicality by leaning forward as Elsa as I stood up from Joseph K’s knee. Instantly I had hunched my shoulders and had my body bent ready for Mrs Grubach.

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