Performance Research
A Journal of the Performing Arts
ISSN: 1352-8165 (Print) 1469-9990 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rprs20
On Theatricality
Andrew Quick & Richard Rushton
To cite this article: Andrew Quick & Richard Rushton (2019) On Theatricality, Performance
Research, 24:4, 1-4, DOI: 10.1080/13528165.2019.1655350
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/13528165.2019.1655350
Published online: 17 Sep 2019.
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On Theatricality
ANDREW QUICK & RICHARD RUSHTON
A standard dictionary tends to define ‘theatrical’
in two ways. A first will declare that theatrical
means ‘of or relating to theatre’, while a second
declares it to mean ‘exaggerated or affected’,
especially as such affectations might pertain to
human behaviour. Both of these meanings are
explored in the articles that make up this issue
of Performance Research that takes theatricality
its theme. Some authors explore the edges of
what is traditionally called theatre, while others
veer towards discussions of theatricality in terms
of exaggeration, display and ‘showiness’ – or,
alternatively, they contest such characterizations
of theatricality. Crucially, all of the pieces here
force their readers to consider – and reconsider
– what ‘theatre’ is, or what it has been or can be.
And hovering sometimes in the background but
often in the foreground is the spectre of Michael
Fried’s critique of theatricality, which first
emerged in his ‘Art and objecthood’ essay of 1967
(1998 [1967]), a critique that has continued up to
his most recent writings (2015, 2018).
Some of the articles published here emerged
from a symposium held at Lancaster University
in the United Kingdom in September 2017. The
symposium was held as part of a research project
on ‘Theatricality and Interrelations between Art,
Film and Theatre’ that was funded by the Arts and
Humanities Research Council (AHRC) in 2016–17.
The articles gathered here tend to focus on
aspects of performance and theatre, while another
book to be published soon will concentrate on
theatricality and its relations both with theatre
and the other arts (film, painting, sculpture,
installation, Internet art and so on). (That book
will be called Theatricality and the Arts: Film, art,
theatre.)
In the nineteen articles that follow there are
four broad tendencies, and we will discuss these
tendencies briefly in this Introduction. They are
(1) Theatricality beyond traditional conceptions
of theatre; (2) Theatricality and modes of self-
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performance; (3) Theoretical approaches to
theatricality; and (4) Theatricality and the history
of performance.
1. T H E AT R I CA L I T Y B E YO N D
TRADITIONAL CONCEPTIONS OF
T H E AT R E
A number of articles here try to broaden the
range of what might be considered theatrical by
concentrating on what in a performance can be
said to make that performance theatrical and thus
make it a piece of theatre. In her provocation,
Julia Peetz asks us to consider to what extent
US Presidential displays and speeches can be
considered forms of theatre. Especially pertinent
is the contemporary setting of Peetz’s reflections,
a feeling that in becoming theatrical, US politics –
and politics more generally – has turned its back
on the real conditions of existence. Lauren Beck
explores what she calls ‘ototheatre’, a form of
personal theatre based on sounds and sound cues.
This form of theatre is at odds with traditional
conceptions of theatre that involve performers on
the one hand and spectators on the other. With
‘ototheatre’, the performer and spectator are one
and the same. Konstantina Georgelou explores
the ways that a lecture on quantum mechanics
can be considered theatrical, and, furthermore,
she asks what kind of theatre this might be.
Each of these offers examples of instances that
might not typically be denoted theatrical, but
strong cases are here made for expanding our
understanding of what can be called theatre.
Two contributions challenge some traditional
conceptions of theatre by invoking modes of
disability: Laura Haughey and Denise Armstrong
investigate the use of sign languages on stage in
terms of the ways that such practices can open up
a range of theatrical possibilities, while Jennifer
Goddard traces the innovations and challenges
of a theatre performance combining disabled and
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non-disabled performers in ways that seek to
open up the shared spaces between performers
and non-performers.
2. T H E AT R I CA L I T Y A N D M O D E S O F
SELF-PERFORMANCE
Some contributors share their reflections of
turning their own experiences and memories
into performances of one sort or another, while
others investigate performers who are, in one
way or another, performing ‘themselves’. Harry
Robert Wilson, for example, analyses his own
performance responses to a portion of video taken
of him during his early childhood. He examines
the ways in which he transformed his relationship
to this footage so that it could become a theatrical
performance. Elizabeth Kukjian examines work by
Cynthia Hopkins via its attempts to piece together
Hopkins’ relationship with and memories of her
father and the unique ways in which this was
performed. Bryony White examines works by
Marina Abramović by invoking notions of the
contractual relationship between performer and
audience as indicative of theatricality, especially
via the legal framework of the ‘trademark’.
3. T H E O R E T I CA L A P P ROAC H E S TO
T H E A T R I C A L I T Y.
A number of contributors offer reflections
on theatricality primarily from a theoretical
perspective. Significantly, perhaps – and for
reasons that are certainly unclear to us – these
are all male contributors, and the themes
tackled are theoretically acute. Nik Wakefield
offers reflections on notions of absorption
and theatricality as framed by Michael Fried
in order to question the relationship between
absorption and theatricality in various works
by The Wooster Group and Robert Wilson.
Swen Steinhäuser examines Fried’s arguments
while incorporating some of Samuel Weber’s
theses on theatricality. All of this is undertaken
in the context of poststructuralist debates
on temporality and iterability, presence and
absence, as well as puppetry, and framed by
concepts borrowed from Jacques Derrida, Hélène
Cixous and others. Discussions of performance
works by Goat Island and Every house has
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a door are also incorporated into Steinhauser’s
contribution. Goran Petrović-Lotina offers
a political analysis of theatricality primarily by
invoking the notion of hegemony as articulated
by Antonio Gramsci, as well as by Ernesto Laclau
and Chantal Mouffe. In doing so, Petrović-Lotina
argues for a contestation of spectatorial codes by
emphasizing the possibilities of confrontation
between a performance and an audience. Also
arguing from an overtly political perspective,
Simon Bowes begins to theorize a theatre of
assembly or assemblage, particularly drawing
on the notion of assemblage (agencement)
as used by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari.
Mischa Twitchin balances a wide range of terms,
including interactivity and immersion, presence
and absence, distance and intimacy, all in the
name of interrogating the fantasy of transparent
immersion that is promoted as an overcoming
of theatricality. Finally, from a theoretical
perspective, Jack Belloli reflects on writings by
sociologist Richard Sennett and anthropologist
Tim Ingold to argue for a turn to ‘craft’ and ‘skill’
as markers of theatrical achievement. Much
of this is viewed from a Friedian perspective,
as Belloli explains some of the ways in which
London-based Secret Theatre, in their production
practices, have sought in various ways to restore
a sense of conviction in theatrical processes
and performances.
4. T H E AT R I CA L I T Y A N D T H E H I S TO RY
OF PERFORMANCE
A number of writers tackle issues related to the
history of theatrical production practices from
within the context of reflecting on notions of
theatricality. Soo Ryon Yoon examines some
recent performance practices in South Korea.
Theatricality is used in such performances as
a specific tactic that directly questions official
accounts and histories. As a result, Yoon claims
that theatricality can be mobilized as a mode of
political and social critique.
The focus of Sylvia Solakidi’s article is
on Jan Fabre’s examination of his home
country in his production of Belgium Rules/
Belgium Rules, which was performed in 2017.
Discussing different aspects of this four-hour
performance work, Solakidi discusses the
ways in which theatricality, as a repetitive act,
provides a site of resistance to those forms of
nationalism and national identities that rely on
the linearity of historical time. Theatricality,
she claims, which always incorporates acts of
repetition, creates a political space where both
theatricalization and historization are opened
out to radical transformations. Emma Willis is
similarly interested in the potential of radical
transformation in her discussion of the ethical
problem of the representation of real-world
perpetrators of violence in both theatre and
film. Drawing on Sam Weber’s thinking on
theatricality, where the processes of theatrical
production and presentation are revealed and
narrativized, Willis identifies the metatheatrical
as a form of ‘linked separation’, one that allows
a nuanced interchange between the narratives
of the perpetrator of violence and those that
represent them on the stage and also, in this
article, in film. Theatricality here becomes the
site where the highly charged relationship
between the represented and the representing
can be teased out, exposing new ethical and
political dimensions to both the historical and
the theatrical. Serap Erincin charts some of the
practices of The Wooster Group, especially in
relation to their use of multimedia screens and
other technological mechanisms that Erincin
describes in terms of their intermedial relation
to traditional stage practices. He notes some of
the ways that our understanding of what counts
as ‘theatrical’ has been transformed by such
methods. Patricia Smyth, in the provocation
that opens this special issue, mounts a strong
historically based argument against Fried’s
conception of theatricality. Smyth takes the
specific case of painter Paul Delaroche (1797–
1856), a painter regarded by Fried as very much
a theatrical artist. For critics and audiences
at the time, however, Delaroche’s works were
certainly not regarded as theatrical, Smyth
argues. In her discussion, she also questions
the appropriateness of Fried’s characterization
of theatricality.
Despite our attempt to tie the word down at
the beginning of this Introduction theatricality
remains a slippery concept throughout
this issue and the settled condition that an
uncontested definition of the term might present,
quite properly, always eludes the reader. It seems
that what is staged within the following pages is
fashioned by the challenge that the concept of
theatricality presents to both critical thinking and
also to the practice of making and reflecting on
those elements of performance that are thought
to be theatrical. Of course, all this consideration
takes place within the shadow of what many
thinkers have termed the anti-theatrical turn,
which begins with Plato and perhaps reaches
its zenith in Baudrillard’s claim that because
theatre is everywhere, it is in fact nowhere (1990).
According to Baudrillard, theatre is at the service
of what he claims is an obscene construction
of reality that is merely a pornographic play
of appearance, one that is without depth, that
lacks distance, one that constructs a reality
that renders everything as transparent and,
crucially, exchangeable. Theatre, for Baudrillard,
was always based on particular spatial rules
and social conventions: the machinic division
of stage and audience, a division that once
permitted our ability to believe in and commit to
the power of illusion. Once everything becomes
theatricalized illusion is seen to disappear,
leaving what Baudrillard calls ‘the obscene form
of anti-theatre, present everywhere’. And in
this situation, he claims, we ‘are all actors and
spectators; there is no more stage; the stage is
everywhere; no more rules: everyone plays out
his own drama, improvising his own fantasies’
(Baudrillard 1990: 63). If Baudrillard mourns
the loss of theatre via it being absorbed into the
quotidian, its extraordinariness reduced to the
flatness of the everyday, he also hints that if we
were able to return to the condition of theatre
we might find a theatricality that resists the
reduction, or even the disappearance, he claims
has taken place. In short, the implication here is
that rather than fleeing the environs of the stage
in a vain attempt to encounter a reality in those
encounters where risk, liveness, endurance and
authenticity are privileged, we might discover
something extraordinary, something real, in the
artificiality of theatricality itself.
The following articles, it strikes us, each in
complementary and sometimes contradictory
ways, take up the challenge posed by the term
‘theatricality’ by turning to the condition of
theatre, to the specificities of a practice rooted in
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theatre or its equivalents, to counter Baudrillard’s
playful assertion that theatre has disappeared
and by implication is now made obsolete. The
following articles each make a striking claim for
the cultural relevance and the political necessity
for rethinking what constitutes theatricality.
They also ask how different and contesting
forms of practice allow a reimagining of theatre’s
place in understanding the complexity of our
contemporary lives in which what constitutes
the truth, fact, certainty and history seems under
perpetual attack.
REFERENCES
Baudrillard, Jean (1990) Fatal Strategies, Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press.
Fried, Michael (1998 [1967]) ‘Art and objecthood’, in Art
and Objecthood: Essays and reviews, Chicago, IL: Chicago
University Press, pp. 148–72.
Fried, Michael (2015) ‘Some new category: Remarks on
several black Pollocks’, in G. Delahunty (ed.) Jackson Pollock:
Blind spots, London: Tate Publishing, pp. 57–88.
Fried, Michael (2018) ‘Constantin Constantius goes to the
theatre’, in M. Abbott (ed.) Michael Fried and Philosophy:
Modernism, intentionality, and theatricality, New York, NY:
Routledge, pp. 243–59.
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