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Don't
Say A Word
interactive
theatre about how not to get your ass kicked
Directed and Joked
by David Diamond
Featuring Students from Gladstone and Tupper Secondary Schools
Headlines Theatre
is proud to announce Don't Say A Word, an original forum theatre
play created by students from Gladstone and Sir Charles Tupper Secondary
Schools. This play is based on their experiences of bullying, harassment,
intimidation and violence. The language of theatre allows them to communicate
the truth of these experiences in a symbolic way. The title, Don't
Say A Word, reflects the code of silence that prevents us all from
stopping violence or seeking support.
Forum theatre takes
a moment from real life and theatricalizes it in order to create a symbolic
moment in time that a larger audience - friends and families who are also
dealing with these issues - can work on. When forum is performed, audiences
are invited to jump onto the stage and into the lives of the characters
to test ideas for resolving conflicts. This style of performance and dialogue
is more than talking about the problems; it asks audiences to practice
solutions. Rather than putting forward a didactic message, it engages
the community in making meaningful choices. And, as our audiences have
told us many times, the experience is engaging, enlightening, fun and
even transformative.
Don't Say
A Word will be performed on and around the
main stairway in Sir Charles Tupper Secondary School (419 East 24th, 3
blocks east of Main Street). We would like as many youth, families and
people who struggle with violence in their community to participate in
this event. As seating is limited, it is very important to make reservations.
Call 604-871-0508
or e-mail the box office
to reserve your seats now!
For background
information on the Don't Say A Word, keep reading...
What is Forum Theatre?
Forum Theatre is a unique type of participatory
theatre that Headlines has pioneered and adapted into a North American
context in Canada, but that derives from the work of Brazilian theatre
director and activist visionary Augusto Boal and his "Theatre of
the Oppressed".
A short play is developed out of a Headlines'
THEATRE FOR LIVING workshop -- perhaps 5 - 10 minutes in duration. The
theatre is created and performed by community members who are living the
issues under investigation. The play is performed once, all the way through,
so the audience can see the situation and the problems presented. The
story builds to a crisis and stops there, offering no solutions. The play
is then run again, with audience members able to "freeze" the
action at any point where they see an incident of oppression, or a character
engaged in a struggle. An audience member yells "stop!", comes
into the playing area, replaces the character s/he sees struggling against
the problem, and tries out his/her idea. We call this an 'intervention'.
The process is fun, profound, entertaining and full of surprises and learning.
It is, ideally, 2 hours long.
For many years Headlines has also been the
only theatre company in the world taking this interactive theatre style
to live television on the Community Channel 4. (This has ended now that
Rogers has become SHAW.) We have been taking interventions from the live
audience, but also have actors on telephones. People call in from home,
talk to an actor, who runs into the studio and does the intervention on
their behalf. Live, interactive television! We have won numerous awards
for these broadcasts.
We have also, in the last two years, been
experimenting with live, interactive web casting. During Corporate U,
in 2000, we took interventions over the web from as far away as Croatia!
A little history about this project
This project grows out of a pilot project
we were asked to do in 2000/01 in the Richmond School District. This was
a 5 day THEATRE FOR LIVING workshop in Charles E. London Secondary that
led to a Forum Theatre performance for 300 students on issues of bullying
in the school.
In a letter to Headlines dated November
15, 2001, Peter S. Healy, Principal of Charles E. London writes: "It
was wonderful to see how our young actors worked with such difficult topics
(as bullying and homophobia) in a manner which obviously struck home with
the audience of 300 Grade 9 and 10 students, and in a way that will have
lasting impact on those who viewed it." Maureen Reid, the Vice Principal
of Sir Charles Tupper has told me anecdotally, that she knows that since
the project was in Richmond, the word "fag" has virtually disappeared
from the hallways of the school.
After the Richmond workshop, we were approached
by Dr. Shelley Hymel, Associate Dean, University of BC. Dr. Hymel was
at the performance. She works on anti-bullying issues in schools throughout
the Lower Mainland. She was so impressed by what she had witnessed, and
the resulting changes in the school, that she expressed interest in replicating
the work in Richmond into other School Districts.
We will be doing this in October/November
2002, in one High School in West Vancouver (Rockridge Secondary) and two
High Schools in Vancouver, (Sir Charles Tupper and Gladstone). The dates
are:
- Rockridge: Oct. 11, 15, 16, 17,
18, 21, 22, 2002
- Gladstone: Nov. 4, 5, 6, 7,
8, 12, 13, 2002
- Tupper: Nov. 25, 26, 27, 28,
29, Dec. 2 and 3, 2002
These three workshops will all have the
same format: the sessions will be seven days, working 6 or 7 hours a day.
Workshop participants will be up to 20 students from each school. Through
the intensive THEATRE FOR LIVING process of issue identification, image
creation, play creation and Forum Theatre performance, students will create
and perform plays about bullying in their school that are specific to
the environment of that school. This is play creation by and about the
students in each school. The resulting plays are highly relevant, but
also provide safety for the actors. No one is telling their own personal
story. We will have created a collective story that tells a truth for
that school.
During the course of two extra interactive
performances on days 7 and 8, I will hand over the facilitation of the
Forum Theatre event to two of the students from the group who have self-selected
to be trained as Jokers (facilitators). While this is not a long time
to do this (only 2 shows) it is the model we used in Prince George to
create the highly successful youth company Street Spirits, which is still
going after almost three years. Each school will then own their plays
and be able to keep performing them in classrooms inside their school
and school district, peer to peer.
We will also, as we have been doing with
our community projects for a few years now, run a graphics competition
through the Art Departments of the schools. The winner of the competition
will be paid for the graphic and teamed up with a professional graphic
artist. Working together they will create the poster and flyer for phase
2 the project.
The validation and skills transfer of this
model are, I think, obvious, as is the opportunity for the project to
have an "authentic" voice that speaks to youth about bullying.
In setting up the first phase, we have made
all the players aware that the second phase, the Anti-bullying MainStage
project, is in the works.
During the first phase, I will keep my eyes
open for 8 students from the two Vancouver schools who "light on
fire"; who understand the nature of taking a moment from real life
and theatricalizing it in order to create a pluralized symbol that a larger
audience, the community, the school, the public can work on. I will be
on the alert for a diverse group who I believe can work together as a
team. Having identified these five young actors, two designers and one
technician, and having secured their participation in the second phase,
the MainStage aspect of this project will begin.
The Anti-bullying MainStage project
The process we will engage in is modeled
after out very successful Squeegee project with street youth a few years
ago. The young actors and I will treat the previous workshops and performances
as research -- the mandate for the play we will create together. We will
have videotaped the performances in the schools during phase 1 as a way
to archive those plays for research purposes.
We will have two weeks, working evenings
during the week and full days on week-ends, to build a common theatrical
language in the small group through physical exercises and to create a
more sophisticated short play than can be fashioned in a one week THEATRE
FOR LIVING community process with 20 people in a workshop group.
Professional designers, a publicist and
Headlines' staff and producing expertise will be attached to the process.
The two students interested in design will work with a professional designer
to create the set, props and costumes. The technical person will work
with our Stage manager as crew and, possibly, as lighting operator.
Our graphic arts team will work with the
winner of the graphics competition to create the poster / flyer, and then
the project publicist will mount a publicity campaign, along Headlines
Outreach co-ordinator.
A full-time counselor will be attached to
the project, on salary to Headlines throughout rehearsals and all performances.
As a member of the Professional Association
of Canadian Theatres (PACT) and a signatory to the Canadian Theatre Agreement
(CTA) Headlines has secured the permission of PACT and Canadian Actors'
Equity Association to mount this non-Equity Production, using high school
students. All student personnel will be paid at least union minimums for
their services, with statutory deductions, and be covered by Headlines'
insurance policies.
As in all of Headlines' work of this nature,
the reason for this entire project is to orchestrate a process in which
the community involved can articulate a true voice about their struggles
(in this case youth and the issues of bullying) and then to engage in
a dialogue (through interactive Forum Theatre) with their peers and the
general public about these issues.
- Creation/rehearsal: January 28
- February 9, 2003
- Set-up in school (no actors): February
10
- Tech rehearsal: February 11
- DressTech and preview: February
12
- Public performances: February 13
- 16; February 20 - 22
- Possible tele/webcast: February
22
Attached you will find letters from the
Vice-Principal of Tupper Secondary, the Principal of Gladstone and from
Dr. Hymel. All rehearsals and performances will be at Tupper.
As well as programming eight public performances
we are also in early stages of investigating the possibility of a live,
interactive tele/web cast on the final performance, February 22. This
would, of course, increase the reach of the Anti-bullying MainStage Project
tremendously.
We are very excited about the possibilities
for this project and the combination of artistic creation and community
development woven throughout every aspect of the process.
For further information, please contact
me at the above address, or: david@headlinestheatre.com.
Sincerely,
David Diamond
Artistic and Managing Director/Joker
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