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This volume brings together performance texts from nine productions
by the experimental theatre company Lightwork and one playtext from
Lightwork's precursor company Academy Productions, presented
between 1997 and 2011. Lightwork specialized in collaboratively
created and multimedia performance. The company also experimented
with several performance forms that emerged at the turn of the
twenty-first century, including verbatim and site-specific
approaches. Because of this, the texts cover a range of forms and
formats - scripted plays such as Here's What I Did With My Body One
Day by Dan Rebellato and Blavatsky by Clare Bayley; multimedia
adaptations of classical myths such as Back At You (based on the
story of Echo and Narcissus) and Once I was Dead (based on the
story of Daedalus and Icarus); site-specific experiments such as
The Good Actor, which took place in various spaces across Hoxton
Hall, a Victorian theatre in London's East End; and the use of
verbatim witness testimony from the Court of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, War Crimes section in Sarajevo Story. The defining
aspect of the Lightwork aesthetic is that multimedia and
scenographic experimentation does not come at the expense of the
mainstays of dramatic theatre: character, story and emotional
resonance. What lies at the heart of the Lightwork shows you will
encounter here are human-scale stories: relationships between
lovers or family members, confrontations with the past (both as
personal and as cultural history) and, in many cases, matters of
life or death that entail wrestling with causality, consequence and
fate. The twelve-year span covered by this work reflects a period
in British performance practice when the interrelation of page and
stage, process and production, text and 'non-text', were being
radically rethought. In the collaborative and processual theatre
making that Lightwork exemplifies, the text may be one element
among many and is more likely to be the outcome of the process than
its precursor. How do such playtexts (or performance texts) differ
from those that are conceived and scripted by a single desk-based
playwright in advance of the rehearsal? What gaps are left when the
work of many hands is channelled through the pen (or keyboard) of
one among them? The texts featured in this volume represent a
number of answers to these questions about the nature of writing
for the stage. The performance texts are each preceded (and
sometime followed) by short essays written by some of the many
people who have been involved in productions by Lightwork,
including established academics and theatre practitioners: David
Annen, Clare Bayley, Gregg Fisher, Sarah Gorman, Andy Lavender,
Aneta Mancewicz, Bella Merlin, Alex Mermikides, Jo Parker, Dan
Rebellato, and Ayse Tashkiran. Their contributions reflect the
collaborative nature of the company and the respect that it
accorded the various disciplinary perspectives that make up a
theatre company. There are sections on scenography, sound design
and technical operation, as well as on those crafts that might more
usually draw attention: directing, writing and acting. These
contributions offer an insight into the collaborative,
multi-layered and sometimes messy business of their creation from
an individual maker's or spectator's point of view. This book will
be invaluable for those who are making, studying or researching
performance in the twenty-first century, and an essential resource
for the rehearsal room. Primary readership will include
researchers, educators, students and practitioners interested in
creative practice, theatre-making, integrated design and
performance, and contemporary theatre. It will be an important
resource for those on theatre and performance courses at all
levels, as well as acting, theatre and performance design,
dramaturgy and direction courses, creative writing courses and
media arts programmes. It will have appeal for general readers
interested in new texts and processes in theatre and performance,
and individual texts are likely to be of interest to specialist
researchers working in related fields - for example performance and
the occult (Blavatsky), performance and conflict (Sarajevo Story).
Neoliberalism, Theatre and Performance tackles one of the most
slippery but significant topics in culture and politics.
Neoliberalism is defined by the contributors as a
political-economic system, and the ideas and assumptions
(individualism, market forces and globalisation) that it promotes
are consequently examined. Readers will gain an insight into how
neoliberalism shapes contemporary theatre, dance and performance,
and how festival programmers, directors and other artists have
responded. Jen Harvie gives a broad overview of neoliberalism,
before examining its implications for theatre and performance and
specific works that confront its grip, including Churchill's
Serious Money and Prebble's Enron. Liesbeth Groot Nibbelink
conducts a fascinating discussion with Rainer Hofmann, artistic
director of the SPRING Festival in Utrecht, on ways in which
performance festivals can respond to neoliberal culture. Cristina
Rosa explores contemporary dance in neoliberal Brazil as a site for
both commodification and challenge. Sarah Woods and Andrew Simms
discuss and present excerpts from their activist satire
Neoliberalism: The Break-up Tour. Slim and elegant, forceful and
wide-ranging, Neoliberalism, Theatre and Performance is an
accessible resource for students, practitioners and scholars
interested in how neoliberalism both suffuses and is resisted by
today's contemporary performance scene.
This third volume in the 4x45 series addresses some of the most
current and urgent performance work in contemporary theatre
practice. As people from all backgrounds and cultures criss-cross
the globe with an ever-growing series of pushes and pulls guiding
their movements, this book explores contemporary artists who have
responded to various forms of migration in their theatre,
performance and multimedia work. The volume comprises two lectures
and two curated conversations with theatre-makers and artists.
Danish scholar of contemporary visual culture, Anne Ring Petersen,
brings artistic and political aspects of 'postmigration' to the
fore in an essay on the innovations of Shermin Langhoff at Berlin's
Ballhaus Naunynstrasse, and the decolonial work of
Danish-Trinidadian artist Jeannette Ehlers. The racialised and
gendered exclusions associated with navigating 'the industry' for
non-white female and non-white non-binary artists are interrogated
in Melbourne-based theatre scholar Paul Rae's interview with two
Australian performers of Indian heritage, Sonya Suares and Raina
Peterson. UK playwrights Joe Murphy and Joe Robertson of Good
Chance Theatre discuss their work in dialogue, and with their
colleague, Iranian animator and illustrator Majid Adin. Emma Cox's
essay on Irish artist Richard Mosse's video installation, Incoming,
discusses thermographic 'heat signatures' as a means of seeing
migrants and the imperative of envisioning global climate change.
An accessible and forward-thinking exploration of one of
contemporary performance's most pressing influences, 4x45 |
Performance and Migration is a unique resource for scholars,
students and practitioners of Theatre Studies, Performance Studies
and Human Geography.
"Making Contemporary Theatre" reveals how some of the most
significant international contemporary theatre is actually made.
The book opens with an introductory chapter which contextualizes
recent trends in approaches to theatre-making. In the ensuing
eleven chapters, eleven different writer-observers describe,
contextualize and analyze the theatre-making practices of eleven
different companies and directors, including Japan's Gekidan
Kaitaisha and the Quebecois director Robert Lepage. Each chapter is
enriched with extensive illustrations as well as boxed-off
"asides," giving the reader different perspectives on the work.
Chapters usually focus on a single production, such as Complicite's
2003-04 "The Elephant Vanishes," allowing detailed investigations
of complex practices to emerge. The book concludes with a brief
manifesto for making contemporary theatre by the editors, plus a
bibliography suggesting further reading. Making contemporary
theatre is a rich resource for the theatre-making student and the
theatre--goer alike, full of diverse examples of how the most
exciting theatre is actually made.
This timely work addresses the reshaping of theatre and performance
after postmodernism. It provocatively argues that subsequent to
(and in some instances renouncing) the 'classic' postmodern tropes
of detachment, irony and contingency, theatre and performance
events in the 21st Century engage more overtly with meaning,
politics and society - and entail certain sorts of commitment. And
they involve a pronounced form of personal experience, often
implicating the body and/or one's sense of self. The book features
analysis of many performance events, drawn from a range of
international outputs. These include work by internationally
significant and emergent companies and directors such as Guy
Cassiers, Rimini Protokoll, C de la B and Richard Maxwell, Elevator
Repair Service, Kris Verdonck, Anthony Neilson and Punchdrunk. It
also examines a wider range of cultural phenomena - including
online social networking, reality TV programmes, sports events and
charity galas - where principles of performance are in play.It
represents a compelling and provocative resource for anybody
interested in discovering how performance theory can be applied to
cutting-edge culture, and indeed the world around them.
This timely work addresses the reshaping of theatre and performance
after postmodernism. It provocatively argues that subsequent to
(and in some instances renouncing) the 'classic' postmodern tropes
of detachment, irony and contingency, theatre and performance
events in the 21st Century engage more overtly with meaning,
politics and society - and entail certain sorts of commitment. And
they involve a pronounced form of personal experience, often
implicating the body and/or one's sense of self. The book features
analysis of many performance events, drawn from a range of
international outputs. These include work by internationally
significant and emergent companies and directors such as Guy
Cassiers, Rimini Protokoll, C de la B and Richard Maxwell, Elevator
Repair Service, Kris Verdonck, Anthony Neilson and Punchdrunk. It
also examines a wider range of cultural phenomena - including
online social networking, reality TV programmes, sports events and
charity galas - where principles of performance are in play.It
represents a compelling and provocative resource for anybody
interested in discovering how performance theory can be applied to
cutting-edge culture, and indeed the world around them.
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