Cari Speaks

The incredible Cari Simpson, SIR’s Technical Director and all around crew magician, reflects on her time with the company, overcoming the challenges of the great outdoors, and the importance of protecting our unique theatrical practice:
I first started working with SIR for purely practical reasons; on my end it filled a gap in my work schedule before Fringe started up, and on the company’s end the shows had started getting so large and complex that the actors couldn’t do everything themselves anymore like they used to. They had hired Steve Vande Vyvere on as crew a couple years before that to help with the workload, and when he took over as PM (production manager), the shows had grown even more on their return to the Ruins in 2012 that he brought me on for extra help.
After my first show, which was Comedy of Errors (2014), I was hooked and immediately let Steve know I wanted to come back next year. It was a like a weird chaotic summer camp; I was dressed in a costume, pulling the old sound system around on a wagon, and dragging a crash mat from window to window for the actors to jump onto. In most theatre jobs, you spend your days inside, in my case often in a dark booth, so the change each spring to the fresh air and beautiful sunsets and wildlife running around is a nice way to balance my year out. And the actors and crew that think “yeah, I want to spend 2 months being outside, sometimes for 12 hour days, in all kinds of weather,” are my kind of people. There’s always a great camaraderie among everyone out there, and I’ve added a few truly close friends to my life from my time at the Ruins. That’s what keeps me coming back every year.
I mentioned Comedy of Errors was my first mainstage show with the company, so it’s been 11 years now! The biggest change I’ve seen in my time with SIR is sadly the climate crisis and its effects on everything. Wildfire smoke is a new challenge from the last couple of years for sure, but the biggest hurdle is the storms. When I first started, we would regularly move under our giant tent if the rain was too bad to continue performing outside, and we would only cancel for the occasional thunderstorm. Now it’s almost the reverse, we so rarely have rain that isn’t part of a storm system, our eyes are always glued to the radar watching for lightning strikes to get too close. That’s why we sold off the tent; we had 2 years in a row where we basically couldn’t use it because you can’t tell the audience to go stand beside a giant metal tent pole in a lightning storm. It used to be fun to occasionally watch the actors speed through the last scene to finish a show just before the rain hit, but now we spend at least a third of the shows just wondering if we’ll make it to the end at all.
I think the most rewarding part of doing shows at the Ruins is being so close to the audience. You can feel their reactions so much more than from a booth, and lots of people come up to talk after and say how much fun they had, or that this was their first theatre show ever! There was a man last year who told us he comes up from the States every year to visit family and times it so that he can see our shows. It’s always just great watching people have fun.
The biggest challenge of doing shows at the Ruins is trying to be prepared for as many strange circumstances as possible. Steve had to go wade in the river after a pup tent that blew away in R&J, squirrels have wandered into scenes and stolen props, and one year we had a pilot flying training loops over the Ruins and drowning out the actors. Last year, we had our first storm cause power outage, which meant we couldn’t use our work-lights to light the sword fight scene for safety. In Richard III, we had lit the final scene with the headlights from the limo that was in the show, so I pulled a leaf from that book, drove my car up on the grass, and hoped I wasn’t going to kill the battery (thankfully it didn’t). No two performances in the run are ever the same out there, so trying to be prepared for all eventualities really keeps us on our toes.
I think we need to protect SIR for it’s wonderful uniqueness. The beautiful interplay between the show and the nature of the park is something I feel just can’t be found anywhere else in the city. The Ruins truly are a setting and a character in every play we do, and for people to lose the opportunity to come experience the beauty of a performance in that space would be heartbreaking.
Please support SIR if you can!
– Cari Simpson, SIR Technical Director, Running Crew & Jedi

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