Ten years ago, the National Theatre of Scotland launched with Home, a project inviting ten communities from across Scotland to express what Home meant to them, to reflect on their place in the world.
Ten years on, the world is a very different place and the Company will now revisit the theme, examining the challenges faced by people in Scotland and around the world in finding a sense of belonging in the face of global political, social, cultural and technological forces. For the first time in its history, the National Theatre of Scotland will host a five-day international festival of socially engaged participatory arts, welcoming performers and artists from five continents.
The Company will welcome performing groups from Brazil, Jamaica, Australia, India and the United States, four Scottish-based groups and a transgender global choir, to present new work each evening exploring the themes of Home and Away. Members of the performing groups will also take part in a week-long course of creative learning workshops facilitated by leading artists, in which they will have the opportunity to develop their theatre-making skills, to exchange ideas and to share cultural experiences of theatre, music, dance and food.
Home Away will run at Tramway in Glasgow from Saturday 8 to Wednesday 12 October 2016, with additional activity taking place in The Hidden Gardens and at Scottish Youth Theatre.
Participatory arts offer a fundamental means of engaging communities and audiences in a direct and impactful way and are therefore now a vital part of any arts organisation's output. Participatory theatre is typically created by non-professional participants working alongside professional creative artists, to present authentic, socially engaged stories. This practice has been an integral part of the National Theatre of Scotland's programme since its inception and, in recent years, productions such as Granite (Aberdeen), To Begin (Forres and Wigtown), The Tin Forest (Glasgow) and Jump (Kirkcaldy, Calton and Jamaica) have been co-created with thousands of non-professional participants and performed to audience and critical acclaim. Most recently, the Company collaborated with the National Theatres of Great Britain, Wales and over 20 other theatre organisations on the UK-wide participatory arts project we're here because we're here, a UK-wide participatory arts project commissioned by 14-18 NOW, conceived and created by Jeremy Deller in collaboration with Rufus Norris, which had a significant impact on the thousands of participants who took part and audiences across the country.
In addition to a nightly double bill of public performances and the creative learning opportunities for participants, the Company has also curated a five-day daytime conference programme on the future international development of participatory arts practice, aimed at creative artists, arts and cultural organisations, policy makers, funders and students. Conference delegates can take part in sessions presented by leading facilitators and organisations, including the British Council, the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Scottish Ballet, Scottish Refugee Council, Creative Scotland, the Scottish Mental Health Arts and Film Festival and the National Theatre of Scotland itself.
Each of the ten performing groups features non-professional participants from communities facing challenges to their way of life due to a wide range of forces, including poverty, isolation, migration, technology, micro- and macro-economics, climate change, broadcast and social media and the digital world. These community members have worked with leading professional artists to create a new piece of theatre presenting their particular story. Each group will preview its piece for a home audience, before travelling to Glasgow to present it to a public audience, the other Home Away participants and delegates.
The newly commissioned productions include:
National Theatre of Scotland Associate Director, Simon Sharkey, says: "We have invited some of the most exciting artists and organisations, working with isolated communities from across Scotland and the rest of the world, to tell us their stories, to tell us what Home and Away means to them, to focus us on togetherness, empathy and a new way of experiencing the world. At a time of dramatic global change and chaos, we are looking forward to welcoming these artists and groups, to start an urgent conversation with us at a genuinely community level."
Director of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation (UK Branch), Andrew Barnett, says: "We supported Home Away because of our strongly held belief that participating in the performing arts brings enormous artistic and social benefits to individuals, communities and the arts sector. We believe this work gives a platform for the voices that are rarely heard in mainstream society. The ambitious scope of this project, featuring stories from both urban and remote communities from Scotland to Jamaica, South Asia, Australia and the USA, will be enriching and enlightening for all audiences, and enable us to further our interest in exploring connections across boundaries such as national borders, communities, disciplines and sectors."
British Council Culture and Development Director, Stephen Stenning, says: "Ten years on from the launch of the National Theatre of Scotland with Home, The British Council welcomes the opportunity to work with the Company on Home Away. The British Council recognises that Scottish artists and creative practitioners have a long tradition of community arts and socially engaged practice. Equally, Home Away demonstrates the wealth of long-standing and meaningful international connections. We are pleased to welcome a panel of practitioners and managers of international, socially engaged and community arts practice, to facilitate a discussion around arts for social change with an international perspective, looking at relevant performances within the Home Away programme and links with the British Council's Culture and Development programme. It feels like a particularly important time to be sharing stories and exploring the role of arts and artists in social change from communities across Scotland and across the globe."
Councillor Archie Graham, OBE, Chair of Glasgow Life, says: "We look forward to welcoming Home Away participants to Tramway this October, as work which has been created by artists and communities in five continents is brought together to be performed in Glasgow. Personal, powerful stories of the Bangladeshi community of the city will form a fascinating part of a richly diverse mix of ideas, viewpoints and inspirations from across the world."
Tickets for Home Away are on sale now at HOMEAWAY2016.COM.
HOME AWAY TRAMWAY PERFORMANCE INFO:
Tickets for each performance cost £9/£6 concessions
Book online at: tramway.org / by phone on 0845 330 3501 / In person at Tramway
Each performance lasts between 45mins to 1hr
An interval of approx. 30mins will take place between shows each evening
Recommended age guideline: 8+
SATURDAY 8 OCTOBER
7.00pm: Reprise by Adventure Stage Chicago and Northwestern Settlement
8.30pm: MEMORi by Bangladesh Association of Glasgow and theatrEX Bangladesh
SUNDAY 9 OCTOBER
7.00pm: Bargad Ki Chhaon Mein (In the Shade of the Banyan Tree) by The Yuva Ekta Foundation
8.30pm: The Adam World Choir by National Theatre of Scotland, with support from the Scottish Mental Health Arts and Film Festival
MONDAY 10 OCTOBER
7.00pm: Gunyal *Scar by Fred Leone
8.30pm: Fuaigh Fosgail (Home Away) by Fuaigh Arts Collective, with support from Bòrd na Gàidhlig
TUESDAY 11 OCTOBER
7.00pm: TIM (This Is Me) by Scottish Dance Theatre
8.30pm: Run Free by Manifesto Jamaica
WEDNESDAY 12 OCTOBER
7.00pm: The Hidden House by Wildbird in partnership with Tomintoul & Glenlivet Partnership
8.30pm: Antes Que Tudo Acabe (Before Everything Ends) by Nùcleo de Artes Integradas do Rio
HOME AWAY CONFERENCE INFO:
Conference passes are available to buy online at HOMEAWAY.COM.
Day pass tickets = £22/£19 concessions
Passes entitle delegates to 2 daytime sessions and 2 evening performances each day.
The full conference programme can be found at HOMEAWAY2016.COM.
ABOUT THE ARTISTS:
Tareq Abdullah is a writer, poet and director from Glasgow and a key figure within the Scottish Bengali writing and journalism community.
John Binnie, director and writer of over 30 plays, many for Glasgow's Clyde Unity Theatre, winner of three Fringe First awards and an Independent Theatre award. John has worked with the British Council on numerous occasions, devising new plays and running playwriting workshops in India, Namibia, Nigeria, Singapore and Germany. He directed a large scale Namibian/Scottish dance piece Journey at Glasgow's Tramway, which had a cast of 120 and fused African and Gaelic songs.
Cora Bissett is a director, actor, songwriter and Associate Director at National Theatre of Scotland, for whom she directed Rites, a production exploring the sensitive subject of female genital mutilation. Her political musical Glasgow Girls was based on the true story of teenage girls in Glasgow fighting for the lives of their asylum seeker friends, and won Best New Musical in the Off West End Awards London in 2013. The production returns to tour the UK in Autumn 2016.
Cora launched her company Pachamama in 2009 with Roadkill, first performed at the Edinburgh International Festival Fringe, where it won nine awards. Exposing the hidden world of sex trafficking, Roadkill toured to Glasgow, London, Paris, Chicago and New York, winning an Olivier Award for Outstanding Production. Other projects include GRIT - The Martyn Bennett Story, which won Event of the Year at the Trad Awards 2014, and Janis Joplin: Full Tilt, which played sold-out runs at the Edinburgh International Festival Fringe and at London's Theatre Royal Stratford East.
Sudip Chakroborthy is a theatre practitioner and Assistant Professor at the Department of Theatre and Performance Studies at the University of Dhaka, Bangladesh. He has directed, designed and performed in over 20 productions in Bangladesh, Kolkata and London, and has participated in national and international theatre festivals, including National Theatre of Scotland's The Tin Forest. His research specialism is the indigenous theatre of Bangladesh.
Sarah Rose Graber is a director, performer and teaching artist working between the US and the UK. As a Circumnavigator Scholar, she travelled the world studying theatre for social change. She then completed a Fulbright Fellowship centred on devising theatre. Sarah Rose has worked with National Theatre of Scotland, punchdrunk, Fuel, LIFT Festival, Playwrights Studio Scotland, Edinburgh International Festival Fringe and Scottish Youth Theatre. In Chicago, she's worked with Strawdog, Victory Gardens, Northlight, Metropolis Performing Arts and Adventure Stage Chicago.
Dawn Hartley, originally from Ayrshire, trained at London Contemporary Dance School and joined Michael Clark Company in 1986. After worldwide touring she relocated to Scotland and has worked freelance in teaching, movement direction, choreography and performance. From 1999-2007 Dawn worked at Brunton Theatre and initiated an extensive dance programme before joining Scottish Dance Theatre, where she has developed the company's reputation for offering excellent teaching, creative learning and community engagement opportunities at home in Dundee Rep Theatre and on tour.
BRian Johnson has been a Jamaican theatre practitioner for over ten years where his work has earned him numerous awards including the Prime Minister Youth Award for Excellence in Arts and Culture. Brian is an educator in Speech and Drama with children ages 3 to 12 and does youth advocacy with Articulet Edutainment where he serves as Artistic Director. With Articulet the emphasis is on using the arts to entertain change in the attitude of Jamaican youth on a range of social, economic and political issues.
Emma Jones graduated from Aberystwyth University with a degree in Drama and thereafter various theatre jobs took her from the West End of London to Butlins Entertainment Resort before migrating north to become the Deputy Chief Electrician at Dundee Rep. In 2006 Emma joinEd Scottish Dance Theatre as Technical Manager and is now Head of Production with her work seen in many international countries including USA, China, India and Brazil.
Chris Lee is a writer, director and performer, who has worked extensively in community and education settings on a plethora of projects ranging from youth theatre to film and multi art collaborations. He has previously worked with the National Theatre of Scotland as community director on The Elgin Macbeth and The Crucible.
Fred Leone is a well-respected community leader, with strong Australian Aboriginal, Tongan and South-Sea Islander heritage. Fred belongs to the Garawa of Far North West Queensland into the Northern Territory, and the Butchella of the Fraser Coast region of Queensland South East Coast. Fred has been the Guest Curator for the Queensland Performing Arts Centre's festival Clancestry for the past three years and Guest Curator of Indigenous content on the opening ceremony of the G20 Cultural Programme. He also collaborated on the official G20 World Leaders' Welcome to Country ceremony at the Brisbane Convention Centre. He has developed his 19-year career across the Indigenous Hip Hop and Queensland Hip Hop movements, community cultural development, education and youth sectors to become an established performing artist, arts and cultural facilitator, educator, youth worker, artistic director and creative producer.
Quee MacArthur has created music for a variety of dance and theatre companies, including Scottish Youth Theatre, Plan B Dance Company, Y Dance, Indepen-dance, BBC Alba and The Scottish Youth Pipe Band. He wrote and arranged the music for Barrowland Ballet's The River, which featured in the Glasgow 2014 Cultural Programme and the Greenwich and Docklands Festival. Quee plays bass with Scottish band Shooglenifty and has also played with Sunhoney, Kaela Rowan, Mouth Music and the Finlay MacDonald Band.
Rona MacDonald, South Uist-born playwright, poet and writer, from a family of Gaelic singers, pipers and storytellers. Rona has been and continues to be a key figure in the development of Gaelic Arts in Glasgow and is Gaelic Editor for Ghetto na Gaidhlig on the political blog Bella Caledonia. She has four children who have gone through Gaelic Medium Education in Glasgow and this, together with her own struggle of Home and Away, informs her artistic practice.
Gillebride MacMillan, from South Uist, one of the best know modern Scottish Gaelic singers, winner of two Gold Medals at the Royal National Mòd and a regular performer at some of the most prestigious Celtic music festivals throughout the world, including Celtic Connections, Sidmouth Folk Festival and the Pipes of Christmas in New York.
Judith Parrott, visual artist working across photography, sound and prose, examining relationships between community and place, the importance of cultural identity and the resulting personal and environmental wellbeing. She developed her Place Matters series working alongside communities in Bolivia, Canada, Antarctica, Scotland and Australia. This series follows her own migration from Scotland to Australia and consequent exploration of issues around displacement.
Renato Rocha is an internationally respected director, who has directed and collaborated with artists on projects and performances in India, Scotland, Germany, Tanzania, Egypt, New York, Paris and Colombia, besides Brazil. His current production Acelere, with Circolombia, enjoyed a successful season at The Roundhouse in London and is now on a world tour that includes visits to Paris, Blackpool, Sao Paolo, Medellin, Manchester and Madrid. Previous critically acclaimed productions include Turfed and The Dark Side of Love. He has created shows for the Royal Shakespeare Company and LIFT (London International Festival of Theatre).
Graeme Roger's work includes sculpture, film, performance, photography, installations, theatre and residency projects, often collaborating with other artists and musicians. Projects include residencies at Culloden Battlefield and Aden Country Park. Graeme was also recipient of the Royal Scottish Academy Morton Award for lens-based art as part of ROGER & REID. He has worked as a video designer for theatre, including the National Theatre of Scotland, Mull Theatre, Theatre Hebrides, Eden Court / Open Book Productions and The Big Fat Electric Ceilidh. Graeme leads the digital team and 'Cashback for Creativity' program at Eden Court Theatre in Inverness.
Puneeta Roy has worked as a director in theatre, film and television for over 25 years and is Managing Trustee of The Yuva Ekta foundation, a not-for-profit organisation empowering youth through active citizenship. As she dreams of setting up a Global Youth Citizenship Network, her vision is directed towards building a more equitable society, one in which underprivileged young people engage with their more fortunate peers, learn from each other and together create a more loving, sustainable planet.
Lesley-Ann Welsh is a founding member and current Executive Director of Manifesto Jamaica, a social enterprise whose mission is to develop and attract opportunities for young people that inspire creativity, productivity and elevated consciousness by harnessing the talents of nation-builders. Manifesto Jamaica was founded in 2010 to improve access to inter-disciplinary art education, business management and entrepreneurship skills specific to creative industries.
The National Theatre of Scotland is dedicated to playing the great stages, arts centres, village halls, schools and site-specific locations of Scotland, the UK and internationally. As well as creating ground-breaking productions and working with the most talented theatre-makers, the National Theatre of Scotland produces significant community engagement projects, innovates digitally and works constantly to develop new talent. Central to this is finding pioneering ways to reach current and new audiences and to encourage people's full participation in the Company's work. With no performance building of its own, the Company works with existing and new venues and companies to create and tour theatre of the highest quality. Founded in 2006, the Company, in its short life, has become a globally significant theatrical player, with an extensive repertoire of award-winning work.
The National Theatre of Scotland is supported by the Scottish Government. For more, visit www.nationaltheatrescotland.com.
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