Thursday, 24 August 2017

Moment(o)Us @ Gradfest 2017


A twenty-minute performance that removes the thing that you think you need most in the theatre- sight! The performance, which has a loosely referenced narrative to a refugee, actually focuses on the audience by encouraging them to get in touch with their other senses.

Firstly, the performers (facilitators) were blindfolded and tasked to build a sense of trust with a spectator. The audience members were informed to put on a pair of headsets while they sat beside next to a blindfolded performer. As placed in the position to listen to the recording (sounds of the sea, and a narrator's voice about finding and losing), they are instructed on how to guide the performer outside of the room space (Uni of Bristol's Brandt Cinema) to another (corridor). Once accomplished, an exchange takes place between performer and spectator.

As a performer I needed to be attentive to the responses of my spectator in my care. I began to think more about the boundaries of another person and adapt to it. From navigating someone in narrow to large spaces to a standstill, dancing or engaging the body of someone else through touch and sound, I was physically challenged and critically (as well as reflectively) engaged.

This sensation-based performance was a highlight of yet another end to a year in university, which  built my aspiration to encourage sensory-based performances and shed light on the advantages we take for granted.

Wednesday, 15 March 2017

Performance at the B.O.V.


As part of UoB's Performing the Archive unit, we have curated:

An installation on the Bristol Old Vic's 70's renovation period with regards to Peter Moro's architecture and people's reviews on its establishment and theatrical preservation. Join us track back in time through the lens of Trelawny, Macbeth and As You Like It.

In no particular order, we let spectators perceive photographs, transcripts and fragments of Bristol Old Vic's past between 1969 and 1972. This non-linear timeline was to provide the freedom to interpret events and to assess gaps in history. Framed in the manner of performing production extracts, we believe elicited a dramatic nature in both the BOV's digression (loss) and progression (addition), and into theatre as a whole. Perhaps, the loss of tradition and the clasp of contemporary. Or art versus money? The contradiction of idealism with realism.

Or as an institution, could it still; "The Theatre Complex-yes the old dream come true. Keeping what's best, but making all else new." (Theatre Collection As You Like It Gala Program, 1969)






Friday, 6 January 2017

Theatre @ Bristol


Come on and let the good times roll... 
My first term of studying theatre and performing at Bristol has been a whirlwind of opportunities. Despite falling ill for sometime, I acted in 'Good Times' on the 3rd of November, 2016 during my assessment period. The play is about 5 women locked in a room, only to have Sam Cooke's 'Good Times' song on repeat. As I played a 'nice' woman who turns into a maniac, the role was a challenging one that pushed my vocal abilities and raised my sensitivity to psychological disorders. The story reveals an estranged but recognisable world - "think gladiatorial updated for the Starbucks generation." I thoroughly enjoyed being part of the cast and to have presented a frighteningly possible future.

 

Memories, the chance to reconnect with your childhood through an immersive and guided audio tour performance. Creating this performance was a bundle of fun, and that certainly included some child-like arguing. In two weeks we built script using the theme of hide and seek for our audience to admire the spaces of Bristol's Royal Fort garden and to fill in the gaps with one's own previous experiences. With the help human sculptures, we dress in primary school outfits and in primary colours to tempt our audience to play. From playing tag to relaxing amongst the grassy fields, doing two performances in one day was exhilarating. But, I was thrilled to have received an array of responses. Some were tears of joy, tears of reminiscing, or perhaps tears kept within.

In my eyes, our postmodern narrative and energetic performance has become an unforgettable, distant memory.

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/site-specific-performance-royal-fort-gardens-tickets-29516062337#