As you read this, please put this song on repeat
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPRy1B4t5YA
Or this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rILKm-DC06A
And keep scrolling down
We live in a T-Rex World
Many tyrant kings. Taking us back to the late cretaceous
I fear tyranny, as we all do, I’m sure
And in our world we have so many different flavours to choose from
But this is the kind I fear the most.
We all know this tyranny:
And I ask … what do I do?
Some days when I go running I imagine a theatre that
Then I make it so by
Or at least I try
I think I was told at university that meaning-making, telling stories was passé
I’m sure I imagined that wrong
But I guess that was my sense of the learning
It felt so … empowering
to resist the traditional hierarchy of narrative.
To create a lacuna of meaning within which an audience could see themselves.
Felt … what was it? A pre-emotional response.
Do fascists care about affect?
Do I care if fascists care about affect?
In my dream theatre
In my hope for future theatre
I want there to be
And then I will put it on by
And it will be awesome.
It will change the world.
People will see truths in themselves heretofore unnoticed.
It will affect people.
They will laugh, cry, and make real and meaningful change for themselves, and the world.
It will nourish them.
It will change the world.
For the better. Yes.
Or even just one person. But, like, profoundly.
Yes.
#art
The idea that artists have responsibility is tired and old and passé
Because remember that guy who jumped off the second floor window?
Or that guy who shot himself?
Or that woman who painted with her dookies?
#blacklivesmatter
#metoo
#MAGA
#resist
#noDAPL
#takeaknee
#boycottNFL
#bluelivesmatter
#brexit
#prayfororlando
#prayfornice
#internationalwomansday
I mean I try.
At least I’m trying to put stuff on, maybe?
Stuff that’s “important”
Harriet Gillies, a friend and collaborator, once said that the more experimental something is the more entertaining it should be.
So if you’re making a performance artwork about #resist-ing and making clear and impassioned performance art statements about feminism or racism or any other ism, then perhaps you need to shove lasers up your butt and dance or give sloppy head to long balloons or something?
As a sometimes lighting designer, I’m quite into this.
Because even though we have all the hashtags we need to entice people into the message and to sugar the pill because performance can be SO BORING and we must also remember that a primary function of art is TO ENTERTAIN and we’re competing with Game of Thrones and Californication and a sex and violence drenched entertainment and advertising culture so really we gotta up the ante and make people feel safe but also challenge them. As the artist I am there to ASK QUESTIONS and examine POSITIONS THAT HAVE PERHAPS NOT BEEN CONSIDERED in this world of post-truth and post-drama and post-Nazis-are-bad and post-satire and post art. I AM IMPORTANT AND DOING A JOB THAT IS IMPORTANT TO THE WORLD. AND IN THE FUTURE WE WILL FEEL THIS ABOUT ARTISTS.
Anyway here’s a dropbox link to a very nude picture of me holding a copy of Augusto Boal’s’ Theatre of the Oppressed above my cock. Very NSFW, obviously. Hopefully it will make people better understand the crucial role of contemporary performance theory and praxis in whatever future we find ourselves in.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/thgdvsj66i98j4x/Imagined%20Theatres.jpg?dl=0
nice
nice.
#blacklivesmatter
#metoo
#allispolitics
#theatreisaweapon
#theatreisnottherevolutionitistherehearsaloftherevolution
#thisisaplayforimaginedtheatresihopeitsgoodsomeonepleaseputiton
#downwithpatriarchy
#downwithtyranny
#iamthecometthatkilledthedinosaurs
#iamart
The other day I re-read some of the plays of Elfriede Jelinek.
They were very good.
In the future my plays will be like this, but way, way better.
They will change the world and make everyone want to have sex with me.
Copyright joe hooligan lui 2017
Please direct all inquiries to my agent at joe underscore lui 3 at Hot mail .com
Please dear god someone put this on.
We have to at least try.
Here’s a first page for you to write some notes in the future.
What is possible or impossible to perform
I imagine a rock-star,
a theatre rock-star,
a hooligan theatre rock-star,
standing on stage in the middle of a stadium.
The stadium is packed – the kind of packed where further back the faces become pixels,
Impressionist-painting-dots which you can’t quite make out in the multitude.
The multitude is shouting. You can’t hear them.
They are in kind-of-slow motion, like stock-video-footage of a background stadium crowd
where there is no sound but you know that they are shouting.
It is like – but it is not – Woodstock, or Live-Aid,
where the politics are part of what makes it sexy.
And it is like – but it is not – Beyoncé, or Rage Against the Machine,
where the sexiness brings people to the politics.
The rock-star is singing or saying something,
but you can’t hear them for the shouting
(which you also still can’t hear).
All you can hear is this vast, pulsating, slow-motion silence.
~~~
It feels clichéd to write of silences being loud.
Of silences that shout.
But it seems that I have to. Because I read Joe’s rock-star theatre script and for me, the silences in it scream.
I sit inside them for a while. In the impossible breadth of the tyranny-that-scares-me-most. In my impossible distance from those-who-shape-the-world; in how impossibly everywhere fascism and T-Rexism appear to be.
There is a kind of must-do-something scream that has long sat deep in my chest – not quite where my heart is but near there, towards the back of my ribcage and woven around my breath.
Sometimes it is quiet. Sometimes it swells.
Sitting in the gaps and silences of imagining a theatre that–
which we do by–
–it squeezes me inside-out.
When I think of changing the world – and how art, how theatre, might do this – the answers are so complex that I still find them to be beyond words.
But I sit for this moment in the audacity of imagining. And it feels gloriously, painfully loud.
~~~
I imagine knowing what to do. And doing it.
I imagine my voice stepping into the silence that follows a T-Rex roar
without waiting to be asked.
I imagine it cutting through the billboard-bustle and ad-banner-scrolling
and next-best-things-you-should-click-on – cutting through, cutting in.
I also imagine it cutting out – making space for other voices from the multitude.
I imagine words falling from my fingertips like rice from a bulging sack
that has finally been slit open.
I imagine theatre as the knife.
~~~
On the other side of the shouting, there are the fascists. The T-Rex tyranny. The king-of-the-island roars that we believe to be real.
Do fascists care about affect? It is a good question. I think they do, and I care about that very much. Fascists are masters of affect, dealing in movements built on blind furies of feeling. I remember reading, in my first year of studying performance, Richard Schechner’s writing on Hitler and the mis-use of theatrical presence (2002: 216); citizens mobilized to unthinkable acts, swept up in the act of un-thinking through feeling. I remember my sense of what theatre is and can be expanding, and feeling chilled by the responsibility. So many different ways for tyranny to show its face.
As a sometimes-theatre-maker this still unsettles me. And I stay wary of using affect as a tool of persuasion for political ends.
But artists deal with affect in myriad ways beyond this. Marianne Van Kerkhoven describes dramaturgy in the contemporary moment as learning how to handle complexity (2009: 11), the antithesis of a simplistic, un-thinking roar. And she writes – more eloquently than I can paraphrase, so I am borrowing her words – of the possibilities this complexity opens up for navigating culture and creating change:
We can throw stones at each other over the wall separating the two gardens, or we can be forced under control to bring down the wall and declare that all the gardens from now on are one single park. But other alternatives are possible. Approaching each other takes a long time. Perhaps we have to grow a hedge or some bushes instead of the wall. Where the wind can pass through, where between the leaves we can have whispering conversations. We can make small doorways in the hedge, openings where the bushes have disappeared because we cross them and wear them down so many times. We have to give time to the talks, so that slowly hesitation and fear can turn into clarity and pleasure. Sometimes it will succeed, and sometimes it will not. Will we get somewhere? We’ll see if we get somewhere.
(Van Kerkhoven, 2009: 10)
Do fascists care about moments of connection that offer the possibility of understanding the world in different ways? I am much less quick to answer.
~~~
The rock-star steps back from the microphone.
I read their lips as they whisper:
‘We have to at least try.’
I shout, silently, mouthing my words in the slow-motion rock-concert crowd, that I agree,
standing tall and raising my cheeks to the wind.
And, with a sudden sense of the absurd, I realise why it is silent.
The stadium is a theatre, and the wind has taken our words.
It it impossible. And perhaps a bit whimsical.
But for today, for this moment, that is the performance, the grand theatrical device:
thoughts whipped from our mouths to the sky, through the smog, through the drizzle,
through the hedges and hedgerows in the fields around the stadium,
to pass through and encounter and tangle-in-complexity and whisper.
Around me, I feel the multitude grow louder.
Through the silence I imagine I can hear them all –
not just those closest to me, not just those similar to me –
everyone in the stadium, right to the farthest speck-like pixels at the back.
When my words return to me, they will have passed so many others on the way.
I imagine sifting through them, finding all that they encountered.
Finding perhaps, (im)possibly, the beginning of a collective shout.
Finding bruises and new shapes and smooth edges.
Finding corners knocked off of the letters.
Finding traces of fallen leaves.
~~~
On my bookshelf, I have the same edition of Theatre of the Oppressed that Joe does. While not nearly so sexy, here is a very-safe-for-work photo of it in a hedge.
Science tells us that T-Rexes did not roar (Riede et al, 2016). We just imagine that they did.
(Of course that has little to do with the sharpness of the their teeth.
But bear with me. It is a metaphor.)
If we come back from the impossible fancy of flying words,
we are still standing in the stadium in silence.
I imagine the roaring of our collective silence
being louder than the dinosaurs.
We have to at least try.
I imagine trying.
I imagine that succeeding is possible.
References:
Hardt, Michael, and Antonio Negri. Empire. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2009.
Riede, Tobias, Chad M. Eliason, Edward H. Miller, Franz Goller, and Julia A. Clarke.”Coos, booms, and hoots: The evolution of closed‐mouth vocal behavior in birds.” Evolution 70 (2016): 8, pp 1734-1746.
Schechner, Richard. Performance Studies: An Introduction. New York: Routledge, 2002.
Van Kerkhoven, Marianne. “‘European Dramaturgy in the 21st Century’ A Constant Movement,” Performance Research. 14: 3 (2009), pp 7-11.