Monthly Archives: November 2015

Staging a Cause

Elspeth Tilley does the little things that many do on the homefront to protect the planet, from recycling and marching against climate change to encouraging her family to walk and take public transport.

On a global scale, though, the Massey University theatre and arts lecturer knows that many are tired of being bombarded with information and statistics about climate change.

On the eve of one of the most important global meetings, the United Nations Conference on Climate Change (COP21) in Paris, which starts on the evening of November 30 (NZ Time), her short, provocative play, Flotsam, has been accepted by the New York-based Climate Change Theatre Action group, as one of the official plays.

“Information about climate change is very depressing and leaves us all churned up, thinking the world’s going to end,” says Tilley.  “The result is that people switch off. Instead, it works to reach people’s hearts and consciousness, and to help them think differently.”

Playwrights like David Geary, a Vancouver-based Maori playwright and Jacqueline Lawton, an award-winning black American playwright, are among 50 writers whose poetry, plays and songs were chosen by the action group to be performed before and during the Paris event.  Not all will be held in Paris, though, and Tilley’s play is being shown in Chicago, Washington, New York and Virginia.  Other productions range from living-room readings to fully produced shows, and from site-specific performances at the foot of glaciers to radio programmes and film adaptations.

Tilley says that climate change is often seen through a policy or scientific lens, and solutions are discussed only in political offices, boardrooms and negotiating halls.

Her play is based on the real-life case about a man from Kiribati – Ioane Teitoita – who was denied status as a climate change refugee and sent home.  In a case which affected Tilley, the issue is battled out between a refugee application officer following the rules, and her teenage daughter, who challenges her mother about the case after following it on Facebook.

In Flotsam, the refugee officer says: “It’s not that simple, love. The law says there must be a well-founded fear of persecution causing serious harm to qualify for refugee status.  Maybe there might be a cyclone causing serious harm, maybe not.  But a cyclone isn’t persecution.  I can’t override the wording of the law, it’s my job to apply the letter of the law.  If it says definite serious harm, then I have to require definite serious harm to prove the application”.

The case of Teitoita, who was sent home, stuck with Massey Associate Professor Tilley, who says: “It’s symbolic of the system’s response. Eventually, we are going to have to welcome climate change refugees. We can’t keep turning a blind eye, treating them like an inconvenient teenager.”

Flotsam premiered here at a Massey University climate change event, Waves, earlier this month and each production overseas features local actors and directors – it’s being shown at the Institute for Excellence in American Contemporary Theatre in New York on Tuesday, chosen by Matthew Clinton Sekellick, an award-winning director. Theatre activism isn’t new to Tilley, who teaches a paper on the expressive arts, so her students have been involved in everything from a multimedia smokefree campaign on campus, to a play about GM corn.

“We emphasise artistic expression as both intrinsically worthwhile and as a means to an end. Art has aesthetic value, but it’s also powerful as a communication tool that can connect people with ideas, provoke new ways of looking at things, and create change.”

At the Waves event, Massey PhD student Sara McBride acted in the world premiere of Geary’s play, Morehu and Titi, about a tuatara and muttonbird heading for Antarctica on a floating island.

McBride, a disaster management communications specialist, has seen the effects of climate change first-hand, after working in the Solomon Islands as a volunteer communications advisor.  “The Reef Islands was one of my areas, where you have 14,000 people living on coral atolls totalling 12 square kilometres.  The area has eroded so much. Locals are losing their island, but they can’t leave, and it’s heartbreaking to watch.”

She says that climate change is now the most pressing issue for those working in disaster management.  “It’s like, how can we fix this, or mitigate it?”

McBride also knows what it is like to live with the threat of disaster hanging above.  Growing up in Washington state, she lived within 15 kilometres of the Hamburg nuclear site as her father was a nuclear chemist.

“We grew up with the threat of the nuclear plant melting down.  We had to do drills regularly and we were told that if the nuclear facility went critical, we had to put a big white sheet up on our window to let the military know we were still alive.

“Working in disaster management has been a natural extension of my childhood.”

Elspeth Waves

NUTS NZ Issue 8

Editorial

Welcome to the eighth edition of NUTS NZ – the Newsletter for University Theatre Studies New Zealand. The purpose of the newsletter is to help us communicate more effectively as a community of scholars interested in Theatre and Performance.

The meeting of the NZ Universities Committee for Theatre/Performance Research was held at University of Auckland on  Monday 9 November 2015. One of the issues that was discussed is the status of creative outputs as part of research, particularly given the approaching PBRF exercise and the challenges we face as a community in how performance research is evaluated. Several members had recently experienced an internal institutional review of research and it was noted that while Universities acknowledge the work and value of creative outputs there is still an undermining of the value of this work in regards to the PBRF. As one member explained, its difficult to find time to write PBRF articles when much of our time might be taken up juggling teaching and directing or producing theatre productions. Although productions might count internally within universities as valid and justifiable research – some internal reviews conducted at Universities in NZ struggled to find ways to account for these creative outputs as part of the PBRF exercise. This seemed to highlight a suggestion made by Sharon Mazer at a previous meeting that was about encouraging us as a community to make sure we attend each other’s creative work and write reviews or peer evaluations that might help to critically articulate and place such work as original contributions to knowledge. We also discussed how different institutions might manage payment to individual academics who might be involved in different creative projects ‘outside’ the university. The next meeting of the NZ Universities Committee for Theatre/Performance Research will be hosted by the University of Otago next year.

This is the final edition of NUTS NZ for 2015 and it has been interesting keeping up-to-date with what our various theatre programmes are doing over the year. If you have also found the newsletter informative and worthwhile, please do take the initiative to ensure your colleagues, postgrad students, and administrators are aware of NUTS and the dates for submission of news stories and items. We are glad to report that we will be back again next year. We plan to circulate our ninth issue of NUTS NZ in mid-March 2016, and we will need items of news by 26 February. As always, submissions should be sent to the NUTS NZ editor Jane Marshall:  j.g.marshall@massey.ac.nz

Newsletter Issue

Information Required by

Date of Circulation

Issue 9

26 February 2016

11 March 2016

Issue 10

29 April 2016

13 May 2016

Issue 11

29 July 2016

12 August 2016

 Issue 12

28 October 2016

11 November 2016

Kind regards,

NUTS NZ editors: Jane Marshall and Rand Hazou.

NUTS People

In each edition of NUTS NZ we profile an academic and a postgraduate student to show case “our people” and their current research/interests. In this issue we have Dr Rand Hazou and PhD Candidate Ammar Almaani, both from Massey University.  As always, NUTS NZ asked each of them to answer the following questions:

  • What is your research about?
  • What theatre/performances have you seen recently?
  • What have you been reading lately?

Rand

Dr Rand Hazou

Research: My research tends to focus on theatre engaging with issues of social justice. A large majority of the theatre I tend to write about deals with social isolation or marginalisation. I’ve written about refugee theatre, Palestinian theatre, and documentary theatre. At the moment I am trying to finnish an article on Auckland-based Massive Company (http://www.massivecompany.co.nz)  and their production of ‘The Brave’ which explored stories about contemporary masculinity and male identity in New Zealand. 

Theatre: In September I saw David Greig’s play ‘The Events’ which was staged by Silo Theatre at Q Theatre in Auckland. The production has stayed with me. Each night the production featured a different local choir from around Auckland, who provided musical accompaniment for the performance. It was interesting watching these ’non-actors’ negotiate the stage space and their ambiguous placement as both ‘performers’ and as ‘audiences’ to the action that was unfolding on stage. I also liked the way Beulah Koala played all the secondary characters from perpetrator of a crime, to counsellor, to passer-by, to the Lesbian lover of the main protagonist played by Tandi Wright. I liked the idea that wherever the main protagonist and victim turned, she ended up seeing the face of the perpetrator who had committed the horrendous crime that continues to haunt her. The most recent performance I saw was a promenade-style adaptation of Strindberg’s The Stronger which was staged in the bar and dressing rooms of The Basement Theatre in Auckland. Playwright Nathan Joe took inspiration from Strindberg’s one-sided conversation in the original play and developed a series of scenes exploring this device in which audiences were invited into different areas of the The Basement to ‘over-hear’ different pairs of characters confront each other. 

Reading: I’m reading Urbanesia: Four Pasifika Plays (Playmarket 2012). I was particularly keen to read ‘My Name is Gary Cooper’ by Vitor Rodger which appears in this volume. I’ve also been reading ‘Out of Time Out of Place: Public Art (Now)’, which is edited by Claire Doherty (Art/Books, 2013). The book features forty works of art that intervene in some way in the social order. These tend to be works ‘staged’ outside of conventional art gallery spaces. I was particularly intrigued by the work ‘NowhereIsland’ by Alex Hartley that is documented in the book which began with the ‘discovery’ of  a rocky outcrop in the arctic that had  been been revealed by a retreating glacier. The artist ended up towing this land-mass from the Norwegian arctic circle to the UK where it was presented as a new Island state accompanied by a mobile embassy. The work involved 23,003 people signing up to be citizens of the new Island nations and were issued passports. The work seemed to raise really interesting questions about displacement, mobility, and what it means to be a citizen.

Ammar's PiC

Ammar Almaani

Research: My study examines the contemporary political Arab theatre that accompanied the social and political movements of 2011, the revolutions of the so-called ‘Arab Spring’ and its aftermath. Since the Arab Spring numerous themes have been emerging in Arab theatre, particularly focusing on long-neglected issues regarding minorities, women, refugees, youth disenfranchisement, terrorism and extremism in Arab region. The aim of the study is to investigate how this contemporary Arab theatrical wave showcases and encapsulates the Arab people’s struggle against colonial and postcolonial practices.

Theatre: I have recently seen the play إكسكلوسيف  (Exclusive), written and directed by Heider Mun’athir, that addresses the tragic repercussions of extremism in Arab region. Themes running through Exclusive, staged on Theatre National Mohammed V in the 7th Arab Theatre Festival in Rabat-Morocco, explore Arab people cry against the ideological terrorism of Daesh group, so-called ISIS, the psychological motives that drive a human to extremism and the role of some institutions in the creation of terrorist.

Reading: I have been reading some articles that deal with how creative dissenters, such as the Egyptian playwright Leila Soliman, have used theatre as a revolutionary tool that interrogates, scrutinizes, deconstructs, and reflects.

 

Publications

Despatch 9.32.48 AM

Despatch by Angie Farrow published by Steele Roberts

Hannah Danson is a hard-bitten New Zealand war journalist who has already served in Bosnia, Afghanistan and Somalia.  Along with her photographer lover, Richie, she finds herself in a dangerous war zone covering the story of a genocide.  At the heart of the story is a Catholic Nun called Sister Mala and the Sister’s involvement in the genocide drives Hannah into an obsessive quest to discover her whereabouts.  The journey to find the truth takes her from observer/commentator of the war to active participant. Epic, disturbing and unnervingly funny, Despatch examines the relationship between responsibility and matters global importance, forcing us to confront our complicity in events that seem beyond our control.  It is one of several of Angie’s plays that deal with contemporary issues which concern us all.  It was the winner of The Pen is a Mighty Sword International Playwriting Competition run by Virtual Theatre in the USA.

Rowan Gibb’s Biography of Henry Hoyte – An Update

I am continuing with my biography of Melbourne born actor (and crime novelist) “Henry Hoyte” and his three wives, all of whom were on the stage (in England, Australia, New Zealand and America). His first wife, who made her stage debut in Australia in the 1880s and ended her career in a film with Elizabeth Taylor in 1944, was the daughter of one of the brothers who ran Hamilton’s Dioramas in England through the second half of the 19th century, and my next publication will be what amounts to a 400 page footnote on the family and their dioramas, the details of which have hitherto eluded researchers. Another brother, Harry Hamilton, was associated with one of the many “Christy Minstrel” groups who played in Great Britain from 1857 and I am putting together a complete prosopography and itinerary of all these groups and their tours in Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand, India and the East Indies.

Performances

Waves

imageclimatechangetheatreaction

Waves was Massey University Wellington Campus’ contribution to Climate Change Theatre Action (#‎ClimateChangeTheatreAction), a series of worldwide readings and performances staged in 22 participating countries led from New York by Theatre Without Borders, The Arctic Cycle, and No Passport as part of Artcop21 – the global cultural programme of the United Nations Conference on Climate Change. Waves was the only Climate Change Theatre Action event for New Zealand. Students and staff from Massey’s theatre studies and expressive arts programmes entertained, consoled and confronted their audiences with works humorous and intense, problem-illuminating and solution-focussed, powerful, sometimes funny, sometimes catastrophic, often moving and inspirational. The works included exciting new world premiere short plays from David Geary (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Geary), Jacqueline Lawton (http://www.jacquelinelawton.com/bio.html) and E.M. Lewis (http://emlewisplaywright.com/). Our own English & Media Studies creative communication tutor and NZ playwriting star Phil Braithwaite (http://www.playmarket.org.nz/playwrights/philip-braithwaite) gave a reading from his new work, The Atom Room, plus we launched some brand new talents. See more at: http://sites.massey.ac.nz/expressivearts/2015/10/13/waves-climate-change-theatre-action/#sthash.l54ZwNlF.dpuf

Two Postgrad Documentary Theatre Projects:

Ending the Silence

Ending the Silence.Flyer
Ending the Silence is a Documentary Theatre project which has been created as part of a Master’s research project at Massey University. For this project, postgrad student Rebekah Hines has explored her German heritage and in particular her great-grandparents experiences during the Second World War which have been somewhat hidden or obscured. The aim of this project is to better understand historical conflicts and how issues of heritage and inheritance have informed Kiwi/German bicultural identity. Ending the Silence also aims to explore how documentary theatre might enable a closer investigation into topics which are regarded taboo and the extent to which theatre can give a voice to those who have been silenced due to the pressures of social constructs regarding German War Guilt. Set around a family table in modern day New Zealand, the play hinges on questions of identity, perceived guilt, and the untold stories of the past. The play will be staged at Massey University, Albany Campus on November 26th and 27th at 7:30pm. Seating is limited and bookings are required.Email kah.hines@gmail.com for more information.

Barrier Ninja: A verbatim play about hauora by Fran Kewene

NB

This show was developed as the performative component of Fran Kewene’s Masters of Arts, in Theatre Studies at the University of Otago. The question being asked was; ‘how can verbatim theatre be used to document and then represent people’s experiences of hauora?’ Kaupapa Maori has been foundational to the examination, exploration and has guided the re-presentaion of people’s experiences in this solo performance. Barrier Ninja is a verbatim play about hauora based on the personal and professional testimonies of nine Dunedin people. Hauora can be translated as ‘hau’ breath and ‘ora’ life, the breath of life and health. These nine people’s conversations were recorded and then edited to create an audio score. What is unique about this form of verbatim theatre is the way the audio score is played through headphones on an MP3 player and then spoken word-for-word in the performance. This ‘headphone’ technique ensures the actor, Fran Kewene, stays true to the nine people’s vocal inflections and intonations. In rehearsal, the film of the conversations is then studied to inform the body language and gestures for the performance. This ‘headphone’ technique also makes overt the mediation process between the nine participants, the actor, and the audience. A Kaupapa Māori approach underlines the research, editing and production of this play putting Māori experiences and observations of hauora centre stage.

Teaching Positions

Teaching Fellow in Theatre Studies University of Otago

Applications are invited for a full-time, fixed-term Teaching Fellow position in the Theatre Studies programme within the Music Department. The position will run from the 1st of February to the 30th of June 2016. The main tasks of the position involve contributing to the planning and teaching of assigned papers and assessment of students’ work. As the Teaching Fellow, you should be able to teach aspects of research methodology and critical theory (ideally Marxist, Gender and Postcolonial theory, and Carnivale) for a 300-level course, and to deliver most of the curriculum of a core 200-level survey course that comprises theatre history and theory, dramatic criticism and textual analysis. You will also be expected to contribute to teaching elsewhere in the programme, preferably the 400-level Trauma and Violence in Performance paper, covering subjects such as the Eichmann Trial, Butoh and The Grand Guignol, and/or a 300-level and 400-level course on aspects of modern drama. The successful applicant will have a PhD or close to completing a PhD and will be required to show evidence of their ability to teach effectively. View the job description via the University of Otago website: https://otago.taleo.net/careersection/2/jobdetail.ftl?lang=en&job=1501622

Specific enquiries may be directed to Hilary Halba, Head of Programme, Theatre Studies, on Tel: 03 479 8925 or via email: hilary.halba@otago.ac.nz

Applications quoting reference number 1501622 will close on Friday, 27 November 2015.

 

 

 

2015 LitCrawl – Wellington

Check out LitCrawl in Wellington this weekend, Saturday 14 November. 15 Events, Countless Readers.

Bryan Walpert is on a ‘Scientia [knowledge]’ panel : 7.15pm Arty Bees, 106 Manners Street.

Ingrid Horrocks is reading in a competing slot on ‘Real Life’ : 7. 15pm Concerned Citizens Collective, 17 Tory St.

Then Bryan will be on for a second run as part of a Hoopla poets reading 8.30pm Concerned Citizens Collective, 17 Tory St.

http://www.litcrawl.co.nz/

litcrawl%20web%20map

Congrats to Angie

Big congratulations to Angie Farrow, whose full-length play ‘Despatch’ has just been published with Steele Roberts Publishers NZ. Despatch examines the relationship between responsibility and issues of global importance by focusing on an international war correspondent who covers the events of a genocide. The action follows Hannah Danson, an ambitious Kiwi journalist obsessed with pursuing stories to the world’s most dangerous territories. Despatch has been performed both on stage and on radio on RNZ and the BBC.

Angie Farrow

 

 

Arbor Day Competition Winner

Warm congratulations to Megan Stace-Davies, School of English and Media Studies tutor at Manawatu, on winning Massey University’s Arbor Day Writing Competition. Megan’s entry was a story about rescuing a cherry tree that was repeatedly attacked by vandals.  It was commended by the judges for its “emotional power” and the “crystal-clear way she expressed this”.

See: http://www.massey.ac.nz/massey/about-massey/news/article.cfm?mnarticle_uuid=BD055051-AE39-CD6B-6C92-D66B6C8148B9

tree2

More Creative Works from Waves

The EAC Climate Change Creative Writing finalists Stevie Greeks, Braidicea Warriner and Sophia Dempsey receive their awards from EAC president Olie Body

The EAC Climate Change Creative Writing finalists Stevie Greeks, Braidicea Warriner and Sophia Dempsey receive their awards from EAC president Olie Body

Last but not least in our series of posts of creative works from Waves: Climate Change Theatre Action Aotearoa (#climatechangetheatreaction), we bring you all in one place the links to the three finalists’ poems from the Expressive Arts Club Climate Change Creative Writing Competition.

The Expressive Arts Club is a large and vibrant student club at Massey Wellington campus open to students and alumni in our three Expressive Arts disciplines: creative writing, digital media production and theatre studies.  (Plus we do find their friends from other majors tend to want to join the fun too, which is fine by us as the more the merrier.)  EAC ran meet-ups and showcase events throughout 2015, culminating in the climate change creative writing competition in association with Waves.  Many more events are planned for 2016 so if you want to join the best student club on Wellington campus, see http://www.mawsa.org.nz/clubs/clubs-mawsa-2015/massey-wellington-expressive-arts-club/ for details.

Thank you to Dr Ingrid Horrocks, creative writing senior lecturer, for expert judging of the entries in the EAC competition.  Here are all three finalists – congratulations to them all, and happy reading!

Links to read online the three shortlisted poems from EAC Climate Change Creative Writing Competition 2015.

1. Finalist: A race to extinction by Stevie Greeks

2. Highly Commended: Melting Clocks by Braidicea Warriner

3. Winner: Fade Out by Sophia Demsey

Melting Clocks: Poem from Waves

DSC_2637

Braidicea Warriner reading her work at Waves: Climate Change Theatre Action Aotearoa

In the second installment of our creative work posts from Waves: Climate Change Theatre Action Aotearoa (#climatechangetheatreaction), we bring you ‘Melting Clocks’ by Braidicea Warriner.  This poem was Highly Commended in the Expressive Arts Club Climate Change Creative Writing Competition 2015.

Braidicea Warriner recently completed a Bachelor of Arts where she developed a passion for writing screenplays. The weirdest thing she’s ever written is a love poem from a grassy lawn to a willow tree. Some of her favourite-sounding words include; effervescent, epiphany, clandestine and cacophony.

 

 

 

Melting Clocks

By Braidicea Warriner

Salvador Dali’s
melting clocks are
all the more
relevant today
At my house
the tap drips
like a reminder
that this big blue
marble of dreams
is quickly dissolving
into an apocalyptic puddle
Pearls of water
slap the stainless steel
like hurried footsteps
Water weeps from the hour-hand
and time drains down the colander
in the kitchen sink
Drowning tensions
are shipwrecked
in my stomach
as I gaze at
the intricate tree
stump
outside my window
Exposed like an open artery,
it bleeds sap
seeping down its age-defining rings
Branches and twigs
lay scattered
like dismembered
body parts,
a skeleton that was once
filled with the flesh
of crimson flowers
and outspoken birdsong
The tap continues
to drip relentlessly
like a siren in my ear
it strikes the stainless steel
harder and faster
A pool of water trickles
down the edge of the bench
like the world slipping
off its surface

Creative Works from Waves

DSC_2552

Philip Braithwaite reading Danny’s Monologue at Waves: Climate Change Theatre Action Aotearoa

If you couldn’t make it to Waves, our fantastic #climatechangetheatreaction event recently, or you were there, loved it and would like to relive those magic moments, we’ll be posting some of the creative writing work here for your reading pleasure.  So no more fear of missing out!

First up, we’re posting Phil Braithwaite’s moving monologue from The Atom Room. Phil, who teaches on our Expressive Arts programme, has won multiple awards including the top playwriting award in New Zealand, and we were honoured to have him share at Waves this sneak preview from his next major work.  Our audience nominated the lines ‘And the rats and stoats’ and ‘I don’t even know who to be angry at any more’ as some of the best lines in the show (along with David Geary’s Al Gore saying ‘I told you so!’)

In The Atom Room, Danny and Sarah are a modern couple. They are living in a long-distance relationship: he is in Wellington, and she is on Mars. But this is a universe where the Earth has been catastrophically damaged by tsunamis and nuclear meltdowns, and the rich elite are moving to outer colonies and Mars.

Sarah is an engineer and scientist in the Mars programme. Danny is on his own on Earth, working for Envirocorp, the only organisation left that looks out for the environment. Every now and then they can meet in The Atom Room: the most advanced virtual avatar programme in the galaxy. In his monologue, Danny is engaged in a series of interviews, trying to talk about the death of his planet, and why he refuses to leave it.

Danny’s monologue from The Atom Room.

Philip Braithwaite

DANNY               I once heard this saying: ‘They were joined at the wound.’ That’s how it was with me and Sarah. Not only that, you know, but we discovered pretty early on that we’d both lost everyone in the deluge. We were both orphans.
Problem is, now the world is crawling with orphans, running around, trying to find a home.
When someone’s about to die, and you know they haven’t got long left, you ignore it. You make excuses.
He came home one day. She knew he’d been sick, but mum just thought it was the weather, it was a cold, it was whatever. He brought home some lemons, a bag of lemons. And she said he couldn’t hold onto the bag. He was so weak he couldn’t even carry a bag of lemons.
They’d be out for their daily walk and he’d say, ‘hold on,’ and he’d have to take some time to get himself together. He’d clutch at a pole or a stairwell or anything that was handy. She said that was all she knew about how sick he was; the rest he kept hidden, beneath that iceberg: the giant was cracking and melting.
The Earth was like that: it cracked open, it split itself down the fault lines. It was sick, its sickness was stabbing our faces, tumbling through us, but we had cars and jobs and families, and we didn’t notice. We lost touch. We walked around in the streets. We didn’t see.
I wasn’t there when the deluge came. We called it the deluge, but you know, that’s only the first act. The fault lines, they opened up through the middle. It’s a good thing space exploration was up and running at the time. It’s good the Russians and Americans kept trying to outdo each other. If you had enough money when the tsunamis and storms came you could get out.
You know how everyone thought it was gonna be nuclear war that ended us? It wasn’t like that. It was so much subtler than that, so much slower. It was just that we weren’t paying attention.
Dad was getting radiation therapy for his cancer at the time. Radiation therapy! All he needed to do was stand outside! Open up his arms and let the sky pour itself inside him. The iceberg, it melted, it flowed into the world. The earthquakes, then the tsunamis. The meltdowns. It’s hard to know whether it went willingly or under duress, whether it gave us a passing thought or whether it was happy to jettison us, so that maybe it could start again.
Nothing much could survive those first few months. But somehow the planet spared me. I was standing on train tracks, the train was coming, and it went right past me.
Actually I was in an office building discussing a document on the preservation of native birdlife against the threat of rats and stoats, and then the tsunami came and washed away the buildings. And the rats and stoats, so that was that problem solved.
We were evacuated and taken to a safehouse. One of the many ironies: because I work for the environment we were able to avoid the extremities that it threw at us. Sit it out.
After that, when the world had shaken us free, we couldn’t cling on anymore; the fault lines, they’d all cracked open; we were walking inbetween, hanging on to the cliff face.
Charitable trusts, church groups, they set up shelters, and gave out free counselling, if you didn’t mind the ministers, the church fathers, even the liberal ones, starting to rabbit on about the end-times and being prepared and all that. If you could put up with that then at least you had someone to talk to and a cup of tea: in that sense they certainly were prepared. The earth is cracking open and you’ve still got your choice of Dilmah special filter, Twinings, Bell, or Rooibos for the more adventurous parishioner.
I never saw it, except I did. It’s worse in your mind. I have this dream, where the storm comes over the horizon, the burning light, and it sort of envelops everyone … then … nothing. I wake up. I wish it was as dramatic as that. It wasn’t like that. I sat it out.
When the atmosphere became unbreathable, we all bought oxygen helmets. Oxygen helmet manufacturers. Advertising! Everywhere!
It seemed like there was this shift, this perceptible change in … I don’t know, agendas. Suddenly the planet was dead, but no-one was telling you about it. The advertising, it washed over you, like that giant iceberg, flooding towards you, without shape, you’re numb to it. It rolls towards you, this giant mass of buy this and go here and do this and everything’s fine. And money and corporations and pop culture and oil and lemons and chemicals, and Hollywood stars and hydrogen bombs. Ads and bad poetry, and sometimes you can’t tell the difference.
But it wasn’t about Earth. It was pointing somewhere else. No-one was talking about Earth. The commercials, they were talking about spreading out, us children, leaving home for the first time, into the stars, it was time, time to make the change, time to cut the apron strings, that’s where we were supposed to be, out there, the exterior of life. When life throws you lemons. That’s where you went if you had the money. That’s where you could feel better. You could pay in instalments. Equity, loans, brokers. Suddenly everyone’s flying to the Moon, to the space stations. They all took off, the governments couldn’t stop them. There was no government, even that was gone. You didn’t even know who to be angry at anymore. You walk through the embers now and all you see is where things used to be. We’re defined by the past tense.
So Sarah went to Mars, to build a new Eden up there, start again. Create opportunities for chain stores and Dilmah tea bags. I stayed here and tried to rebuild the old. But I want to be here. And I’m starting to think, maybe that’s the difference between me and her.
I once said to her, ‘We’re joined at the wound.’ She didn’t like it. She thought it was a weak thing to say. She said I feel sorry for myself, and we have to just get on with it. And I suppose I do feel sorry for myself, but I don’t. I feel sorry for us. ‘Cause it showed us who we really are.

New Postgraduate Paper in Theatre for Innovation

A/P Elspeth Tilley

A/P Elspeth Tilley, paper coordinator

The School of English & Media Studies is launching a new postgraduate communication paper in 2016.

The paper, 139.764 Theatre for Innovation and Communication, is available to students in both the Master of Communication and Bachelor of Communication Honours programmes.

It is an internal, second-semester paper offered at Wellington, and is timetabled on a Tuesday from 4pm to 7pm to enable working professionals to attend in the evening.  Other PG papers in the same programmes are available on Wednesday and Thursday evenings so that professionals studying while working can make up a viable schedule of after-work study on Wellington campus.

Theatre for Innovation and Communication offers an advanced, practical exploration of theatrical improvisation techniques in relation to enhancing creativity, innovation, leadership, teamwork, and communication performance, with an emphasis on the application of theatrical techniques to communication and innovation challenges.

It is designed for those with organisational experience who want to understand how theatre and roleplay can extend their skills as a communicator, manager and team facilitator, or for those with theatre experience who want to move into applying that background to organisational training or communication roles.

In class, students will examine a range of historical and contemporary models for improvisational theatre through reading, seminar discussion and evaluative writing and engage in a range of practical theatre exercises such as spontaneity, story-telling, and character and dramatic narrative development during workshops.  They will also study organisational communication theory and models, particularly evidence-based approaches to non-verbal communication and teamwork.  As part of the final assessment, they will be required to bring these two areas of learning together to research, plan, pitch, deliver and evaluate their own short workshop using theatre and improvisation to offer a communication intervention.

Paper coordinator Associate Professor Elspeth Tilley said the course filled a clear gap in available curricula for postgraduate communication study. “There is growing recognition of the value of creative techniques for improving business and theatre techniques for enhancing communication, but there is nothing like this that brings them together in one integrated learning experience at postgraduate level.”

Dr Tilley has a background as an improviser and theatre practitioner, and has also taught and researched in communication and public relations at advanced levels for more than a decade, meaning she was able to connect up these two areas of expertise in designing the paper. “Organisations have been asking me repeatedly for input on how this is done – with this paper we will be able to upskill a whole new cohort of communication professionals who have evaluated the evidence about creative and improvisational approaches, had practice in designing and delivering workshops, and can go out into industry and start using these techniques effectively to create change in how our organisations innovate and communicate. I’m very excited by the potential for this to lead to significant improvements for New Zealand businesses.”

For more information about the paper, see http://www.massey.ac.nz/paper/?p=139764&o=1229693 or contact Dr Tilley on Email:  e.tilley@massey.ac.nz or Phone: + 64 4 9793565