PaR in Musical Theatre
PaR in Musical Theatre
PaR in Musical Theatre
Zachary Dunbar
Royal Central School of Speech and Drama
Practice as research in
musical theatre reviewing
the situation
Abstract
Keywords
practice as research
practice-led
practice-based
doing-thinking
Praxis
multimodal knowledge
performance as
research
interdisciplinary
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Zachary Dunbar
1. http://www.cssd.
ac.uk/events/
research-events/
research-conferences/
song-stage-andscreen-viii-conference.
Accessed 1 December
2013.
2. By which I mean the
mainstream genre
of music theatre
entertainment that is
identified historically
and culturally with
the West End and
Broadway industry
rather than with the
experimental forms
of music theatre,
which were primarily
influenced by the
early twentiethcentury avant-garde
movements in the arts
(Dunbar 2002).
3. Gray (1998), Haseman
(2006): practice-led,
commonly used in
Australia; Freeman
posits that practiceas-research and
practice-based are
used interchangeably
without prejudice
(2010: 1).
58
an essentially dialectical concept into an analytical tool for the appraisal and evaluation of musical theatre PaR.
With a mob on his tail Fagin the master pick pocket in the musical Oliver!
theorizes about a crime-free life: a wife?, a classy job?, a regular nine-to-five?
Alas, these alternatives to a criminal practice propose such modest gains:
...Ithink Id better think it out again!, as his song refrain goes.
Throughout history academics and theatre practitioners have picked a
pocket or two in the name of creative scholarship. In recent times, however,
none will have failed to observe the mob-like effect of practice-based research
projects. They have spread to every quarter of academia, especially where
conservatoires have converged with research universities. There are further
incitements that occasion my thinking out loud here the prospects of Practice
as Research (PaR): a year-on-year growth in PaR interest in musical theatre; a
correlation in the number of supervisees who conduct such research at Royal
Central School of Speech and Drama; my encounter with PaR during my own
Ph.D. studies and a re-encounter in a collaborative composition project. In
addition, a critical mass in the practice-based research outputs within related
fields such as experimental music theatre, new opera, music composition and
performance training, and voice and movement studies has caused me to
ponder why an essentially skills-dense vocation such as musical theatre has
yet to produce a similar density of practice-based outputs. Most recently,
following through on this query I curated an international musical theatre
conference in 2013,1 on the theme of practices, with the possibility of generating papers for a future special issue on PaR in this journal.
In this review I will provide a brief overview of PaR as it relates to musical
theatre. 2 I will use Robin Nelsons recent examination of the field, and particularly the fundamental trope of doing-thinking, which he argues is manifested
in praxis (2013: 40). Like Fagin, my reflective turn is all part of thinking out
again PaR, particularly the various debates and challenges that I will develop
in two discussions. The first includes various settings in academia in which
I have encountered PaR, occasions that have given rise to issues about the
ineffability of the art form and the intentionality of practice during research.
The second discussion focusses on the nascence, resistance and potential of
practice-based research in musical theatre. Crucially the inherent complexity of musical theatre offers us a chance to reflect on the dyadic concept of
doing-thinking. To that end I propose taxonomic distinctions for doingthinking that help us convert an essentially dialectical concept into a discussable analytical tool for the appraisal and evaluation of PaR.
Throughout this article I will refer to PaR interchangeably as practicebased or practice-led research. Opinions vary minimally in its current traffic
within academia, more a matter of frequency of use and research settings than
unique inflections of meaning.3 I also make note, at the outset, of a parallel
mob of readers who at the moment that I speak of the relationship of practice
to research demand recognition of the dialectic that construes research both
in its orthodox and non-orthodox modes as a practice, or research-as-practice.
The practice of least resistance is to skulk Fagin-like behind a discussion in
this article where I introduce the notion of the research self (in the section,
PaR Model) and taxonomic divisions (in the section Towards a Taxonomy
of Doing-Thinking).
A multimodal scenario
A performer interested in British Pantomime wants to explore the complicated interface of singing and of acting in this form of musical theatre. He
or she conducts multimodal research that includes aspects concerned with
embodying a cross-gendered role, the use of breath as an actor versus the
use of breath as a singer, the emotional resonances in the tonal aspects of the
song versus the often ironic objectives signified in the lyrics. A couple of critical positions scroll down from these practice-based concerns: performativity
and gender issues, Estill voice training, Stanislavski-based principles underpinning truthfulness, and standard musicological analysis. Moreover, the
researcher may engage with the possibility of mixed qualities of presentation
(in order to demonstrate outcomes) and dissemination (in order to articulate
the research enquiry).
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Zachary Dunbar
60
In the same seminar, a composer highlighted the issue of offering original composition as evidence of new knowledge, the argument here, by way
of a challenge, is that compositions, as evidence of practice, embody knowledge in an especially valid way. The larger issues looming in this case are
culturally and pragmatically interrelated: the quality and type of accreditation
that the research outcomes are responding to; whom the practice is meant to
enlighten (i.e. its readership); and in what form the outcome is expressed so
that the new knowledge generated by the research is communicated properly,
compellingly and meaningfully to a research community.
In musical theatre, assuming a project is interdisciplinary, tensions regarding validation normally arise in a situation where a researcher self-identifies as a
specialist (actor, singer, dancer, director, composer, instrumentalist), and is also
required to provide equivalent excellence of, or at least masterful conversance
with, any of the adjoining specialties in his or her interdisciplinary research.
A researcher new to PaR may well ask what might conventionally stand for
practice. Or, more technically, to practice that is, the formulation, iteration, consolidation and reflection that occurs more or less simultaneously
in, say, a rehearsal process: such as when a dancer practices a set number of
moves, a pianist practices a song with a singer, an actor practices a scene with
a director. And in view of the practical act, how might this activity be different
from performance? an event whereby modes of spectatorship and experiencing are present during a mimetic or didactic act, in a virtual or real space
that provides (what psychologists may describe as) an environment that is
contextually richer than a rehearsal space?
The twists and turns in the discussions of practice and performance are
part of several overlapping and historical discourses, such as the practical
turn in scholarly research during the 1980s and 1990s, which gave rise to the
emergence of PaR.4 The concept of practice and of performance are further
complicated by the generalized applications of the performative, which
belongs to a formal theoretical framework (pace J. L. Austin or Judith Butler),
and also acts as a descriptor for anything to do with performance or performing. There are various localized and discipline-specific discourses on the topic
of practice and on performance, but it is widely accepted that performance is a
subject that can be subsumed in PaR methodology.
PaR model
Anything with a label of research attached to it implies that there is a great
deal of thinking and reading involved real brainy, superhuman intellectual feats. PaR adds another dimension to this common (mis)conception. In
fact, the practice of doing and of thinking implies a collapse in the Cartesian
distinctions about mind- and body-generated knowledge: I think therefore
Ipractice and I practice therefore I think. For the musical theatre practitioner,
doing-thinking is a process that seems to be already embedded in the concept
of the triple threat the integrated embodiment of singing, acting and dancing. PaR in a sense is about simultaneously doing the walk, the talk and the
thought. How might we perceive and describe the kinds of knowledge that
result from this configuration?
According to Robin Nelson, three interlinked categories of knowledge underscore these actions: know how, know what and know that (2013: 3647).
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Zachary Dunbar
Know how
insider close-up knowing
-
experiential, haptic
knowing
performative knowing
tacit knowledge
embodied knowledge
ARTS PRAXIS
theory imbricated
within practice
Know what
the tacit made explicit
through critical reflection,
-
Know that
outsider distant knowledge
-
spectatorship studies
conceptual frameworks
cognitive propositional
knowledge
Know-how
This state of knowing is defined by Nelson as experiential or haptic. It is
knowledge that has built up inside us, so to speak, through formal practice
and performing. As such, it is also considered to be embodied, tacit or unconscious, and yet somehow potentially communicable. Nelson offers an example
of riding a bike (2013: 9), which relies on a host of procedures such as balance,
vision, the mechanics of pedalling, sense of torque and even a suspension
of faith in the laws of physics while carrying out the act of balancing on two
wheels. Knowing how is embedded in the iterative level of motor skills and
62
encoded in bio-physical and cognitive levels. For an organist who plays a fivepart fugue, a racing car driver in a sophisticatedly computerized Formula One
car, or a performer who mimes a horse in the show War Horse (2007) night
after night, the know-how is evidenced on some level through organized,
purposeful and expressive actions (or indeed purposeful chaos, disorder and
non-linear actions).
Similarly, a musical theatre performer, in the middle of performing, for
instance, Dianas monologue-song Nothing from A Chorus Line (1975),
would fail to accomplish the fictionalizations and mimetic acts that the song
demands without having embodied or practiced, in a structured way, the exterior and interior sensations and images prompted by the text. Yet, if you ask
the actor playing Diana to tell us how she disassociated her real self from the
character singing the song, she would have difficulty in articulating the whole
rehearsed or performed event, let alone a step-by-step account of all the
performance aspects. In a nutshell, knowing how constitutes an understanding that represents more than the (discursive) sum of (experiential) parts.
Know-what
The musical theatre performer, however, may be more articulate about knowing what. When she thinks about her performance (as informed reflexivity
(2013: 44)), her artistic practice comes to the fore as craft, or a set of actions for
getting the desired effect. From a performing standpoint, her description may
include the technical aspects of how an actor can distinguish between diegetic
to mimetic actions; in terms of singing, know-what involves the technical
labels for negotiating the position of the larynx, and also lyrical and speechtype intonation; for movement, the mechanics of archetypal movements that
physicalize the active verbs in the song; for learning the notes, the performer
might utilize the pedagogy of sight-reading skills and music theory principles.
In the way that Milton expresses the intelligence of Adam in Paradise Lost
(1667/1674) by the act of naming things, knowing what involves the manifestation of intelligent knowledge by comprehending and naming the systematic principles that underscore a set of practices. If you can talk the nuts and
bolts of what you do, the chances are you are communicating the know-what
aspects of your practice.
Know-that
Were we to ask the musical theatre performer about the formal methods
or concepts that underscore her craft and interpretation, we are likely to
encounter the knowing that aspect of her knowledge. This is defined in
Nelsons model as conceptual frameworks or cognitive propositions. The
musical theatre performers explanation or description of her practice may
use language and concepts that are formally connected with actor training
(Stanislavski, Michael Chekhov, etc.), singing methods (Bel Canto training,
Estill voice techniques, etc.), movement-based processes (Lecoq, Laban, etc),
or even contextual (history of Broadway and song writing in the 1970s). The
formal nature of such philosophical or practical systems of thought affords
the practical researcher critical engagement with, and further cognizing of,
knowing how and knowing what. This form of knowledge also lays the
foundation of a shared discourse for other practitioner-academics who may
not necessarily understand the metaphorical or analogical language of the
musical theatre practitioner.
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Zachary Dunbar
64
eyeon-theprize type of end game did not fit the remit of a PaR project. I
was further flummoxed by the apparent ineffability of the process of adaptation, which I was meant to explore: what formal language could articulate
the subjective experience of composing and writing? I had not given time
to survey or evaluate a theoretical language (phenomenology?, narrativity?,
postdramatic theory?) that might serve as a conceptual framework through
which I would be able to analyse and articulate my practice. I had not
conducted the appropriate amount and quality of critical thinking to match
the complexity of writing a new musical, and had imagined instead that the
practice would magically show the way.
Eventually, having reviewed the situation la Fagin, I realized I was actually more interested in researching the historical reception of ancient Greek
tragedy as a musical art form. Understanding the practice of staging tragedy
historically, and not experientially, led me to write a historiographical thesis
instead of a PaR one.
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Zachary Dunbar
not make perfect research, but the practice of research will tend in that direction (see the section, Praxis: The past and the present).
Practice-based project
A few years ago, following a production of an original musical, I initiated a
project to investigate integrative and collaborative processes in song writing. In my musical I explored anthropomorphism, that is, actors embodying
animal-like qualities. My role in writing the musical followed a conventional
approach which was to work conceptually on ideas and characters that were
already formulated in a libretto. Following the production, a colleague asked
me whether, as a composer-writer, I had considered working directly with the
actor. By taking part in a more devised/collaborative process, especially with the
intention of integrating movement, voice and action, would a different type of
song emerge? As the basis for a research exploration I put forward the case for
investigating song-writing in a collaborative-devised setting, in an exchange
between actor and composer. The main research concerned the nature and
method of authorship, composing, as well as what constituted moments of
inspiration. I was eager to get into a studio and start playing around, to just
think and do, and see what would happen. However, without the interplay of
knowing what (identifying key methods and operations) alongside knowing
that (conceptual framework), my practice soon lost its epistemological bearings. I also lost sight of my original intentions. Let me review the situation.
The research evolved in three phases. Phase one gathered together three
actors, a director who more or less ran the workshops, and me, who was
mainly behind a camera recording events. If it was my intention to test collaborative/devised processes, that goal was overwhelmed, first, by the exponential amount of interdisciplinary issues generated through the various activities
that included movement, acting and singing. This situation was further exacerbated by my somewhat confused role as both archivist-observer and composer-writer. In phase two of the project I streamlined the process and worked
solely with one actor, with a focus on breathing, sound and systemic movements. I generated the results I wanted and proceeded to produce songs a
song cycle in fact inspired by the material generated between me and the
actor in the practical studio. As I narrated the methods and processes I used
in a video, it dawned on me that I had again lost sight of the intention of my
research. I had not demonstrated or articulated, through a critical framework,
the process by which the practical studio work transitioned into composition.
It was my view that the compositions proved that I experienced collaboration. In fact I had yet to explicitly interrogate modes of authorship, composing
or indeed the ontological basis of inspiration.
66
Diarized, anecdotal, aphoristic and autobiographical experiences of practice used to pass as critical reflection in musical theatre studies. Current scholarly research and publications in musical theatre studies however have framed
this knowledge within established critical reflection and current shared modes
of articulacy: historiography, pragmatic-anecdotal, musicology and critical
theory (see Symonds and Rebellato 2009). Yet the trend in musical theatre scholarship would suggest that PaR represents a new phase. As musical
theatre training and research within the Higher Education sector increasingly
converge, and as experimental music theatre, opera and related theatre studies
such as sound studies reach a substantial mass in their practice-based research
outputs, is it not timely and significant that an essentially skills-dense vocation such as musical theatre takes formal scholarly account of its practices?8
Whats in it for the musical pick-pocket? Depending on what pockets
are being picked, PaR in musical theatre can perhaps open fresh discourses in
re-identifying, defining and problematizing the field of musical theatre, much
like the way the performance- and practice-based turn in research unblocked
the incessant inwardness of scholarship in the field of ancient Classics and in
literature studies. Moreover, PaR projects may deepen and enrich three domains
of knowledge in musical theatre: pedagogy (methods used in teaching or coaching acting, singing, voice and movement), process (creativity and learning strategies in rehearsal and performance mode) and performance (the live, simulated
or virtual co-presence of experiencers and performers). In the field of practicebased music itself, leading research questions such as how is musical performance creatively embodied, or how musical performance practices vary across
different global contexts, idioms and performance conditions, present viable
leads for musical theatre performance practices.9 More interesting, perhaps,
and potentially ground-breaking are the PaR paradigms in the psychology of
music performance, sports science and artificial intelligence.10 Research breakthroughs in these correlative arts and practices have not only enhanced and
deepened experiential/performative knowing in music performance.11 These
sorts of research activities have also brought new areas of discourse in to the
conceptual and methodological language of performance training.
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Zachary Dunbar
artists of these theories through their creative work. The synesthetic, eclectic and anarchistic impulses in twentieth-century modernist movements also
represented deliberate attempts by practitioners to break down or ignore
boundaries between music and in theatre. From Meyerhold to Cage, from
Cocteau to Goebbels, thinking outside the box meant privileging theory as a
formal part of creating new work (Dunbar 2012). Three responses below by
current Ph.D. researchers at Royal Central School of Speech and Drama were
prompted by my request for a reflection upon their praxis in action. Insofar
as they are staged interlocutors with future musical theatre research in mind,
I suggest how their unique mode of doing-thinking may transition into a
musical theatre environment.
Researcher 1: Hannah Ballou
The way I do praxis is to connect my critical framework to my devising
process via daydream and reverie. That is to say, I read around my enquiry...
then I come across a theoretical concept like feminist fluidity in Jackie
Willson or animalsance in Derrida and my performance-maker brain will
inevitably drift toward the possibilities of testing, proving, disproving, parodying, developing, challenging, or otherwise problematizing that concept
on stage. I jot down that performance proposal (it may just be a drawing,
or a fleshed out idea for a game, song, joke, etc) alongside my notes on the
theory. I mark it with a little drawing of a lightbulb. Then, when the time
comes to leave the library and go into the studio to make work, I have a
large collection of performance proposals (lightbulbs) to test in the devising rehearsal room that are born directly from my engagement with the
theory. These form the framework of each new performance I make.
(2013)
The lynchpin in Ballous praxis is manifested through a sense of play (or
lightbulb-ing), which freely operates through her engagement with theory.
For newcomers to PaR the encounter with theoretical writing is characteristically a daunting one; much like the ancient traveller to Delphi, the experiencer is overwhelmed by enigmatic sayings and obfuscating vapours given off
by the alien-sounding language. As Ballou illustrates, concepts, even in their
discursive mode, can be useful as mnemonics or prompts during the process
of generating a methodology.
A composer investigating song-writing and dramaturgy in new musical
theatre may be similarly enjoined to play. Having surveyed the know-what
aspects of song-writing (represented by books and articles on how to write
musicals, and reflections on craft by masters such as Oscar Hammerstein II
orStephen Sondheim), the musical theatre researcher identifies a key principle
such as particularization (i.e. a process of detailing dramatic qualities or journeys of character in a song). He or she may test this principle of character-specific
writing; testing can also mean enacting particularity on an experiential level.
Testing and enacting shade into a methodology, and the theoretical language
uses notions of Roland Barthes jouissance, an orgasmic pleasure that comes from
writing [] free of the constraints and rules of appropriate and inappropriate,
right or wrong (Fortier 2002: 228). Consequently, the PaR researcher through
praxis gains insight into playing, so much so that the experience of spontaneity
and chance-taking becomes intrinsically bound to the act of particularization.
The composer may argue: here are the rules of particularization as I define it,
68
and here is how I systematically play with the rules in order to generate a new
set of principles for character-specific composing.
Researcher 2: Jo Scott
In my work, the notion of praxis encompasses what Robin Nelson refers
to as doing-thinking (2013: 11); that is that there is always a dynamic
relationship between ideas and action, that the doing of the practice is
in dialogue with my own ideas and the ideas of others and that praxis
emerges from that process. There was always a clarity to me in the
central idea of PaR that the enquiry is carried out and enacted through
practice, but the role of theory can be challenging in that process.
Existing theory is for me both the prompt for action (a gap or problem
which I identify and want to explore) and the sounding board for what
emerges from the practice, i.e. do these emergent properties align with,
challenge or interrogate current thinking? However, I also feel like a
central and vital precept of PaR is that practice can generate theory and,
in that sense, the doing is also always thinking.
(2013)
Scott reinforces the idea that feedback loops operate during the process of
doing-thinking. The existing theory (in this case intermediality) prompts practice-based methodology and at the same time comes under scrutiny. Consider
a musical theatre director who wants to observe the external actions of an actor
(gesture, sound, breath, etc.) alongside the phenomenon of truthfulness in his
performance. This is based on the presupposition that the ontology of truthfulness, its verifiable reality, corresponds with the Stanislavskian tradition of reiterative physical actions. Ultimately the musical director wants to develop ways
to intervene in that truthful moment, like keyhole surgery, and redirect things
without disturbing the flow. He or she designs a methodology that incorporates
technology (AV digital recording) to track and archive those psycho-physical
variables. Whether the research is successful in tracking, or even explicating
the embodied qualities of truthful acting, the knowledge gained through this
praxis may impact on the larger discourse of intermediality. Scott asks, do
these emergent properties align with, challenge or interrogate current thinking? The emergent knowledge for the musical theatre director may prompt
a similar question: does current thinking on intermediality have anything to
contribute to the intervention of digital recording in performance training?
Researcher 3: Rebecca Reeves
The relationship between theory and practice in my research has been
typified by a sense of fluidity. Theory and practice are in constant play with
one another; one takes the lead and the other a more secondary role, only
for this to be reversed in the next instance. These shifts are constant and
continual. Allowing theory to take second place to practice, or practice
to theory, with the confidence that all that I have learnt through one will
inevitably manifest itself through the other, has been a particular challenge.
The relationship between theory and practice in research is instinctive,
instinctual and new knowledge appears gradually, sometimes surreptitiously through this constant and continual interplay between the two.
(2013)
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Zachary Dunbar
12. A performer in
musical theatre who
embodies the skills
of playing a musical
instrument, although
the label generically
applies to musicians
whose formal musical
training converges
with theatre practices.
Actors actively playing
an instrument as they
embody a character
role have been
especially prevalent
in recent productions
of Sondheim musicals
by John Doyle. In
experimental music
theatre, the synesthetic
performer is commonly
featured.
70
moments like this, where theory and practice overlap, or to use Borgdorffs
terms again (see endnote 6), they are immanent and performative. There
is an inherent complexity to the embedded-ness of thinking and doing that
amounts to more than the sum of its two parts. So in summary, degree denotes
both definitiveness and transition in the formulation of theory and of practice.
In musical theatre research, a choreographer defines his dance style as
somewhere in the spectrum between George Balanchines classical-balletic
style and Jerome Robbins contemporary idioms. During practice testing this
spectrum he discovers that shaping character-driven dance inspires hitherto
unrecognized embodied knowledge that comes from a different spectrum,
the American modern dance of Martha Graham, Mary Wigman and Agnes
de Mille. An interrogation of stylistic legacy ensues and so does a shift in
elements of practice; initially fixed definitions of theory and practice lose their
moorings for the time being as the researcher redefines what he is now going
to practice based on a priori knowledge of how he or she thought about the
influences on his or her choreography. The reflection of fixed positions (my
legacy) and transitory process (renewed practising and theorizing) represent
the degree to which doing-thinking is happening.
Similarly, a conventional composer defines her style as modernist and
eclectic, in the style of Leonard Bernstein, for instance. At the same time,
the eclecticism in her composers tool kit appropriates elements of the boulevard style of music theatre of Jean Cocteau and Erik Satie. Lately she also
finds herself in the role of a lyricist, actively formulating text as a prompt
to compose music. American and French forms of eclecticism, based on
embodied knowledge (what I do instinctively when I compose) encounters
new definitions through readings of discourses on the practical relationship of composing poetry and composing music. Effectively the composer
enters a transitory state in which she conceptually defines herself as an
eclectic composer, and at the same time increasingly interrogates this definition as she appropriates, through practice, modes of creativity associated
with composing through structural textual narratives. When PaR researchers mobilize thinking about epistemological domains (the basis of embodied
knowledge for instance) and audit how doing and thinking overlap, they are
in a sense engaging with the degree to which the intellectual and the practitioner are undifferentiated.
Frequency/Duration is a process of mapping degrees over the time of
research. Often when supervising postgraduate students, the sense of not
being able to see the wood for the trees represents one of the general
anxieties associated with practice-based research. The woods and trees
constitute the actions of thinking and doing that deepen into a proverbial
forest of entangling terms and a feeling of being bogged down by practice;
the path through research, once defined, never turns out the way it looked
on the page. It is, therefore, useful to map out the degrees of doing-thinking
over time.
Essentially the researcher, by means of constructing or creating a grid,
matrix, graph or timetable, indicates the frequency (number of occasions) and
duration (length of time) of stocktaking or auditing of critical reflection. For
a musical theatre researcher the occasion to step outside the research in this
manner represents a means to apprehend and to evaluate an overall picture
of the doing-thinking process at various stages of research. The content and
style of mapping will, of course, follow a bespoke path to that undertaken by
the researcher. In fact, a scheme of works and/or timescale represents this
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Zachary Dunbar
process of mapping. Defining the frequency and duration of praxis over time
also constitutes a form of doing and thinking in itself, which helps to distance
the researcher from the intensive periods of immersion in research.
Intensity of doing-thinking is defined by the emergence of new forms of
knowledge. A researcher might interpret this event as a kind of landmark
or punctuated moment that offers new ways forward in either the practical
methodology, the problem of theory, or a modulation in the research enquiry
that (happily) matches or converts the findings of a practice into useful knowledge. I recall a session on methodology during my Ph.D. research at Royal
Holloway (University of London) in which a tutor described such an intensive
breakthrough as an Archimedean Eureka moment.
For the musical theatre composer who researches collaborative methods,
the intensity of doing-thinking emerges not so much in the outcome of a wellturned new song (as valuable as that is), but in the increased correlation of her
evolving methods (acts of composing) with emerging insights into, say, the
notion of collaborativity. Similarly, a choreographer-director has an out-ofthe-blue moment and visualizes a totalizing concept for a musical. This has
happened by immersing himself or herself purely in the musical language of
the score rather than in the dramatic arch of the story, whereas previously
text-based analysis was the primary activity in his or her practice. The totalizing breakthrough is an intensive moment in doing-thinking if what follows
is a radical reconsideration of the practical activity (in this case, from reading
and analysing to aural awareness), and the development of new methodology
that radiates from this breakthrough. Admittedly, we might also consider the
sensation of a breakthrough as a graduated event, an aggregation of subtle
shifts in patterns of thinking and doing.
By observing such moments of intensity in doing-thinking, a researcher is
made aware of gradual or sudden leaps in knowledge, and also where those
cognitive and practical turns accelerate, open up or reorganize the infrastructures of the research. A significant criterion for a successful PaR thesis is the
advancement or offer of new knowledge to the field. Observing the intensive
moments in doing-thinking is one way to acknowledge the gains and developments during a PaR project, perhaps the reassurance (or extra insurance) as
one nears the finishing line of a thesis.
72
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Suggested citation
Dunbar, Z. (2014), Practice as research in musical theatre reviewing
the situation, Studies in Musical Theatre 8: 1, pp. 5775, doi: 10.1386/
smt.8.1.57_1
Contributor details
Zachary Dunbar trained as a concert pianist in both the United States and the
United Kingdom (Fulbright, RCM) before embarking on a combined career
in music and theatre. He currently works as a director, writer, composer
and performer in different genres that have included radio drama (BBC 4),
stage plays, musical theatre, Beijing Opera, soundscape drama and dance
theatre. His original works have been staged at Camden Peoples Theatre,
Pleasance Theatre, Bloomsbury Theatre, Brighton Underbelly, the Embassy
Theatre, several Edinburgh-fringe productions (Fringe-First nominated), and
the Jungehunde Festival (Denmark). At RCSSD, MD for The Year of the Pig,
Into The Woods, Sunday in the Park with George, The Bakers Wife. Directing
credits include Euripides Bacchae (Central) and forthcoming Martin Crimps
The Country (Camden Fringe Festival) with Twice Born Theatre. He has
academic publications in the field of Greek tragedy and in Music theatre with
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