Insights in Applied Theatre: The Early Days and Onwards
By John O'Toole and Peter O'Connor
()
About this ebook
Much more than an archive, these are the vivid, still pertinent voices and messages of the pioneers worldwide.
The nineteen articles chosen by the editors of Applied Theatre Research represent key themes and elements from the early days of applied theatre that are still – and indeed now more than ever – relevant. They are all high-quality articles, some of which were highly influential in their own time. All of them still have plenty to say to today’s applied theatre, both in their own terms and sometimes in terms of how their publication influenced the development at the time of this still-expanding field, or refracted it in ways that give us new insights with hindsight.
They have been arranged in sections according to some of the key themes – and problematic issues – that were discovered, thought out and sometimes stumbled across by the pioneer writers in the collection. Each section is preceded by a critical editorial commentary on those themes, besides thorough introductions to all the articles and in some cases re-evaluations. The editors have added substantial additional new material to the collection and in doing so, bring their own applied theatre experience to bear on these themes, as they raise general questions that are wide-ranging, contemporary and urgent: from the vital and contested issues of power, partnerships and the giving of voice through theatre to applied theatre’s proactive response to COVID-19, to the need to identify, take account of and address the needs of all stakeholders in any applied theatre project.
The articles are grouped in six sections, covering areas such as diversity of geography, community contexts, forms of applied theatre and organizational factors that characterize applied theatre; the definition and nature of applied theatre; how the best intentioned projects could be compromised by any of the many opportunities for applied theatre to go wrong; opportunities for change it can offer and the incorporation of new media technologies, and ethnographic performance, two factors that have now become major preoccupations for our field, particularly in the years since the articles were written. The final section recognizes that applied theatre has been around not for 30 years, but for thousands, and in countless cultures.
The editorial chapters have strong connections with the rest of the book, but are written with the editors’ deep insights into the field, and are sharp in their focus and context. The book offers useful insights into the start of applied theatre and its development as an area of practice and research. The chapter collection is relevant and includes influential names in the field who have contributed significantly to the development of applied theatre over time.
The primary market will be academics and advanced practitioners in applied theatre, drama education and theatre studies – including the expanding fields of drama therapy, theatre and health etc. It will also be useful for educators exploring creative pedagogy and drama in education strategies across the curriculum.
It will be valuable introductory background reading for advanced undergraduate and post-graduate students in drama, theatre studies and theatre arts, performance studies and community theatre.
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Insights in Applied Theatre - John O'Toole
Insights in Applied Theatre
Insights in Applied Theatre
The Early Days and Onwards
Edited by
John O’Toole, Penny Bundy and Peter O’Connor
First published in the UK in 2022 by
Intellect, The Mill, Parnall Road, Fishponds, Bristol, BS16 3JG, UK
First published in the USA in 2022 by
Intellect, The University of Chicago Press, 1427 E. 60th Street,
Chicago, IL 60637, USA
Copyright © 2022 Intellect Ltd
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Cover designer: Aleksandra Szumlas
Copy editor: Susan Jarvis
Production manager: Jessica Lovett
Typesetting: Newgen
Print ISBN 978-1-78938-524-3
ePDF ISBN 978-1-78938-525-0
ePub ISBN 978-1-78938-526-7
Printed and bound by Lightning Source.
To find out about all our publications, please visit
www.intellectbooks.com
There you can subscribe to our e-newsletter, browse or download our current catalogue, and buy any titles that are in print.
This is a peer-reviewed publication.
This book is dedicated to those pioneers of applied theatre who are no longer with us, and in particular to four contributors to this book, John Carroll (d. 2011), Christine Sinclair (d. 2020), Philip Taylor (d. 2020) and Kennedy Chinyowa (d. 2021).
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Then and now
John O’Toole
Part 1: Inspiring stories
Introduction to Part 1
John O’Toole
1. Life Drama Papua New Guinea: Contextualising practice
Andrea Baldwin
2. Audience participation, aesthetic distance and change: Reflections on Fifty Square Feet , a theatre in education programme on urban poverty
Chan Yuk-Lan (Phoebe)
3. Converging worlds: Fostering co-facilitation and relationships for health promotion through drama at the grassroots
Christine Sinclair and Andrea Grindrod
4. Shakespeare in Nicaragua
Els van Poppel
Part 2: What is applied theatre?
Introduction to Part 2
Peter O’Connor
5. Applied theatre: Problems and possibilities
Judith Ackroyd
6. Applied theatre and the power play: An international viewpoint
Bjørn Rasmussen
7. Conversations with the devil
Tim Prentki
8. Applied theatre: An exclusionary discourse?
Judith Ackroyd
Part 3: Risky business: Good intentions and the road to hell
Introduction to Part 3
Penny Bundy
9. Ethical tensions in drama teachers’ behaviour
Shifra Schonmann
10. Community theatre in a South Samic community: The challenges of working with theatre in small communities
Tordis Landvik
11. Spectacular violence and the Kachahari theatre of Sindhuli, Nepal
Alberto Guevara
Part 4: The desire for change: Voice, power and partnership
Introduction to Part 4
Penny Bundy
12. Tabula rasa: Starting afresh with classroom drama
Kathleen Gallagher
13. Making a break for it: Discourse and theatre in prisons
James Thompson
14. Evaluating the efficacy of community theatre intervention in/as performance: A South African case study
Kennedy Chinyowa
15. ‘We like good disco!’: The ‘public sphere of children’ and its implications for practice
Nora Roozemond and Karola Wenzel
Part 5: Theatre of innovations
Introduction to Part 5
Peter O’Connor
16. Theatrical reflections of health: Physically impacting health-based research
Julia Gray
17. Playing the game, role distance and digital performance
John Carroll and David Cameron
Part 6: A nod to the ancestors
Introduction to Part 6
John O’Toole
18. Educational and critical dimensions in Turkish shadow theatre: The Karagöz Theatre of Anatolia
Mehmet Takkaç and A. Kerin Dinç
19. Christmas traditions and performance rituals: A look at Christmas celebrations in a Nordic context
Stig A. Eriksson
Editors’ biographies
Contributors’ biographies – original and updated
Acknowledgements
The editors wish to acknowledge with thanks the assistance to Applied Theatre Researcher and to this book of Griffith University, the University of Auckland, Intellect Books Ltd, our ever-encouraging commissioning editor Jessica Lovett, our administrative assistant Alex Harvey and our indefatigable copy editor Susan Jarvis, who was with us at the beginning and is still getting it right for us two decades on.
Introduction: Then and now
John O’Toole
This book is both old knowledge and new knowledge: a rediscovery and a reconfiguration; a restoration – salvage, even – and an archive; a recent revelation to its editors; and, above all, an entirely contemporary handbook of applied theatre for today’s practitioners and scholars.
Put simply, the book is the editors’ pick of the best and most important articles from the world’s first journal of applied theatre, Applied Theatre Researcher (2000–11), together with our commentaries and re-evaluation. It is a critical anthology of the cream of early scholarship in applied theatre, chosen by three old hands who have ourselves been centrally involved in applied theatre since the term emerged (see below), and are still up to our necks in it.
The nascence of applied theatre
The earliest usage (more or less) of the term ‘applied theatre’ that we can identify was by Norwegian drama scholar and contributor to this volume Bjørn Rasmussen, who used the phrase ‘applied theatre science’ in the mid-1980s. Helen Nicholson (2011: 241), among the keenest and most conscientious chroniclers of the field, suggests that ‘applied theatre’ was not a term coined by a particular individual to describe a very precise set of practices, but that it emerged haphazardly and spread like a rhizome to fill a gap in the lexicon. We prefer to see it as a phrase whose time had come, which serendipitously emerged in a finite number of places, quite precisely to create the rhizome to fill that gap in the lexicon. That is not uncommon in this strongly collaborative field. There are quite a few specialist drama coinages that have sprung up synchronously in several places just when a name for a concept was needed – ‘process drama’, ‘actor-teacher’, ‘hot-seating’ and ‘teaching artist’, to name a few. (This is rather like those children’s rhymes and jokes that pop up spontaneously in half a dozen locations and are collected at the far ends of the earth within 24 hours).
Since one identifiable node in the rhizome that is particularly relevant to this anthology was Griffith University in Queensland, Australia, we can quite precisely identify the timing too, because two of us ‘were there’, playing our part in the genesis. A group of Griffith University drama lecturers were sitting in a Gold Coast waterfront café one day in 1991, speculating – as we all do – on the changing, broadening scene in drama and theatre. We were trying to find a new term (as we endlessly do too) that was broad enough to bring together the common and converging elements of drama education, community, fringe and experimental theatre, Theatre for Development … and those other manifestations of drama for purposes beyond just entertainment that were taking place outside formal theatre contexts and buildings. There was an element of tension in this discussion, as we were considering overdue changes to our tertiary course offerings; moreover, one of our number had an abiding and deep distrust of all things educational, especially those labelled as such. It was he who suddenly came up with the suggestion ‘How about applied theatre
?’ There was a rare moment of agreement among us as we embraced the term, not too critically.
Over the next two years, we started to put together plans for a degree course in applied theatre, and we founded the Griffith Centre for Applied Theatre Research. Just a few years later, in 2000, the centre’s director, the late Philip Taylor, started the Applied Theatre Researcher (ATR), the journal upon which this book is based. In the interim, we had stumbled across the visionary work of James Thompson’s centre at Manchester University in the United Kingdom, synchronous with ours or possibly starting even earlier, the work of which shared most of our own emerging definitions and principles. (There was one significant difference, which will be discussed below.) We also began to hear the phrase, independently, from other colleagues in Canada and Africa. The rhizome was certainly taking root.
The story of the Applied Theatre Researcher
From the start, the journal attracted submissions from distinguished scholars and practitioners, and over its twelve years we published over 90 articles with a progressively broader and deeper geographical reach and breadth of context as the field developed its expertise and expanded worldwide. Philip Taylor edited the first three volumes, followed by John O’Toole for the next three, then John in co-editorship with Penny Bundy for the last six. Several of those issues were simultaneously branded as the IDEA Journal, resulting from a bargain with the International Drama/Theatre and Education Association (IDEA), which was looking for a journal outlet for its elite Congress papers. That further broadened the ATR’s global reach and credibility.
By 2011, the editors were finding the production in our spare time of an expanding and increasingly influential online journal without technical or administrative support too onerous, and with perfect timing, international publishers Intellect UK contacted us with a proposal for a professionally produced journal, to be available both online and in hard copy. So, ‘ATR2 – The Next Gen’ was born, better known as Applied Theatre Research, with the same editorship as the first issue in 2013. While that journal has gone from strength to strength with international academic recognition, the next part of the old ATR’s story is sad and wasteful. Its original sponsors, Griffith University, were no longer able to either promote it or support its continued online existence, despite frequent hits by ATR devotees; on two occasions, the second with finality, Griffith wiped it from its website in an IT upgrade. For several years, the journal was unobtainable, and by many forgotten. But not by its editors, who each managed to unearth a badly corrupted and incomplete edition of the twelve issues, and eventually combine and restore them to approximately their original whole. Intellect generously agreed to host this precious archive on its Applied Theatre Research website, where it now sits, once again picking up hits from applied theatre devotees with long memories. These back issues are available from https://www.intellectbooks.com/applied-theatre-research-back-issues.
By the time of the Griffith-published ATR’s demise, applied theatre was spreading across the globe, and, almost as fast, gaining footholds in academia. Griffith’s BA was quickly followed by undergraduate and postgraduate courses – mainly Anglophone – from Canada and the United Kingdom to the United States, South Africa, New Zealand and beyond. The field had already begun to get its own base of academic literature and chronicles of practice. Taylor (2003), Thompson (2003) and Nicholson (2005) all published useful introductory books, and soon edited readers and collections of applied theatre were emerging. More recently, two series of books on applied theatre have been published. Applied Theatre Research continues to thrive with its next generation of editors (Peter O’Connor and Kelly Freebody), and the British journal Research in Drama Education has added to itself the subtitle ‘The International Journal of Applied Theatre’.
This, of course, raises the question of what this volume can provide to today’s growing literature, especially from the lens of the past.
And now what?
The first thing, of course, is that this book restores continuity by completing the important thread of the history of Applied Theatre Research from its origins to now. Yet that mainly archival purpose is much less important than our contemporary aims. The nineteen articles we feature have all been judiciously chosen by us to represent key themes and elements from the early days of applied theatre that are still – and indeed now more than ever – relevant. They are all, in the view of the three of us, high-quality articles, some of which were highly influential in their own time. All of them still have plenty to say to today’s applied theatre, both in their own terms and sometimes in terms of how their publication influenced the development at the time of this still-expanding field, or refracted it in ways that give us new insights with hindsight. We have arranged them in sections according to some of the key themes – and problematic issues – that were discovered, thought out and sometimes stumbled across by the pioneer writers in the collection. Each section is preceded by a critical editorial commentary on those themes, besides thorough introductions to all the articles and in some cases re-evaluations. We have been necessarily immodest, we think, and have gone well beyond the normal practice of an editorial introduction that just introduces the author and main themes of the articles. To put these into current perspective, we have brought all of our own applied theatre experience to bear on these themes, as they raise general questions that are wide-ranging, contemporary and urgent: from the vital and contested issues of power, partnerships and the giving of voice through theatre to applied theatre’s proactive response to COVID-19, to the need to identify, take account of and address the needs of all stakeholders in any applied theatre project.
The book is first and foremost a critical reader for today’s applied theatre practitioners and scholars. We are using the term ‘applied theatre’ inclusively, as the journal did. Some of our writers use other terminology to describe what they were doing, like ‘community theatre’, ‘Theatre for Development’, ‘theatre in education’ and ‘drama education’. However, the single definitional criterion we are using is that the writers all chose to submit their articles to a journal offering ‘applied theatre’ in its title. In the Introduction to Part 2, we provide further detail about what applied theatre actually is and what it comprises, in what is sometimes still a contested debate.
Our other more qualitative criteria for selection for the book included that the writers were all assured in their field and could articulate a clear definition for themselves of their field of activity, navigate it surely, and map or depict it for us with confidence. They have done their homework thoroughly on their particular contexts and have absorbed the literature and the traditions and conventions in which they are working. However, they are not overawed by those traditions, and there is a freshness of approach in all the articles. They are all honest, mostly humble, and they all respect what they are writing about and who they have been working with. Furthermore, they are reflective and self-critical, not writing victory narratives, welcoming the problematics, seeking to address inconsistencies and failures, and thinking laterally as well as logically.
One further quality is shared in common: they are all experienced and accomplished – and reflective – practitioners in applied theatre, and they are therefore writing as insiders, most of them telling of projects which they led themselves, in which they took part or were privileged observers. This, of course, inevitably means that their commentary is not disinterested, and so it is unable to provide an unbiased view from outside. That’s where we – the Editors - come in with the benefit of hindsight; not involved ourselves in any of the articles or the projects they describe, we nevertheless bring to our critical commentaries the combined experience of almost a century of applied theatre and many, many similar projects.
Partly by happenstance, partly deliberately, we have left out projects that were designed in universities or as training for actors’ or teachers’ courses. Those academic settings have in fact produced, and continue to produce, a sizeable proportion of the total corpus of applied theatre, and they have generated many successful and inspired projects chronicled in the pages of ATR and its successor. However, such projects are inevitably compromised – indeed, made more difficult – by other purposes, aims and factors beyond using applied theatre for its primary purpose in its context. This is true for their leaders, the students participating and, of course, for the participant community. These factors include the training itself; the variable skills, commitment and experience of the students; their level of understanding of the community; the ability of the institution to effectively resource the project; often (for the students) assessment; and (for the leaders) the need to produce community engagement and publishing outcomes for their institution.
The shape of the book
For Part 1, ‘Inspiring Stories’, we have selected four articles that represent just a fraction of the diversity of geography, community contexts, forms of applied theatre and organizational factors that characterizes applied theatre. As we have said, we take an inclusive view of the term ‘applied theatre’, and Part 2, ‘Defining Applied Theatre’, consists of four articles that explore the definition and nature of applied theatre, helping us to map the field and navigate our way through the semantics, the terminology and the early priorities. The opportunities for applied theatre to go wrong are manifold, just as in the conventional theatre, from incompatible funding aims to ill-controlled emotional or ideological dimensions of the work, and bad reading of the needs and tolerances of the audiences; so Part 3, ‘Risky Business’, presents three bravely acknowledged examples of difficulties that arose in widely different contexts, and compromised part or all of a project designed with the best of intentions. The four articles in Part 4, ‘The Desire for Change’, articulate how applied theatre can offer opportunities for communities or the individuals within them to express thoughts or ideas that might otherwise not be comfortably shared, to change power relationships and to offer new partnerships. Part 5, ‘Theatre of Innovation’, explores two particular applications of theatre form and aesthetic: the incorporation of new media technologies, and ethnographic performance, two factors that have now become major preoccupations for our field, particularly in the years since the articles were written. The final Part 6, ‘A Nod to the Ancestors’, recognizes, with just two offbeat examples, that applied theatre has been around not for 30 years, but for thousands, and in countless cultures.
There are numerous gaps, of course. One that we acknowledge with regret is that within our limited corpus there were no articles that comprehensively represented any one of the many contexts and usages of applied theatre tied to specific, primarily instrumental educational purposes that do not have any underlying aim for significant social change, social rescue and the betterment of society. These include leadership training in business and commercial contexts, teaching languages through drama, assisting debate in corporate conferences, and theatre shows and simulations in museums and tourist parks. This was the main original difference in principle between Griffith’s Centre (and the ATR) and Manchester’s – and most of the discourse and literature since. Quite a proportion of professional applied theatre workers make most or all of their income from those non-altruistic contexts, but unfortunately (as here) they rarely appear in our literature or our debates, as if they are a black-sheep relation who is somewhat shameful even to mention. It is more heart-warming to focus on our efforts for the betterment of society. And this is what we do instead.
The articles are not organized chronologically, although the articles do happen to represent most of the years of publication. We hope that the unfolding narrative of applied theatre, within each section and between the sections, comes across as a still-dynamic dialogue among the writers – many of whom knew each other well then and now, as applied theatre is still a small field.
References
Nicholson, H. (2005), Applied Drama: The Gift of Theatre, London: Macmillan.
Nicholson, H. (2011), ‘Applied drama/theatre/performance’, in S. Schonmann (ed.), Key Concepts in Theatre/Drama Education, Rotterdam: Sense, pp. 241–45.
Taylor, P. (2003), Applied Theatre: Creating Transformative Encounters in the Community, New York: Greenwood Press.
Thompson, J. (2003), Applied Theatre: Bewilderment and Beyond, Oxford: Peter Lang.
Part 1
Inspiring stories
Introduction to Part 1
John O’Toole
We call these inspiring stories because we see them as quite typical models of practice of their kind and their time: they are imaginative and thoughtful, and it seems they mainly achieved their purposes and generated some valuable insights. They are stories told realistically and not through the rose-coloured glasses that sometimes colour the memories of drama and theatre educators. They are partly chosen for their multiple diversities and contrasts, most obviously of geography, but also of scale, of intention, of participant community, of resources and funding, and of dramatic and aesthetic form. In addition, the first two provide their own highly articulate definitions for how they name and describe the applied theatre work they do, in terms of the shifting and contested discussions in our field relating to nomenclature and meanings. In this they help the reader new to the field to know what the book is actually about, and neatly lay the groundwork for the articles in Part 2, which thoroughly map the whole context – the practice and the theory.
Three of them also explicitly raise, explore and debate several of the biggest questions and most vexed issues with which applied theatre has been wrestling since its inception, and which still confront in one way or another all the work in the field. These questions are often interlinked, forming a problematic complexity that is a challenge to any applied theatre project designer. They implicitly also form a sub-text at least to most of the other articles in the book.
Multiple interests and purposes
In conventional theatre, the relationships and interests (in both senses of the word) are fairly clear and usually known in advance by all participants, to form a straightforward and agreed transaction: a group of performers choose or are paid to provide a performance with the main purpose of entertainment, to a willing audience that expects just that. There is a clear and mutually agreed power relationship here. Of course, this can all easily get murky or even screwed up when the interests and expectations are not in fact clear or mutual. Because theatre is a group artform, everyone has to be on the same page – at least metaphorically. Those in the performing company must understand each other’s capacities and place in the ensemble, and they must know what the audience wants and expects. Even if they set out to challenge that with an additional purpose such as artistic experiment, educational aim, controversial message or polemic, they must know the limits of tolerance of their audience. If they transgress, the audience has one potent power: to walk out, or disrupt the transaction in some way, by throwing critical comments to break the atmosphere, or insults, or tomatoes and projectiles – or even, in some cultures, to invade the stage and take over the performance. Mostly this does not happen, however, because the contract is agreed and upheld.
In applied theatre, this almost never happens, because there are by definition multiple purposes and usually multiple stakeholders, with disparate sets of interests that must be reconciled. The theatre is being made for instrumental purposes that at the primary level have nothing to do with entertainment, and usually for funders and sponsors who may know nothing about theatre. The theatre-makers (I’m using this word because there is not always a recognizable performance as part of the project) have to know their whole context extremely thoroughly, and navigate into the agreement the interests, knowledge and/or ignorance, and the emotional, intellectual and political tolerances, of those multiple stakeholders.
Power relationships
At the bottom level is usually the target group for the whole experience: the community that somebody has decided needs educating in sanitation, environmental education or HIV-AIDS prevention; the children receiving the theatre-in-education experience; the nurses, police or medical trainees for whom the applied theatre is devised. These are not necessarily either informed or willing audiences. They may indeed be literally captive audiences, unable – because of the power of the organization, the curriculum or the sponsors – to walk out if they don’t like what they are getting. In such cases, applied theatre workers have learned to their cost and chagrin that their purpose in applying theatre to that community group is rarely achieved, and may be severely damaged.
To our credit, and as these four articles demonstrate, this question of power imbalances is one of which the applied theatre community is usually conscious, and that it has often found ways to overcome. It might be as simple as inviting the target community into the planning and design from the start (that’s almost a requirement these days), involving them in the performance itself, and/or giving them some control over the project. Sometimes, highly ingenious solutions have been found – for instance by Victor Nyangore (2000). He was tasked by a health charity to explain to his own community through theatre that they needed to change their traditional personal sanitation methods. A further difficulty was the resistance of key community members to the message, and their reluctance to be involved … except for the responsible older women, the community mothers, who thereupon became the acting company, and delivered their message in a way that was certain to gain at least a respectful hearing.
The dangers of outsiders coming to do good
Nyangore did have one advantage – he was working with his own village, and his own mother was one of those open-minded women. By its very nature, and the needs and demands of the funders, applied theatre usually involves theatre-makers bringing their skills to work for a community of which they are not a part (that’s a normal professional relationship). As in the above example, there can be a disparity between the beliefs of the initiators of the project – in Nyangore’s case, the health agency that was funding it – and the beliefs and wishes of the ‘target’ community. In some projects, the agency and the theatre group may potentially be seen by the community as ‘the enemy’ – for instance, a theatre group hoping to use theatre for local community behaviour change on an issue such as ‘save the trees’, rather than destroying them for necessary firewood or for profit. These theatre-makers are right in the firing line, with the responsibility – before they have a hope of any theatrical or educational success – of at least making the community responsive to the experience … and interested. To do this, they have to thoroughly understand the perspectives of their audience, which means doing their homework, listening, lengthy prior discussion and often two-way negotiation, where the theatre-makers understand and reflect the community’s position too. The theatre-making starts there and no earlier – as our first story in this section, from Papua New Guinea, shows in exemplary fashion. Fly-in-fly-out (FIFO) applied theatre is usually just a waste of time and money, as countless examples vividly testify, such as Jamil Ahmed’s (2002) now legendary bleak comparison of projects in Bangladesh, often used today as a basic lesson in how-not-to practise applied theatre 101 for students. However, twenty years on, many funders at all levels still prefer the apparent metric and economic advantages of a theatre show that can be performed three times a day to a grand total of thousands of spectators, to a program that may work for a week, a month or years with one single community or class. Luckily, the Indian theatre collective Natya Chetana had been doing this in its program to help a village understand the need to save their trees, and had established that rapport for which theatre and performance can itself be a great catalyst, of course … Then one day the local timber industry sent its bullies into the village with the avowed intention of running these subversive interlopers out of town, and even killing one or more, just as an example. The hapless theatre group members immediately found themselves surrounded by a protective group of outraged villagers, who all refused point-blank to release their new friends to the standover team (Patnaik 2004).
Stakeholder expectations
The multiple stakeholders all have their agendas for what they want, what they know, what they don’t or don’t want to know and what they can offer. Applied theatre-makers have to somehow match all of these, and then incorporate them into whatever use they make of their theatre skills. For instance, most theatre-in-education shows or programs immediately need to: (1) satisfy their primary captive student audience; (2) ensure that the show educates, illuminates or at least doesn’t upset their secondary audience of teachers (and the third audience in the teachers’ heads – the parents); and (3) fulfil some educational or curriculum aim given by their funders … before (4) they can consider building their own educational or ideological purposes into the mix. This often demands extreme flexibility, as Chapter 2 vividly shows. If, as often happens, the applied theatre is a collaboration between the theatre-makers and another profession, such as health or medical workers, or police, or university leaders, they may share a common aim, but each of these agencies will bring to the table their agendas, their expertise and their world-views. One factor that any of the stakeholders is quite likely to bring along is a total or partial ignorance about what theatre can do – and, just as important, what it can’t do. Chapter 3 analyses this sensitively.
Sustainability
By its nature theatre is an ephemeral art form – normally a fleeting and transitory experience – and those surprises and provisional insights that it creates are part of its aesthetic. That is in direct contradiction to the usual aim of applied theatre, which is to create lasting effects and behaviour or attitude change, often in contexts where long-term reinforcement of that change is needed – say in prisons, or in working with children of war zones. This problem has to be faced on two levels. In the case of our first three stories, there is no avoiding it, and one-off programs or visits are long discredited as part of those FIFO experiences, except in exceptional circumstances; the theatre-makers therefore have to negotiate something longer and more substantial than the normal ‘one-off’ project. That one-off characteristic is itself a problem for the theatre-makers, whose job is to bring their expertise to a particular situation or commission, and thus work in an endless series of ‘one-offs’. All four of our storytellers in this section show that the question of sustainability, both for themselves, and for their projects, has received considerable thought.
Andrea Baldwin’s story (Chapter 1) is set right at the beginning of what she hoped would be a long and sustained project in Papua New Guinea, where as part of an Australian university team she was commissioned to help especially remote Papua New Guinean communities to deal with the scourges of HIV-AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases, and the attitudes that promulgate them, by encouraging behaviour change. There’s a minefield for a bunch of outsiders. So she started by grounding her account in careful study of the literature, especially on some of the issues mentioned above, before bravely using the word ‘empowerment’ as one of the stated aims of the project. The team’s task was eased somewhat by the fact that they were commissioned by major PNG health agencies, with considerable local resources and a generous timescale for the project to mature. It was a large-scale project in every way, with major funding from the university and the Australian Research Council (which of course both had their agendas and demands to be reconciled), and two very diverse and geographically problematic locations for the action research. The project was based on a long-term ‘train the trainers’ plan, with the intention being for the Australians to eventually withdraw and leave it all to the locals. A decade on, discussion with the author reveals that this has in fact happened, and a form of the project still exists in Papua New Guinea, entirely independent of the ‘Life Drama’ team.
Phoebe Chan’s theatre-in-education project (Chapter 2) was set right at the other end of the scale, a small independent theatre in education company with strong views about what Hong Kong children should know that did not normally form part of either their experience or their curriculum. Her team’s aim was to bring about change, at least in the children’s attitudes and understanding, with the intention of helping them to empathize with Hong Hong’s poorest citizens, and to reflect on the causes of urban poverty.
Like Baldwin, she meticulously backgrounded her story from the literature to explain her approach, as well as her choices of aesthetic and theatrical form. Also like Baldwin, she made the choice to use mainly processual theatrical techniques, including significant deep participation from the audience, to permit active audience engagement in decision-making, which would affect the final dramatic outcome. A remarkable quality of her account is how flexible the team was in monitoring the actual effects of the program, spotting a major flaw through ongoing critique and then making major changes in the aesthetic shape of the whole experience. This also allowed for a measure of sustainability. As a form, theatre in education is by definition FIFO, although this program did allow a significant amount of time (three hours) for their ‘one-off’ experience, and the program’s devisers did not expect results more tangible than a slight shift in understanding – certainly not behaviour change. What their sensitive fine-tuning did ensure was that the program had an extended life – at the time of writing this article, for another two years at least.
Christine Sinclair and Andrea Baldwin’s story (Chapter 3) is another modest, small-scale and entirely local project, where the team and all the stakeholders were local too: insiders responding to a particular purpose, to help local community health workers better understand the needs of their clients. It was initiated not by theatre-makers, but by a group of health workers who were inspired by a demonstration of the power of drama by an outside expert, and initially driven by this group. First, a local school and then (conveniently) a locally based drama expert (the co-author) were co-opted, with a very close relationship ensuing. The story is jointly told by the health leader (Grindrod) and the drama leader (Sinclair), and it explores the importance of effective and equal partnerships in applied theatre. This story is impressive for the way the authors (those leaders themselves) analysed the power relationships in the project, and in particular a crucial unseen power shift that was undermining and inverting the priorities of the project, partly because of the very potency of drama itself. The question of the project’s sustainability was discussed, but this issue was problematized by their recognition