First of all we’d like to wish you a rather bleated and very happy New Year.  There have been so many world changing events over the last year, so many things that have made us examine who we are and why we do what we do – it’s a time of great change and great opportunity and we hope that it’s a chance for us all to make exciting and daring choices.

At the end of 2011 we finished our attachment at the National Theatre Studio.  We’d spent 2 weeks working with our full creative team and then another 4 weeks working with writer Matthew Hurt, building up the foundations of our new piece of work based on Joseph Conrad’s ‘The Secret Agent’.  It was incredibly productive and marks the start of a very exciting project.  There are clear ideas for the show, we have a narrative structure in place and the beginnings of muscle on the bones of act I (!).

We’ve never had the opportunity to work in this way before; to be able to thoroughly explore ideas for a project with the full creative team, and then to have the time, space and financial support to develop those ideas with a writer.  It has been a pleasurable and constructive experience and we’re excited about what the next stages will bring.  It has always been our ambition to effectively bring a writer into the devising process and it strikes us as essential to the evolution of our work.  It’s a territory that we started to explore with our last show, ‘Delirium’, and is the key to all our future projects.

‘The Secret Agent’ is a show that we want to make in the Autumn of this year.  Between now and then we’re keen to put some of our choices to the test to be sure that they hold up.  As well as formal choices, this is also a chance to develop a full rehearsal draft of the script.  This is something of a challenge, as whilst it’s great to have the template of a script from which to work, we also need to leave space for the devising process to continue when we eventually finish making the work.  In this sense the type of relationship with the writer is paramount and needs to be one that continues to allow for the unforeseen suprises of devising. We also need to make some decisions on where we’d like the project to go, the sort of life we’d like it to have and of course we also need to raise the money to make the show!

One of the things that has really struck me about the process so far are the resonances it has with our previous work.  More than any of our other projects, it feels like this one is being fed by what has come before.  Of course all our work is informed by what we’ve already done, but it feels that the lessons we’ve learned are really starting to come to fruition.  In this sense it feels like 2012 represents a new phase of theatre O’s existence and we hope very much that it’s the year in which we get to share new work with you all.

Spread the word.

With best wishes from the ‘O’

 

So we’ve just finished a fantastic couple of weeks work at the National Theatre Studio. We spent the first few days generating a whole lot of material that would inform how we wanted to tackle our adaptation of Joseph Conrad’s novel ‘The Secret Agent’. It was all incredibly productive, and it feels like we’ve created a very distinctive theatrical world in which to tell the story.

Of course it’s just the very beginning of things, but the flavours were strong and we think we’re going to be able to make a tasty meal!

Today (111111) we did a showing to an invited audience and got some very positive and useful feedback. It felt like an auspicious date to be introducing a new piece of work to a wider public. We will now spend the next 4 weeks working with writer Matthew Hurt, building on what we’ve discovered in these last 2 weeks.

It’s been an immensely useful way of working as now we have a shared theatrical vocabulary and a clear understanding of how we want the piece to develop. By the end of the next 4 weeks we’ll have a clear structure and the basis of a script to start rehearsing with. We’d like to make the show next year. At this point I’d like to say a huge thank you to all those who’ve been involved in the process (listed below) as well as to the National Theatre Studio for all their help and support and to the Arts Council for making it possible for us to pay everyone for 2 weeks of their time and immense skill.

We’re very excited about the project and will of course keep you posted on how it’s all going. In the meantime, here are some hastily snapped images from today’s showing.

Spread the word.

the ‘O

Performer/Devisers
Dominic Burdess
Leander Deeny
Helena Lymbery
Oliver Senton
Carolina Valdés

Joseph Alford – director
Simon Daw – designer
Matthew Hurt – writer
Rosie Kelly – associate producer
Ellen McDougall – assistant director
Emma Mckie – stage manager
Paddy Molloy – animator
Marc Teitler – composer

 

winnie.jpg

Tomorrow. Monday 31st.

And we start 2 weeks of development on a new show idea.  We’ve been completely blown away by Joseph Conrad’s ‘The Secret Agent’ – it’s inherent theatricality, it’s relevance to today, it’s political and social themes.  It’s an immensely complex book (despite the fact that it’s full title is ‘The Secret Agent – a simple tale’)!  It speaks in so many ways to what is happening in our society today, both here and abroad, about the people who want to dictate and control the flow of things, the people that talk about change but do nothing, the people who want to put a halt to any possibility of change, the people who find it easier to think of it all as somebody else’s problem.  It’s an attack on lethargy, on mediocrity and on those who blind themselves and others to the realities of the times in which we live.

Not exactly easy to put on stage.

But we have some ideas.  We are starting to make some choices.

Most importantly we’re working with an amazing team of people, all of whom are passionate about the subject matter and who are committed to finding a way through it.

When Conrad wrote the novel he was aware of the necessity to reduce his story ‘to manageable proportions’ – and of course putting it on stage requires us to do the same.  To pick out the things that speak most clearly to us.  So these 2 weeks will be the very first steps of doing that.  After, we’ll spend a month working with writer Matthew Hurt, to continue picking out our route through the material, and then… well, first things first.

For these first two weeks the team is:

Simon Daw – Designer

Paddy Molloy – Animator

Marc Teitler – Composer

Ellen McDougall – Assistant Director

Carolina Valdés – Performer

Dominic Burdess – Performer

Leander Deeny – Performer

Oliver Senton – Performer

Helena Lymbery – Performer

Emma McKie – Stage Manager

Rosie Kelly – Associate Producer

We’ll let you know how it goes!

 

So last week we finally were forced to take the decision to get rid of all our old sets.  We’ve received a huge storage bill for the last year and have the promise of another in a couple of weeks – our first step has been to reduce our 2 containers down to 1 and then we have to find a way to take that to none!  The only way to do this was to pile the last 10 years of theatre O history onto a huge bonfire.

It was a strange process – lovely because it reminded me of a lot of great moments both onstage and off, really sad because it shuts a door on some wonderful work that we had a lot of fun making and touring, and frustrating because it now feels like we hung onto it all for nothing!  However, there is a sense of relief as well (or there will be when we get rid of the last container) as we move to a lighter form of existence!

I’m not sure that we’ll be there for the actual burning of it, but here’s a picture of me at the top of the pile…

The End of Things

I want to take this opportunity to say an enormous thanks to Dominic, Emma and Harriet who came with me to help close the door on this particular chapter of the ‘O’.  We couldn’t have done it without you!

On a happier note, on Monday we move into Rehearsal Room 3 of the National Theatre for the first of our 2 weeks testing out some ideas for our new project ‘The Secret Agent – a simple tale’ – inspired by Joseph Conrad’s novel. But more on that in a separate post.

For now the flames, later the Phoenix.

 

I thought I’d write a bit more about Sheriff and where it’s come from.  In fact, this is from before the week we spent, so it’s already evolved since I wrote it, but it gives an idea of the starting point.  In reality it became about trying to find normality in the face of extreme violence and the point at which we decide that we have to take a stand against that violence.

For Theatre O, our week at the NTS was the starting point for a devised show with the provisional title of “Sheriff”. The piece will  explore the themes of motherhood and the lengths we are prepared to go in the name of one’s child.

We want to do this in the context of Westerns, to investigate how to translate the world of the Western into the modern day and into theatre, and to re-examine the role of the woman within it.

We have been inspired by the current situation in Mexico, where in lawless towns numerous women with babies or small children have taken on the role of Chief of Police, risking everything in order to create a viable future for their children, even if it means sacrificing themselves. We are also influenced by the recent worldwide events where existing orders have been completely wiped out by violent events – what does it mean to exist on a domestic level when everything around you is being torn apart?

“The story of the West is the story of a man fighting against the elements and all the basic emotions are used: if you hate, you hate, if you love, you love and if you laugh, you laugh. There is no nuance.” John Wayne.

“…in 2012 the change will be that it will be the woman’s turn to drive humanity towards the light.” Nuestra Aparente Rendición (blog about Mexican current situation)

 

We’ve just spent an inspirational 4 days at the National Theatre Studio trying out some ideas for a new show.  At the moment the piece is called ‘Sheriff’ and we’ve been looking at the ideas of frontiers, violence, motherhood and fear (amongst others)!  Things veered wildly between the horrific and the hilarious.  We want to encompass both…

We were working with an incredible team and are really excited about the possibilities that started to emerge.  It makes a very good companion piece to our other project, ‘The Secret Agent’, which we’ll be spending some time on in November.

On the last day I managed to take some shots of the team at work, and here they are…

 

When we first planned our website we wanted to write something about what theatre O was, why we do what we do, what motivates us.  Looking back it seems that everything we wrote still goes;

Theatre O is constantly changing and evolving and for that reason it’s very hard to define exactly what it is we do.  People’s need to ‘define’ is often what stops the process of growing, of innovation.  The moment we try to define what we are, we would already be betraying that definition.  So each show defines itself, both in the form of its creation and the language of its presentation.

We are constantly learning and endeavour to apply that learning to the next project.  We must always push ourselves to take risks.  Hopefully these risks will bring moments of greatness, as well as moments of spectacular failure and desperation – but it is these moments of failure and desperation that provoke the most exciting work.

The one constant, however, is the idea of the ‘company’, the ensemble, the collaboration.  The successful makeup of this group is often the hardest and most painful thing to achieve;  If done well,  then half the battle is already won.  The absolute commitment of everyone involved is essential.  That commitment brings an ownership of the work that will bring unparalleled results.  We are interested in the actor as creator, not as a puppet.

Quite simply, theatre O is only as good and as exciting as the sum of the people who are involved in the creation of the company’s work.

I think it’s apt that I’m moved to re-examine this today, today being the day that so many companies are finding out what the next 3 years hold for them, or whether they’ll continue to exist at all.

We opted not to apply for RFO status.  We have spent the last 10 years with an idea in our heads of what we wanted our ‘company’ to be.  Part of this was the desire to be a self-contained unit – conceive the work, develop it and produce it ourselves.  Our rules.  We managed to do this – not prolifically, but we did it.  But it was, on the whole, a nightmare.  We made certain choices along the way that probably didn’t help us in a practical sense.  The idea of an autonomous company never really developed, and although we have always tried to push ourselves creatively, we were constantly stuck between 2 worlds without really being in either.

As a company associated with the Barbican and the BITE program, it was assumed that we had infrastructure and financial backing.  Of course we had project funding to make that particular piece of work, but the reality is that in organisational (and financial) terms, you always end up back at zero.  If we had made work that realistically reflected our means, we would never have even approached the ambition of, for example, collaborating with Enda Walsh and the Abbey Theatre on our show Delirium.

At the same time, all of our shows, except our first one 3 Dark Tales, have suffered from a severe lack of organisational infrastructure behind them.  With the creative team constantly being torn by having to fulfil all these roles at once, each of the shows has been frustrated in its artistic aims.  Of course it goes without saying that, in my view, that it’s pretty much impossible to achieve the ‘perfection’ that you imagine in your head, but in the struggle to do so you can hit upon some pretty amazing things.  But for these struggles and frustrations to come from predominantly organisational flaws rather than lack of creative skill or ambition, is something that I deeply regret.

Our most recent show, Delirium, was the most exciting piece of work we’ve made.  It’s also the piece that I’d want most to have another run at.  We made it in an oxygen starved environment which gradually sucked all the joy out of it.  The blame for this ultimately lies with me, but I feel very strongly that if we’d had a solid infrastructure supporting us, we could have spent more time being creative than the ‘creatives’ having to carry the administrative burden as well with all the problems that brings.

Two years after Delirium and our creative urge was flapping about like an oxygen starved fish, whilst we struggled to find enough money to pay for storage, overheads and all the other costs related to having a ‘company’.  Applications for money to make new work were rejected despite being ‘excellent’ and ‘highly recommended’ for funding.  So we had to make a decision; throw in the towel, re-train as… as what? Anything that made our lives feel somehow valid.  Or re-think.

So we re-thought.  I have no idea whether it was the right decision.  What did we want theatre O to be?  Throughout everything, theatre O has been myself and Carolina.  All the impulses and ideas start with us.  So at its core, that’s what it is – us.  And we want to create work that originates from us and our vision of the world.  We want to realise that work with people who share and enhance that vision, people who inspire us.  We want to create an environment in which they/we are able to do that.  Therefore theatre O becomes that group of artists working together to create something utterly unique to them.

We want to do that without being an organisation, an institution. In our experience, it is that side of things that has slowly but surely ground us down and crushed the creative spirit out of us.  The point at which we decided to let go of the idea of theatre O ‘the organisation’ was revelatory. Ok, it meant trashing all our old sets and relinquishing a very important dream, but the instant we did it, the ideas started to flow again.  Suddenly we were having conversations about shows and stories rather than fucking Arts Council applications or our non-existent relationship with the only real funding body in the country for companies like ours.  We weren’t stressing about how we were going to survive for the next week, but were starting to remember that we are artists and that we should be driven by our passion for telling stories and creating theatre, rather than by the next funding application.

I appreciate that this is pretty naive.  We’ve had a ton of ideas for new projects, but the one idea that doesn’t really exist is how the hell we’re going to make them happen.  Carolina and I have 2 children together, a mortgage, a car – all things that require some sort of level-headedness and thoughts towards the future.  But the fact is we were so fucking miserable and despite trying very hard, unable to hide it.  It doesn’t matter how well you talk the talk, if underneath you feel seething resentment towards the world, people can tell!

There are now parts of our lives that are dedicated to the more practical things – we both do work outside of theatre O in order to earn enough money to survive.  But the naive space, the really joyful space is reserved for theatre O.  We have absolutely no idea if this will result in any new work actually being made, but we’ve got a shit load of good ideas and it’s our full intention to find someone, some theatre, some organisation, some producer, to help us make them.  And if they don’t?  Well, we’re not going to stop having ideas or being creative and getting excited about the endless possibilities of great, story-telling, inventive and inspirational theatre.  That, after all, is what we do.

 

Rowan Williams, The Archbishop of Canterbury

Rowan Williams, The Archbishop of Canterbury


Whilst we’re looking at the words of the Dostoevsky experts, here is what Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury wrote for the preface of the Delirium script:

‘Almost all Dostoevsky’s fiction reads as if it is happening at high temperatures. Rapid and not always comprehensible speech, hallucinatory clarity which suddenly dissolves, baffling changes of emotional register – all these feverish symptoms mean that Dostoevsky’s characters are a lot more than just ‘realistic’ (a word he was suspicious of). But to say that he is the narrator of extremes, extreme circumstances and personalities, doesn’t mean that he has nothing to say to the supposedly ordinary experience of those whose temperature is rather lower.

Dostoevsky assumes that when you put human characters in something of a test situation, where the main thing they have to work at is their own emotions and interaction, you discover some – most – of the things that really drive them. You discover the questions that they are afraid to ask and the beliefs they are afraid to own in other circumstances. This makes sense of the way in which he handles issues about religious belief, a theme important in all his work but particularly prominent in Brothers Karamazov: the reality or otherwise of God isn’t to be settled by arguing about ideas. Put your speakers or characters to the test of extreme experience and you’ll see whether the possibility of God is or isn’t around; you’ll see whether someone is fundamentally wounded or crippled by the absence of God, whether the presence of God makes possible actions that fly in the face of bourgeois common sense. Dostoevsky is not very interested in arguments about religion between people with normal temperatures, because they don’t reveal the truth – which, for him, is that belief and unbelief are bound up with basic issues of sanity, self-knowledge and the imperatives of compassion beyond calculation. And, as Karamazov makes abundantly clear, they are bound up also with how you understand the way you have been parented, the way in which you’ve first learned how to be loved – or failed to learn this; and the nature of the images you then carry around with you which determine your sense of who or what you are responsible to.

Dramatising Dostoevsky means finding theatrical equivalents for the sense of soaring temperatures, not just reproducing the plot and dialogue of the novel. This play attempts to do just that, looking for ways of translating the violence, the terrible poignancy and the pitch-dark comedy of one of the greatest European writers of fiction.’

Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury

Dr Williams’ book on Dostoevsky, “Dostoevsky: Language, Faith and Fiction” is available here
172-cover

 

09
here we are, 2009.

2008 was an incredible year for us. Delirium finally came to life, grew, changed and is now having a rest. It was a delirious time, and we’re very proud of what we achieved with the show, the steps we took as a company.

After a rocky start in the Spring, the show really came into its own in the autumn and had sold-out runs at The Abbey Theatre and at The Barbican. The press was completely divided over the show, some really hating it, others totally amazed. You can see some of the quotes on our website. We’ve never done a show that has provoked such extremely opposed responses – the subject matter and the presentational style were bound to incite strong reactions, and the production opened up a lot of interesting discussions. As ever, there are things that we would now like to tweak and change, but we are very excited about the new directions it will take the company in, both in terms of how we make shows and what we make them about. Delirium will have future life, but right now we’re taking stock and deciding what comes next. This month we are allowing ourselves time to get inspired about new projects and I’m sure 2009 will be a year of exciting change and development for theatre O.

We’ve updated our blogging software, so hopefully this will be a slightly more regular occurence!

We look forward to seeing you in ’09

© 2012 bl_O_g Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha
  • Buy Cheap viagra by post Now Guaranteed Shipping. Discount Pharmacy Online.
  • Buy Cheap viagra canada pharmacies Now Best Internet. Order Cheap Meds Without Rx.
  • Buy Cheap cialis us online pharmacist Online Online Prices For cialis us online pharmacist! Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest levitra uk Online 24/Online Pharmacy. Low Prices.
  • Buy Cheap cialis sample Online Cheap Online Pharmacy. Pharmacy Store.
  • Buy cialis dosage rate Online Without Prescription. Best Prices. Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheap viagra recreational Now Online Medical Shop. Discount Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest viagra use Online Low Prices. Discount Pharmacy Online.
  • Buy Cheapest cialis levia and viagra Online Low Prices. Cheap Prescription Drugs.
  • Buy Cheap cialis price Online Cheap Online Pharmacy. Best Drugstore.
  • Buy Cheap cialis does it work Now Best Online. All Medications Are Certificated!
  • Buy Cheap online prescription viagra without Now Best Internet. Top Online Pharmacy Supplier.
  • Buy Cheap best results for taking cialis Now Special Prices For best results for taking cialis! Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheap levitra germany Online Discount Pharmacy Online. Best Internet.
  • instructions for viagra use Online Without Prescription Low Prices. Online Medical Shop.
  • Buy Cheap what is generic viagra Online Best Prices. Drugs, Health And Beauty.
  • Buy Cheap viagra alternative Online Best Drugstore. Internet Prices For viagra alternative!
  • Buy Cheapest women take viagra Now Free Viagra Pills! Online Medical Shop.
  • Buy Cheap cialis online purchase Now Best Prices. Cheap Meds Without Prescription.
  • Buy Cheapest viagra natural Now Free Viagra Pills! Guaranteed Shipping.
  • Buy Cheapest viagra canada Now Pharmacy Store. Cheap Online Pharmacy.
  • Buying Cheap viagra free trials. Offshore Rx, Best Prices. Top Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest cialis testimonial Now Special Prices For cialis testimonial! Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest cialis mens reaction Now Discount Pharmacy Online. Pharmacy Store.
  • Buy Cheapest cialis free trials Online Guaranteed Shipping. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest low price viagra Now Top Online Pharmacy. Guaranteed Shipping.
  • Buy Cheap cialis viagra propecia levitra erectile dysfunction Now Top Online Pharmacy. No Prescription Needed.
  • Buy Cheapest discount drug viagra Online Special Prices For discount drug viagra! Best Online.
  • Buy Cheapest but viagra Online Pharmacy Store. Free Viagra Pills!
  • Buy Cheapest natural cialis Online Pharmacy At The Best Price! Best Online.
  • Buy Cheapest brand cialis name Online Pharmacy Store. Guaranteed Shipping.
  • Get levitra alpha blockers Without Prescription Consultation. 24/Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest german viagra substitutes Now Guaranteed Shipping. Free Viagra Pills!
  • Buy Cheap levitra from mexico Online Discount Online Pharmacy. Best Drugstore.
  • Buy Cheap viagra pro Online Cheap Prescription Drugs. Best Online.
  • Buy Cheap how to buy viagra online Online Best Internet. Pharmacy At The Best Price!
  • Buy Cheap levitra and orgasms Now Guaranteed Shipping. Online Prices For levitra and orgasms!
  • Buy buy viagra in england Without Prescription Doctor. Low Prices. Best Drugstore.
  • generic cialis pill Online Without Prescription Pharmacy Store. Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheapest cialis daily Now Buy Medications Online. Pharmacy Store.
  • Buy Cheap cheap pfizer viagra Online Cheap Online Pharmacy. Guaranteed Shipping.
  • Buy Cheap cialis soft Online Best Online. Buy Medications Online.
  • Buy Cheap levitra 10mg Online Online Medical Shop. WorldWide Shipping.
  • Buy Cheapest soft cialis gel Online Pharmacy At The Best Price! Low Prices.
  • viagra sideffects Online Without Prescription Best Online. Free Viagra Pills!
  • Buy Cheapest non-generic cialis Online Low Prices. Online Prices For non-generic cialis!
  • purchasing viagra in the united kingdom Online Without Prescription WorldWide Shipping. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest where to buy levitra Now Best Online. Internet Prices For where to buy levitra!
  • Buying Cheapest online generic cialis. Mexican Pharmacy, Best Prices. Best Online.
  • Buy Cheap purchase viagra Now Online Medical Shop. Buy Medications Online.
  • Buy Cheap what is cialis professional Now 24/Online Pharmacy. No Prescription Needed.
  • Buying Cheap information on cialis. Worldwide Rx, Good Prices. WorldWide Shipping.
  • Buy Cheap cialis in dublin Now WorldWide Shipping. Buy Medications Online.
  • Buy Cheapest viagra women Online WorldWide Shipping. Free Viagra Pills!
  • Buy Cheap viagra from canada Now Discount Online Pharmacy. WorldWide Shipping.
  • Buy where to purchase cialis Without Prescription Doctor. Best Drugstore. Low Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest viagra purchase online Now Top Online Pharmacy. 24/Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest generic levitra effective Now Top Online Pharmacy. Best Drugstore.
  • Buying Cheap viagra retail discount. Offshore Rx, Best Prices. Guaranteed Shipping.
  • Buy Cheap levitra dosage Now Pharmacy Store. Internet Prices For levitra dosage!
  • Buy Cheap best levitra price Online Best Online. Special Prices For best levitra price!
  • Buy Cheapest cheap viagra from pfizer Online Buy Medications Online. Best Prices.
  • Buy cialis from uk supplier Online Without Prescription. Pharmacy At The Best Price!
  • Buy online viagra sale Online Without Prescription. Best Prices. Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheap generic cialis prices Online Best Online. 24/Internet)(safe Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest levitra no prescription Now Pharmacy Store. Discount Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheap viagra ireland Now Buy Medications Online. WorldWide Shipping.
  • Buy Cheapest experience with cialis Now 24/Internet)(safe Pharmacy. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest california vardenafil hcl levitra Now Best Prices. Discount Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest levitra warfarin Online Cheap Prescription Drugs. Best Online.
  • Buy Cheap order levitra professional Online Best Internet. Drugs, Health And Beauty.
  • Buy Cheap viagra sublingual Now Safe And Secure Payment System. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheap cheap cialis india Now All Medications Are Certificated! Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest woman take viagra Now Best Drugstore. Online Medical Shop.
  • Buy Cheapest how to take viagra Now Low Prices. Order Cheap Meds Without Rx.
  • Buy Cheap sperm count and levitra Online Discount Pharmacy Online. Low Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest viagra 50mg Now Best Prices. Pharmacy At The Best Price!
  • Buy Cheap buy and purchase viagra online Online Internet Prices For buy and purchase viagra online! Best Online.
  • Buy Cheapest mexican rx cialis low price Online Pharmacy Store. Buy Medications Online.
  • Buy Cheap levitra levitria Online Best Online. Top Online Pharmacy Supplier.
  • Buy Cheapest discount brand viagra Now Cheap Pharmacy Online. Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheapest viagra difference in mg Now Buy Medications Online. Best Online.
  • Buy Cheapest samples viagra cialis Now 24/Online Pharmacy. Guaranteed Shipping.
  • Buy Cheapest viagra patent levitra Now WorldWide Shipping. No Prescription Needed.
  • Buy Cheapest viagra levitra cialis stuffy nose Now Cheap Online Pharmacy. Best Internet.
  • taking viagra Online Without Prescription Free Viagra Pills! Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest low dose cialis side effects Now Best Prices. The Largest Internet Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest better pills than viagra Online Drugs, Health And Beauty. Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheap discount levitra online Online Best Online. The Largest Internet Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest buy cialis fast shipping Now Prescription Drugs And Generic Medications.
  • Buy Cheapest viagra shop uk Now Cheap Pharmacy Online. Guaranteed Shipping.
  • Buy Cheapest rapid viagra Now Top Online Pharmacy. 24/Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest mens cialis Now Pharmacy Store. Online Medical Shop.
  • Buy Cheapest cialis regalis Now Low Prices. Discount Pharmacy Online.
  • Buy Cheap viagra soft tabs instructions Now Drugs, Health And Beauty. Top Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheap viagra and heart disease Now WorldWide Shipping. Discount Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest buy viagra online australia Online Cheap Online Pharmacy. Best Online.
  • Buy Cheapest best generic levitra prices Now Best Prices. Pharmacy At The Best Price!
  • Buy Cheapest levitra on-line Now No Prescription Needed. Free Viagra Pills!
  • Buy Cheap herbal viagra vs viagra Now Free Viagra Pills! Cheap Online Pharmacy.