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Once More Into The Breach

So here we go, another year of trying to make it as a professional writer, and as twenty-something too – I mean there’s the make a career in the arts during global economic meltdown and the expected cuts throughout the sector, but then there’s the whole find a city I want to live in, earn enough that I’m not living off £4 a week, manage to get out of the world of house shares, and work out a stable relationship/local friends… I know I only finished uni like half a year ago, but I want to get a start on at least some of this soon! I miss university today, undergrad uni that is. You spend uni making some really good friends, not realising that before long you’re going to be spread out at different ends of the country, none of you with enough money to travel to visit more than twice a year or so.

I definitely don’t want to stay in Wolverhampton, even if it just means moving to Birmingham for a bit. It’s rubbish here, there’s almost zero culture, and no-one my age, it’s either locals, or Wolves university students, who for the most part are locals, or other people who wanted to go to one of the worst (3rd from bottom last year) universities in the country. Yes, I know, intellectual snobbery, but it’s not that that bothers me, I’m sure just as many people are clever and talented (the arts part of Wolverhampton is reasonably well renowned for example) its more…lack of ambition. That sounds horrible, and is by no means exclusive to Wolverhampton, but more generally I think one of the most important things I identify with in others is ambition- making things happen instead of talking about them. Trying and ignoring the fear of failure. I can’t speak with real authority on Wolves students, but I’ve yet to meet one who had much passionate to say for themselves (there are, of course, exceptions to this)… Though that might not be these people in particular, there’s always the idea that this is a generational thing, kids at uni now could be 6-7 years younger than me, these are people who have grown up with the internet, during a massive period of economic and political stability, with the worst things to happen far away, or in the form of middle class anxiety… Massive, sweeping generalisations I know, not fair, but I still can’t help feel a mix of nihilistic apathy, people-as-consumer-entities, middle class security vibe emanate from much of these kids at university today. Might as well get the pipe and slippers ready! That paired with how much you really change after you leave university leaves me just as unable to speak to them as them to me… this reflects badly on me, I know, but it doesn’t half leave you feeling isolated in a town with few people your own age to talk to.

So, how to remedy this? Fair enough it’s rubbish, but I’m the only one who can change this, so let’s look at how. 1) I need more money, well, I’m working on that. I will go into it further on, but I am beginning to get places with a couple of creative routes, which is excellent, and I am learning to rein in my spending a little, food budgets etc. I’ve not bought a bottle of wine for a long time, or spend more than £1.50 on a block of cheese. Morale is accordingly low, but I can do things like pay my bills, so that’s ok. Problem number 2) I don’t like where I live, well, I have started applying for jobs elsewhere, Leicester, Leeds, London, Manchester, places I have friends, and where stuff if going on. I don’t expect to get a job for a few months as I am specifically applying for theatre jobs, ideally literary ones, so it’s quite tough competition, ideally I should be moving around summertime, that way I’ve not screwed with Foursight, and I can try and save some money to make the move smoother. And hopefully this move, will either be to a bedsit (I don’t care if it’s a box, as long as it’s my box, and there’s no arguements about whose turn it is to take out the rubbish), or a two person shared flat – preferably with a friend, but just to make it fewer than 6 in a house would be nice! and that means that 3) I would then be in a more cultural, happening city, and meeting more people, making friends, finding a local feminist movement, (Manchester and London are good for that) going to see some theatre, etc etc.

So there you go. That’s the plan, I’ve set my mind to it now, so watch this space…

And for career plans – there’s not a great deal you can plan, for writing, you can just keep working hard writing and submitting and hope that you fit into someone else’s plan. Having said that, I do have some promising things on the radar this year and had an excellent meeting with a production company last week, so things are looking OK. Scary Little Girls Productions are a really cool multi-artform theatre company who do mixed up Riot Grrl cabaret, electro and jazz recordings, straight up theatre productions, site specific work, ghost stories, comedy and poetry. They’re a really exciting female-led matrifocal company, at the forefront of this generation’s feminist performance. As mentioned in a previous post I originally wrote to them about their Medals of Lead commission – a piece they want to develop on the women who played a massive part in the 1916 uprising in Ireland, and in the Irish Nationailst/Socialist movement and yet have been scandalously left out of much of the official history. I met with Kate Hughes the Literary Associate of SLGP non Thursday, and she was absolutely lovely, they’re really interested in my work, content and style, I have a reading in a new writing ‘Salon’ that they’re running in London on the 1st of Feb, where I’ll also get a chance to talk to the director of the company (Rebecca Morden) about the Irish project (it’s a huge 2 year research led historical epic, so it’s really important that I’m right for her, and she right for me) which is excellent stuff, and the hint of perhaps a first professional production. And then finally, I’m also contributing the main art work for an album cover. I’ve been comissioned to paint Kate’s picture for a jazz album she’s working on. Kate and Rebecca saw my artwork on my website (which I had hitherto thought was a bit of a vanity corner) which has led to this comission! Exciting stuff, my first professional piece of art, which I should be working on in the first week of February.

In other writing news, I finished the first draft of Eismas, and sent it off to the Court. I didn’t like doing that, weird to send off a first draft, but hey ho-it’s at the point I really need some distance/outside work on it right now, so hopefully the Court will see that, and just maybe invite me back to do more work… fingers crossed. Also, Foursight might have a bit of work for me as varbatim scriptor on their current devised piece, it might be a bit of extra cash if they want me out of my normal 3 days a week, and it’s also an excellent experience/thing for the CV.

I’m also really enjoyng the microblogging thing, really interesting people you can follow, and I like that I can do it easily on the move. Do give it a go if you’ve not before, there’s lots of good phone apps for it, and you can sync it with your facebook status and lots of other fun things. You can follow me here.

So yes, all in all, there’s a lot on the horizon this year, it’s my first full year as a real person, and I really need to start making the most of things, not hesitating, and just going for what I want.

Here goes!

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New Year

So, yes, here we are, the first blog of 2009! It will, I’m afriad, be a rushed one, as always I’m low on time, and also not feeling brilliant (cold coming I think) so apologies for garbling…

So, a few pretty good/hopefully things have happened or will happen in the new year with regards to writing, which I really, really need – 1) so I know there’s good reason for me to carry on trying and 2) because my money situation is getting extremely, extremely dire. If something hasn’t happened by about May/June time I’m going to have to start working full time, maybe even move home and work full time for a few months to just inject a bit of cash into my situation… then move to… well one of two places- Leicester or London. And I do want to move. I don’t like Wolverhampton. So it’s either London for writing (if I sell a play this year then that’ll be what I use the money for- to move down there), or Leicester for friends – and I think at that point I’d consider applying for a PHD…

But yes! I should tell you about the possible opportunities. Well , the first is this play I’ve been writing with the Royal Court Young Writers’ Programme – I’m currently redrafting the piece which is due into them on the 15th of January – which, if they like they might offer me a place in the ‘invitation’ group (which means more trips to London) where basically they develop a second draft with you and you meet lots of famous writers and important directors who work on it with you, or if they actually love it, they could commission a second draft, or actually programme it… so that’s pretty good- just need to make my piece good (what I should be doing now in fact)! The other big thing that’s happening is also on Jan 15th I’m meeting the literary manager at Scary Little Girls Productions – just before Christmas I was just trawling the web on my lunch break and came across the fact that they were looking to commission a playwright to write a piece about the women involved in the Easter uprisings of 1916 in Ireland- which sounds bloody interesting- and combining research with writing- which I would love! So on the off chance they wouldn’t simply laugh at me for my lack of experience/previous commissions, I sent a cover letter explaining why I thought I’d be perfect for it, along with a couple of examples of my writing, and they phoned me back a week later to arrange a meeting! Apparently they’re also thinking of working on a new writing season and would like to have a chat about my writing and the commission, as well as the new writing season – so, fingers crossed. Oh and the final thing that might happen is that Loughborough University phoned me up and asked me if I was interested in taking a piece (writing and directing I think) to a European and Mediterranean arts festival in Macedonia, I don’t think it would pay, but I think it would be paid for-and as well as being a great opportunity, it would look good on the CV.

So yes, fingers crossed very hard that at least something will happen this year, I need the money, but I also need the reassurance that I’m not wasting my time…

Also due to extreme lack in time at the moment – I’m giving microblogging a go. I’ve signed up to twitter and have added an app to my phone and facebook so I’ll be able to update both fbook status and twitter on the go. I’m super busy until January, so if lacking main updates – look to the left!

Hope all had a good Christmas break, and here’s hoping 2009’s the one!

Hxx