“We are Performance Philosophy Problems”

Towards an accessible Performance Philosophy?

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Keywords:

cognitve/affective learning, learning disabled theatre, ethics of care, aesthetics of difference, performance research methodologies, presence and voice in performance

Abstract

This article originates from a KeyGroup presentation at the June 2022 Performance Philosophy Problems conference in Helsinki in which the performers of Different Light Theatre Company, a learning-disabled theatre company based in Christchurch, New Zealand, interrogated the conference process, proposing their own research questions for the conference participants as well as questions about theatre, Zoom, and thinking. At the conclusion of the presentation, Laura Cull Ó Maoilearca, asked how ‘we’ (academics and the learning-disabled) can be together in conferences in meaningful and inclusive ways. Two separate pieces form a response to Maoilearca’s question: one from McCaffrey and the other from Maguire-Rosier and Gibson, all participants of the KeyGroup.

McCaffrey starts  and ends with videos of performance (and transcription). Firstly the video message sent by Different Light to the Helsinki conference and secondly The Journeyings of Different Light at the ADSA (Australasian Association for Theatre, Drama and Performance Studies) conference at the University of Auckland, New Zealand in December 2022. The performance questions the company's self or ‘voice’ as determined by the negotiation between the learning-disabled artists, the facilitation of a non-disabled director, and the reception of the performance by a (primarily) non-disabled audience. The middle section is an account by McCaffrey as an ‘unreliable director’ of the processes and politics of making learning-disabled theatre. It performatively demonstrates how the voices of the performers are ‘problems’ for theatrical performance, for an academic conference, and for performance philosophy. Maguire-Rosier and Gibson’s easy-read “story” introduces a dance theatre project in Australia (Days Like These) and a socially engaged theatre project in the USA (To Whom I May Concern) to open up scholarship to people usually excluded from academia due to the density of academic language. Although we keep the offerings separate, both advance the idea that learning-disabled theatre and theatres where people show and share disability and diagnoses of dementia disturb some of the key assumptions of theatre and performance studies, notably ‘withness’ and ‘aboutness’. In terms of ‘withusness’, learning disabled theatre provokes a reconsideration of long-held assumptions concerning liveness and co-presence.

Author Biographies

Janet Gibson

Janet Gibson is a theatre and performance studies scholar interested in socially engaged theatre involving older people with dementia. She is the author of Dementia, Narrative and Performance: Staging Reality, Reimagining Identities (Palgrave Macmillan 2020) and has contributed to Research in Drama Education: Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance and to Contemporary Narratives of Ageing, Illness, Care (Routledge 2022). She is a co-convenor of the Performance, Health and Creative Care (PHCC) Working Group of the Australasian Association for Theatre, Drama and Performance Studies, (ADSA) which is the peak academic association promoting the study of drama in any performing medium throughout the region. She is also a founding member of the Sydney Care Lab, which is in association with the Manchester Care Lab, UK. She is a trained actor (Uta Hagen, HB Studios, New York) who performed in Women in Beckett at Theater for the New City, New York, under the direction of Moisés Kaufman (of The Laramie Project). A certified facilitator for TimeSlips, a creative expression program, Janet is currently collaborating with Dr Meg Mumford on the application of a care aesthetics lens to a TimeSlips program in a Sydney residential aged care home.

Kate Maguire-Rosier

Kate Maguire-Rosier is a dance and disability researcher curious about care, robots and dance theatre. She is currently Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Drama Department at the University of Manchester where she works on a UK Arts and Humanities Research Council-funded project, Care Aesthetics Research Exploration (CARE) with colleagues Dr Réka Polonyi and Prof James Thompson. On the CARE project, she enjoys being part of an interdisciplinary team of researchers in arts and health who specialize in dementia and critical (and creative!) ageing studies. Kate is a dancer. She is also a teacher and Associate Fellow in Advance Higher Education (formerly, UK Higher Education Academy). But above all, Kate is interested in building bridges between what happens inside universities (research) and what happens outside (industry and public involvement). She is co-director of The Care Lab (UK, https://www.thecarelab.org.uk/) and founding member of Sydney Care Lab (Australia, https://www.sydneycarelab.org/ ). Her writing has been published in How Does Disability Performance Travel? Access, Art, and Internationalization (Routledge 2024), The Drama Review, Performance Research, Frontiers, The Conversation (Australia), Theatre Research International, Critical Dialogues, aDm Magazine and on her blog (mrkategoestothetheatre.wordpress.com). She is also the proud human to a gorgeous big dog called Pumba.

Tony McCaffrey

Tony McCaffrey is a Lecturer at the National Academy of Singing and Dramatic Art, Christchurch, Aotearoa/New Zealand and for 20 years has been the Artistic Director of Different Light Theatre, an ensemble of learning disabled artists. He is co-convenor of the Performance and Disability Working Group of the International Federation for Theatre Research. He is the author of Incapacity and Theatricality: Politics and Aesthetics in Theatre Involving Actors with Intellectual Disabilities (Routledge 2019) and Giving and Taking Voice in Learning Disabled Theatre (Routledge 2023). He has contributed articles to Theatre Research International, Global Performance Studies, and The Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism. He has recently contributed chapters to Out of Time? Temporality in Disability Performance (Routledge 2023), How Does Disability Performance Travel? Access Arts and Internationalization  (Routledge 2024), and The Cambridge Guide to Mixed Methods Research in Theatre and Performance Studies  (Cambridge University Press 2024). Different Light have presented self-devised performances in New Zealand, Australia, the USA, and the UK and are currently engaged in a collaboration on Ancient Greek Theatre and Learning Disability with companies in Australia, Belgium, Greece, UK, Switzerland, and Poland.

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Published

30-12-2024