Thursday 6 May 2010

The Politics of Performance

As we find ourselves in the midst of a general election you would be forgiven for assuming that the launch of Mayfesto was strategic in its timing but as Andy Arnold has pointed out, this was merely serendipitous.

However, as the nation turns its collective focus on politics, it does provide an appropriate backdrop for Mayfesto and the work being presented under this banner.

Unlike the politicians of the day Mayfesto has no hidden agenda; its remit is simply to tell stories, real stories about real people caught up in the inevitable tumult of conflict derived from political decision making. Mayfesto and the artists involved are not nailing their flags to the wall and expecting you to follow suit but rather presenting you with the truth of the human condition, with a reflection on the personal effects of manmade corruptions like war, tyranny and governance gone awry.

“What theatre does, at its best, is use artifice to tell fundamental truths. Whereas what politics does, at its worst, is hide the truth with cleverly fashioned artifice”.Chris Wilkinson [Guardian Theatre Blog – 22.04.2010]

DRUMHEAD is our contribution (Rhymes with Purple) – part theatrical performance, part live presentation and part investigation. A piece of site-specific theatre, it is a social and political commentary on humanity’s relationship with itself. With particular focus on the ramifications of legalised torture methods, DRUMHEAD has been a fact-finding mission and an intensive exploration into the limits of human cruelty.

The key question behind DRUMHEAD is “in the context of a civilised society that values human rights, is torture ever justified?” Our answer? Ambiguous...we are presenting you with the truth; it is up to you, the audience, to decide what you think.

When presented with the reality of what we, all of us, are capable of in defence of a belief or a dogma – whatever that may be – you are made to wonder at what point we threw our humanity out of the window. But what do you believe in? What do you love? If this was threatened in some way...what would you resort to and to what lengths would you go to justify your defence?

The development process for DRUMHEAD was a fascinating one but it was not always easy. By pulling into focus some sanctioned practises of various government regimes, including those that are closer to home than we would like, we were shining a light on ourselves. The subject of torture is no longer taboo but a live debate on our own collective apathy and compliance. That is a difficult notion to come to terms with.

Our research was practical as well as theoretical; when investigating the techniques used in “enhanced interrogation” (not torture) we found waterboarding the most alarming and it became the focus of our attention.

Waterboarding: an interrogation technique in which water is forced into a detainee's mouth and nose so as to induce the sensation of drowning.

In order to truly understand the effect of this practise the cast had to subject themselves to it. The results were harrowing but experiencing this in a controlled environment is one thing, to have it done against your will with no way of knowing when or if it’s going to stop would be entirely another.

Like all artists, we create things in order to understand and respond to the world around us. DRUMHEAD is a reaction, not a soapbox moment. We simply want to communicate the facts and have you make up your own mind.


Louise Oliver

CREATIVE DIRECTOR –

RHYMES WITH PURPLE

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