Appropriating Narratives of Conflict in Contemporary Verbatim Theatre: A Practice-as-Research-led Investigation Into The Role of the Playwright By Sarah Beck Department of Media and Communications Goldsmiths College, University of London Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) 2016 1 This is to certify that the following work presented in this thesis is my own. Sarah Beck Abstract Despite the resurgence of interview-based verbatim theatre in the 21st century and scholarly debate surrounding the aesthetics and authenticity of verbatim plays, little examination of the role of the playwright integrating testimonies of war into the making of a verbatim play has been undertaken. The transactional relationships between interviewees and playwrights warrant study as this critical interaction informs the dramaturgy of the playtext. This area of inquiry also has significant resonance in debates regarding the ethics of representation in verbatim theatre, particularly as many contemporary verbatim plays examining conflict tend to incorporate testimony from interviewees whose lives have been affected by war and militarism. What follows is a practice-as-research (PaR)-led investigation into my role as a playwright appropriating testimony from individual subjects affected by conflict. Through the creation of two verbatim plays, namely This Much is True and Yardbird, this investigation examines moments of disjuncture that occur when mediating war- related testimony. In addition to critically reflecting on the creative component of this inquiry, this dissertation also incorporates original interviews conducted with the creative team behind the National Theatre of Scotland’s play Black Watch and examines more broadly the methodologies of playwrights working with trauma-related experiences by focusing on how playwrights’ interactions with individual subjects inform the shaping of a play. This investigation examines the key issues that emerge as playwrights integrate personal testimony in a theatrical translation of subjects’ experiences into the writing of a verbatim play. It also seeks to examine the ethical tensions I encountered within my verbatim playwriting practice. Furthermore, this investigation interrogates my process of locating interview subjects and facilitating testimony; maintaining critical relationships with interviewees; organising the structure of the play; and negotiating interview subjects’ autonomy over the script. Rather than generating codified guidelines for ethical verbatim practice, the findings and deliberations of my investigation are designed to assist other practitioners using personal testimony from interviewees as part of the playwriting process. Encouraging practitioners to critically reflect on the methods that they employ within the interview stages as part of the playwriting process helps to lay bare the ethical and aesthetic responsibilities involved in dramatising war-related testimony. These deliberations are offered for the benefit of other theatre practitioners as well as scholars working within the wider field of theatre studies. 2 Acknowledgments This thesis has been influenced by a spectrum of brilliant people. I would like to thank my mentors from Shippensburg University, Paris Peet, Eveline Lang, Kara Laskowski and especially Sharnine Herbert whose guidance taught me the beauty of reaching out to others and the importance of being heard. I value the feedback and healthy criticism of members of staff at Goldsmiths College, including Ben Levitas, Maria Shevtsova, Gareth Stanton, Sean Cubitt, David Morley, Pasi Väliaho, Des Freedman, Marianne Franklin, Robert Smith, Kay Dickinson and Zehra Arabadji. Thank you to Gregory Burke, Davey Anderson, John Tiffany, Brian Ferguson and Ross Anderson for your time and generosity sharing insider knowledge on the agony and euphoria of making the National Theatre of Scotland’s play Black Watch. I also extend my appreciation to friends and colleagues Sarah Sigal, Yu-kei Tse, Adam Brace, Helena Enright, Tom Mansfield, Yasmin Khan and Aleks Sierz. I also extend one big hallelujah to Tadgh O’Sullivan. I am also indebted to my family for a lifetime of love and immeasurable support and for giving me a good shot in the arm amidst times of crisis including my parents Marie and Ed Beck, and my sister Jessica Beck—who has rigorously read various drafts of the thesis and has offered invaluable, professional feedback. Special love and thanks goes out to my husband Elliott Tiney. Furthermore, I am grateful to my supervisors Angela McRobbie and Susan Clayton for their guidance throughout this journey. Finally, I dedicate this work to those who have shared with me their testimony in good faith, to whom I bestow my deepest thanks. Your openness and trust taught me how to listen, and your stories give testament to the world’s capacity for human compassion. Special thanks goes to Sam Mellott for showing me what it is to fly. 3 ABSTRACT ................................................................................................................................. 2 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS .......................................................................................................... 3 TIMELINE OF CREATIVE PRACTICE ................................................................................ 7 LIST OF FIGURES .................................................................................................................... 8 INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................... 9 CHAPTER ONE: APPROPRIATING WAR-RELATED TRAUMA AND TESTIMONY WITHIN THE DRAMATURGY OF VERBATIM THEATRE ........................................... 18 TERMINOLOGY AND CONTENTION: DEFINING VERBATIM THEATRE .......................................... 19 TRACING THE HERITAGE OF VERBATIM THEATRE: .................................................................... 23 THEORIES AND APPROACHES USED IN DOCUMENTARY AND COMMUNITY-BASED PRACTICE .. 23 EARLY FORMS OF DOCUMENTARY PRACTICE, 1920S-30S .......................................................... 23 DOCUMENTARY THEATRE OF THE 1960S-70S ............................................................................. 25 THEATRE OF TESTIMONY IN THE US ........................................................................................... 27 POST 9/11 AND THE THIRD WAVE OF DOCUMENTARY THEATRE ............................................... 29 OUT OF JOINT AND VERBATIM PRACTICE ................................................................................... 30 RECORDED DELIVERY: HEADSETS AND HYPERREALISM ........................................................... 30 CONTEMPORARY SCHOLARSHIP ON VERBATIM PRACTICE: ........................................................ 31 AESTHETICISING THE ‘REAL’ AND TRANSLATING TESTIMONY .................................................. 31 VERBATIM PLAYWRITING, TENSIONS IN VERBATIM PRACTICE AND RESPONSIBILITY .............. 35 TRAUMA, TESTIMONY AND WITNESSING IN PERFORMANCE ...................................................... 39 THE POLITICS AND LIMITS OF IDENTIFICATION IN VERBATIM PRACTICE .................................. 43 EXAMINING THE ROLE OF THE PLAYWRIGHT THROUGH PRACTICE ........................................... 47 CHAPTER TWO: ADOPTING A PRACTICE-AS-RESEARCH METHODOLOGY AND THE ROLE OF THE PLAYWRIGHT IN CONTEMPORARY VERBATIM THEATRE ..................................................................................................................................................... 48 INTRODUCTION: METHODOLOGIES .......................................................................................... 48 PAR STARTING POINTS: THE KRATOS EFFECT AS A PILOT PROJECT ........................................... 49 WRITING THE KRATOS EFFECT: METHODS AND APPROACH ....................................................... 52 VOCABULARY: DEFINING TERMS THROUGH THE KRATOS EFFECT ............................................. 54 ADOPTING A PRACTICE-AS-RESEARCH METHODOLOGY: THE PERFORMANCE PRAXIS MODEL 59 ORGANISING PAR CASE STUDIES: CRITICAL WRITING AND REFLECTION ................................. 62 PAR INVESTIGATIONS IN DOCUMENTARY PRACTICE ................................................................. 64 ORAL HISTORY METHODOLOGY AND QUALITATIVE RESEARCH ............................................... 66 INTERVIEW APPROACHES AND TECHNIQUES FOR RECORDING STORIES .................................... 68 TRANSCRIPTION: LISTENING AND INTERPRETING STORIES ........................................................ 70 WRITING TECHNIQUES AND DRAMATURGICAL STRATEGIES IN VERBATIM PRACTICE .............. 72 COLLABORATION, OWNERSHIP AND AUTONOMY ....................................................................... 75 RESEARCH QUESTIONS AND PAR CASE STUDIES ....................................................................... 76 CASE STUDY: THIS MUCH IS TRUE RE-THINKING THE ARCHIVE AND VERBATIM PRACTICE ..... 77 CASE STUDY: RECORDING AND WRITING THE LIVES OF US SOLDIERS IN THE VERBATIM PLAY YARDBIRD ............................................................................................. 78 CHAPTER THREE: RE-VISITING THIS MUCH IS TRUE: THE ROLE OF THE WRITER AND THE DRAMATURGY OF THE STOCKWELL SHOOTING ................ 80 INTRODUCTION: THIS MUCH IS TRUE ........................................................................................... 80 STARTING POINTS ........................................................................................................................ 80 RESEARCH PLAN AND STRATEGY ............................................................................................... 81 ISSUES OF PRESENCE, LOCATION, AND INTERVIEW APPROACH ................................................. 82 4 FRAMING TRAUMA AND VICTIMHOOD: RESEARCHING THE 7/7 BOMBINGS AND THE STOCKWELL SHOOTING ................................................................................................ 84 RELATIONSHIPS BASED ON TRUST: ALTERITY AND CRITICAL DISTANCE .................................. 87 DRAMATURGICAL STRATEGIES: WRITING THIS MUCH IS TRUE .................................................. 90 LINEAR PROGRESSION: GENERATING A TIMELINE ..................................................................... 91 LOCATING THE CENTRAL QUESTION FOR THE PLAY .................................................................. 92 CONSIDERING STYLE: WRITING FOR PERFORMANCE ................................................................. 95 MULTIPLE ROLE-PLAYING ........................................................................................................... 96 NATURALISTIC PORTRAYALS OF THE MENEZES FAMILY ......................................................... 100 WHOSE VOICE MATTERS? THE HIERARCHY OF TESTIMONY AND THE RISK OF DOUBLE SILENCING ................................................................................................................... 102 THE LIMITS OF REPRESENTING TRAUMA .................................................................................. 108 SUBJECTS RESPOND TO THE PERFORMANCE: THE ROLE OF THE WRITER AS AN ACCOUNTABLE WITNESS ................................................................................................ 111 AUDIENCE RESPONSES AND DEBATES REGARDING THE ROLE OF THEATRE PRACTITIONERS AND THE MENEZES SHOOTING .................................................................................................. 112 THIS MUCH IS TRUE: PAR OUTCOMES ....................................................................................... 114 RESEARCH QUESTIONS AND FORWARD THINKING ................................................................... 116 CHAPTER FOUR: THE MAKING OF BLACK WATCH AND MEDIATING WAR- RELATED NARRATIVES IN PLAYS BASED ON SOLDIERS’ TESTIMONY ........... 119 NEW CONSIDERATIONS FOR PRACTICE-AS-RESEARCH: BLACK WATCH AS A MODEL .............. 119 BLACK WATCH AND PERSONAL RESONANCE ............................................................................. 120 TESTIMONY AND WAR PLAYS ................................................................................................... 122 ORIGINAL INTERVIEWS WITH THE BLACK WATCH CREATIVE TEAM AND METHODOLOGY ...... 124 STARTING POINTS FOR BLACK WATCH ...................................................................................... 124 NEGOTIATING SOLDIERS’ PARTICIPATION ................................................................................ 125 DEPARTING FROM VERBATIM TESTIMONY: MEDIATING LIVED EXPERIENCES AND TRAUMA 126 THEATRICAL MODELS: FORM AND CONTENT ........................................................................... 128 INVITING SUBJECTS INTO THE REHEARSAL ROOM .................................................................... 130 FINDING THE PLAY’S QUESTION AND THROUGH-LINES ........................................................... 131 TEXTUAL REFLEXIVITY: WRITING THE PLAYWRIGHT INTO THE PLAY .................................... 133 THEATRICAL TRANSLATION OF DOCUMENTS AND ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS ...................... 138 ETHICAL ANXIETY, EXPLOITATION AND THE ROLE OF THE PLAYWRIGHT .............................. 141 FRAMES OF IDENTIFICATION AND EXCLUSION ......................................................................... 143 FURTHER CONSIDERATIONS FOR WRITING YARDBIRD .............................................................. 147 CHAPTER FIVE: YARDBIRD: AN ORIGINAL VERBATIM PLAYTEXT BASED ON INTERVIEWS WITH US VETERANS AND MILITARY FAMILIES ........................... 150 INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................... 150 YARDBIRD .............................................................................................................................. 151 CHAPTER SIX: APPROPRIATING WAR NARRATIVES OF US COMBAT VETERANS AND MILITARY FAMILIES IN THE DRAMATURGY OF THE PLAYTEXT YARDBIRD ........................................................................................................ 183 RESEARCH AIMS AND QUESTIONS FOR THE CREATION OF YARDBIRD ...................................... 183 STARTING POINTS FOR YARDBIRD: CONSIDERING SOLDIERS’ EXPERIENCES ........................... 184 POSITIONALITY AS RESEARCHER/PLAYWRIGHT ....................................................................... 185 ACKNOWLEDGING PERSONAL POLITICS AND CONFRONTING PRECONCEPTIONS ..................... 186 GAINING ACCESS, LOCATIONS AND A FRAGMENTED COMMUNITY ......................................... 187 RELEASE FORMS AND GAINING CONSENT: MOVING AWAY FROM PAPERWORK ..................... 190 INTERVIEWING SOLDIERS .......................................................................................................... 190 INTERVIEWING MILITARY FAMILIES ......................................................................................... 193 5 NARRATIVES OF SURVIVAL: FEAR OF FLYING .......................................................................... 195 TRANSCRIPTION AND IMAGERY ................................................................................................ 199 FINDING THE FRAMING QUESTION ............................................................................................ 200 ORGANISING PRINCIPLE AND ESTABLISHING THROUGH-LINES ................................................ 201 DRAMATURGICAL STRATEGIES ................................................................................................. 203 FIRST REHEARSED READING ..................................................................................................... 206 THE VERBATIM SUBJECTS’ AUTONOMY: EXPECTATIONS AND LIMITATIONS .......................... 207 SECOND REHEARSED READING: COLLABORATING WITH ACTORS ........................................... 209 CRITICALLY LISTENING TO THE AUDIENCE .............................................................................. 212 RESEARCH QUESTIONS AND FINDINGS ..................................................................................... 216 TRANSACTIONAL MOMENTS ..................................................................................................... 217 CONCLUSION ........................................................................................................................ 221 RESEARCH QUESTIONS .............................................................................................................. 224 RESEARCH OUTCOMES AND KEY DEBATES .............................................................................. 231 AESTHETICS, IDENTIFICATION AND ETHICS .............................................................................. 234 META-THEATRICAL GESTURES AND CRITICAL DISTANCE ....................................................... 237 PARTICIPATION AND VALUABLE RELATIONSHIPS .................................................................... 239 FORWARD THINKING AND FUTURE PRACTICE .......................................................................... 240 BIBLIOGRAPHY ................................................................................................................... 244 PRIMARY SOURCES .................................................................................................................... 244 SECONDARY SOURCES .............................................................................................................. 244 APPENDICES ......................................................................................................................... 259 THE KRATOS EFFECT .................................................................................................................. 260 BLACK WATCH INTERVIEWS ....................................................................................................... 279 INTERVIEW WITH MUSICAL DIRECTOR DAVEY ANDERSON ..................................................... 279 INTERVIEW WITH ACTOR ROSS ANDERSON .............................................................................. 296 INTERVIEW WITH PLAYWRIGHT GREGORY BURKE ................................................................... 307 INTERVIEW WITH ACTOR BRIAN FERGUSON ............................................................................. 332 INTERVIEW WITH DIRECTOR JOHN TIFFANY ............................................................................. 344 YARDBIRD LIST OF INTERVIEWEES ............................................................................................. 353 YARDBIRD DVD RECORDINGS OF REHEARSED READINGS ........................................................ 355 YARDBIRD DVD RECORDING OF REHEARSED READING NO. 1 ................................................. 355 YARDBIRD DVD RECORDING OF REHEARSED READING NO. 2 ................................................. 355 6 Timeline of Creative Practice The Kratos Effect July 22, 2008 Written by Sarah Beck First verbatim play about the Menezes shooting Rehearsed Reading at The Cavendish in Stockwell, London This Much is True October 28-November 21, 2009 Co-Written by Sarah Beck and Paul Unwin Second verbatim play about the Menezes shooting Full Production at Theatre 503 in London Fortunate Son February 12, 2011 Written by Sarah Beck Fictional play about an Iraq veteran reconciling with his estranged Vietnam War vet father Rehearsed Reading performed at The Calder Bookshop in London The Kratos Effect June 11, 2011 Written by Sarah Beck Re-written Version Performed at The Bike Shed Theatre in Exeter Yardbird April 9, 2013 Written by Sarah Beck First Version of Yardbird Rehearsed Reading at The George Wood Theatre at Goldsmiths College, New Cross, London Second Version of Yardbird June 4, 2015 Rehearsed Reading at The Pineapple Pub in Kentish Town, London 7 List of Figures Fig. 1 Rose Romain as Chrysoulla in The Kratos Effect (2011). Photo by Benjamin J. Borley. Fig. 2 Speaking with Mary after the show. Photo by Jessica Beck. Fig. 3 This Much is True. Image from The Guardian theatre blog. Fig. 4 Joshua Manning as Tim, Loren O’Dair as Kelly and James Wrighton as Mr. Watson in Yardbird (2015). Photo by Ashley David. Fig. 5 Flying with Sam over south-central Pennsylvania. Photo by Sarah Beck. Fig. 6 Diagram of organising principle and through-lines for Yardbird Fig. 7 Louise Kempton reading the part of Katherine in Yardbird (2013). Photo by Siheng Guo. Fig. 8 Simon Darwen reading the part of Sam in Yardbird (2015). Photo by Ashley David. 8 Introduction This dissertation examines the aesthetic and ethical responsibilities I encountered as a playwright throughout the dramaturgy of verbatim playtexts. Verbatim theatre, in the context of this study, involves the process of interviewing subjects and incorporating excerpts from the interview material to compose the central text of the play. Furthermore, the intention of this study is to critically assess the playwriting process involved in shaping testimonies from verbatim subjects whose lives have been impacted by war. The purpose of the study is twofold. First, it aims to critically understand the relationship between myself as the researcher-playwright and verbatim subjects (namely those individuals whose life experiences and testimony serve as the frame and origin of the text of the play) in relation to the dramaturgy of verbatim plays and the methods adopted throughout the research and writing process. Secondly, the dissertation attempts to comprehend how exploring narratives of war through the development of a playtext (the written design of the play prior to the theatrical performance) might foster new ethical considerations for theatre practitioners. Furthermore, this investigation examines my creative process and ethical engagement with subjects affected by war in the context of contemporary debates surrounding verbatim theatre-making and the methods other practitioners have used to incorporate testimony and interview materials in their working process. By drawing on the complexities of writing plays based on testimony and identifying the problems inherent in scripting private accounts for public viewing, I hope to contribute practical insights into the recent scholarly debates on the role of the playwright in verbatim theatre. My introduction to verbatim theatre came early in my playwriting career. While I had written several short fictional plays for theatre and radio in the UK, I had only studied verbatim plays written by other practitioners as part of my MA degree. I was intrigued by the possibilities of utilising the verbatim form as a type of theatrical ethnographic examination of the lives of others. I was curious about combining ethnography and theatre in the dramatisation of personal testimony as a creative approach to making political and social interventions. In 2008 I was commissioned by Upstart Theatre Company to research and write a one-act verbatim play entitled The Kratos Effect based on interviews with members of the local community affected by the 9 police shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes at Stockwell tube station in 2005 as part of the third anniversary commemoration of Menezes’ death in Stockwell. In contrast to my initial enthusiasm for a form that allows for expression of the personal stories of others as a species of political and social intervention, the process of mediating the experiences of others proved more challenging than I had first considered. This inquiry into the ethical and aesthetic responsibility of the playwright is driven by a personal encounter with a verbatim subject who attended the rehearsed reading of The Kratos Effect and challenged my artistic interpretation of her experience suggesting my portrayal verged on the edges of misrepresentation. Afterwards she spoke with me about her thoughts on the play. Mary, a political activist and local artist who created the mosaic of Jean Charles de Menezes (now permanently mounted outside Stockwell tube station), felt the framing of her testimony in the play presented a despairing, one-dimensional portrayal of her political activism. While Mary had found the play compelling, she had felt very self-conscious watching the presentation of her testimony. This was because Mary felt that some of the statements she had made about war as conveyed in the play came close to making her sound like a paranoid conspiracy theorist. This framing, in Mary’s view, obscured those moments of hope and humanity she has encountered in her life experience. Reflecting on Mary’s response to the play, I realised that I had unconsciously silenced Mary in the framing of her story. In short, my selection of words and assemblage of her testimony over-simplified the complexity of her life experience and framed a more dismal, less empowering portrait of her activism. My encounter with Mary reflects recent concerns in theatre scholarship regarding the ethics of representation in verbatim practice. Current scholarship on verbatim theatre has examined issues of authenticity, aesthetics and the representation of trauma, yet the role of the playwright in organising the verbatim material has been neglected; an oversight in scholarly research that requires further analysis. Playwright David Hare (2005) has claimed that verbatim theatre is the ideal medium to “give a voice to the voiceless” (Hare in Soans, 2005, p. 112). However, the frequent circulation of authors’ claims to speak on behalf of the ‘other’ tend to overshadow the subjective process of appropriating personal testimony in verbatim theatre. The complex levels of appropriation involved in verbatim practice tend to be further veiled by uncritical claims of the form’s veracity and authenticity. As Deirdre Heddon (2008) has argued, the term ‘verbatim’ implies “the ‘authentic’ and ‘truthful’” (p. 130), while David Lane (2010) suggests that verbatim theatre’s claims to objectivity and authenticity have a propensity 10
Description: