Martin dislocated his shoulder during rehearsals last Saturday. The paramedics were great when they arrived, but Martin had a long wait for them while in a lot of pain. Arriving at the hospital (King's on Denmark Hill) there was another wait as his shoulder had to be X-rayed before they could try to put it back in. When the OK came, Martin was brave enough to let a tattooed charmer called Matt put his shoulder back in without a general anaesthetic.
They X-rayed again after relocation and unfortunately a small fracture was now visible in the top of Martin’s humerus. It seemed likely he’d need a screw in the bone to reattach it. However, the consultant deemed it unnecessary and we were very happy – surgery would have caused Martin further pain, trauma and recovery time.
Luckily, Martin wanted to continue with the show, so I wrote his character into the script as wearing a sling due to a dislocated shoulder (I’m very creative). That way, he could rehearse the show as it would be performed.
We still hoped to have some of our planned week rehearsing in Somerset. Martin had to pop in to the fracture clinic on the Tuesday, and we hoped to head down to Somerset later that afternoon.
Martin came in to rehearse on Monday. He was in a lot of pain and discomfort, in addition to which he was nauseous from the painkillers, but stuck it out and carried on working. It struck me that, just as any person can get injured, any character could get injured. When Martin started playing Joe with a dislocated shoulder, Joe started using his injury to manipulate his brother. Martin was very gutsy all day. I felt proud to have him in the cast and incredibly guilty this had happened through doing a play.
The fracture clinic on Tuesday brought bad news. It was decided that Martin did need an operation to fix the fragment of bone in place. This screw would then have to be removed in six weeks’ time – causing another period of recovery. Martin continued to think of the show, asking the consultant if he could keep the screw in longer than six weeks, allowing him to finish the Edinburgh run before returning to hospital. The consultant agreed. There were no beds available that day, so Martin had to go back the next morning.
Martin returned to King's just before 7 am on Wednesday and went under late morning. The operation went to plan, but he was feeling pain in the shoulder and missed the consultant on his rounds so they kept him in an extra day.
He's out now, and still wants to do the show. The doctor says there’s no reason he shouldn’t, as long as he’s not required to perform any movements that cause him pain. Our ‘giving the character what Martin’s got’ technique will hopefully take care of that, but we won’t know for certain until he sees the consultant a week on Tuesday.
I very much hope Martin can do the show – he’s very good, he’s my friend and he’s got injured rehearsing it - but of course it mustn’t interfere with his recovery.
I feel very lucky to have such a stalwart man in the cast. I hope he can carry on.
1 comment:
Three cheers for Martin!
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