Cracking ice or celery stick? Sound designer takes starring role in It's a Wonderful Life: The Radio Play - Action News
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Manitoba

Cracking ice or celery stick? Sound designer takes starring role in It's a Wonderful Life: The Radio Play

When the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre presents the classic It's a Wonderful Life this holiday season, a performer whose work is usually done behind the scenes will instead play a starring role.

While the actors perform, foley artist John Gzowski is also on stage, creating sound effects

Sound designer explains the art of 'foley'

6 years ago
Duration 3:19
John Gzowski has a starring role in the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre's It's a Wonderful Life. He creates sound effects live on stage.

When the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre presents the classic It's a Wonderful Life this holiday season, a performer whose work is usually done behind the scenes will instead play a starring role.

Sound designer JohnGzowskitakes on a unique role in the show. He's responsible for all of the sound effects the audience will hear on stage, from footsteps to car crashes and everything in between.

It's known as foley, a form of sound art used to add sound effects to television, film, radio and stage plays. Today, foley artiststypically digitally layer and synchronize sounds to the videos they're working with.

It's a Wonderful Life: The Radio Play, runningat the Royal MTC's John Hirsch Main StageuntilDec. 15, sees its cast recreatethe classic Frank Capra film as a radio play, performed live on stage, taking the audience on a sonic trip to the fictional town ofBedford Falls.

In keeping with the style of a 1940s radio play, Gzowskicreatesall of his sounds live on stage. He sits stage left, in an cluttered area that brings to mind an abandoned storage barn on any farmyard in Canada.

This is Gzowski'sfoley studio.

The live foley studio on stage at the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

"It's a funny thing, because we're doing a radio show, but in some ways, the sound effects are the visual elements," Gzowski said.

It's not technically feasible, obviously, to have a sheet of ice or a Ford Model T on stage for the sound effects, so Gzowski has to recreate the sonic sensations with objects found in the RMTC prop shop, antique storesand junk drawers.

For instance, the vehicle engines are recreated using Singer sewing machine motors, at times rigged to trigger a snare drum to add the rattling of the motor. Ice breaking beneath thefeet of characters comes in the form of Gzowskisnapping celery sticks.

The creativity of designing the sounds is only the first step, as being able to perform them live on stage poses another challenge.

Reclaimed sewing machine motors act as engine motors for 1940s period vehicles. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Gzowski tinkers and plunders with his reclaimed props, using every limb available to create a full soundscape and layer his instruments live on stage.

In a production during which the audience might be tempted to close their eyes and sink into the sound, Gzowski's foley design and performance may well keep patronswide-eyed in a winter wonderland.

"The great thing is that it's another way into the story," he said.

"You can see all the tricks and what's going on, but still get caught up in the story."

By performing his sound effects on stage, Gzowski says he is offering audience members another way into the performance. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)