Threepenny Opera

News Articles


Jane Thompson, National Institute For Continuing Adult Education writes...

ALL THE WORLD'S A STAGE

'All the world's a stage' announces the Globe Theatre's tour and exhibition promotion on London's South Bank. And when you take the tour, you are soon reminded that, in Shakespeare's day at least, the Globe was an authentic and popular theatre for the people.

Just a stone's throw away on the breeze-block walls of a shared office space, underneath a block of flats, a makeshift gallery of compelling images catches the magic of ordinary people transformed by the pleasure of performance into dancers, actors and story tellers. 1st Framework was set up by Director/designer Peter Avery and producer Maxine Webster in 1982 to bring together arts practitioners and community groups in un-conventional venues to work together on cross art form projects that are both challenging and experiential. 1st Framework - with its mix of artists, volunteers and local groups - is making an important contribution to realising the cultural and creative potential of lifelong learning.

1st Framework has done this most noticeably through its partnership work with The Mary Ward Centre. Over a hundred years earlier, Mary Ward achieved modest fame in her own lifetime as a best selling novelist, but she has had a more enduring impact on public education through the pioneering work she initiated at the settlement she founded which now bears her name. On the agenda was a rich mix of clubs, concerts, debates and lectures that reached the lives of ordinary people. Her declared aim was to promote 'equalisation' in society and the settlement was soon crammed with local residents enjoying 'the hundreds of pleasures and opportunities that fall mainly to the rich'. Concerts and music were always an important part of the programme. The building acted as a magnet to ordinary people who not only came to pursue intellectual pursuits and learn practical skills, but to be part of a social and community network that included groups interested in music and debating, and self help groups like the Coal Club and the Poor Man's Lawyer Service. At one time George Bernard Shaw, Sydney Webb and Keir Hardie were amongst those who lived in the settlement's batchelor accomodation and who gave lectures about how best to support the struggles and improve the lives of ordinary people.

Today the Mary Ward Centre still takes the values and priorities of its founder seriously and continues to be a place for ideals and enthusiasm. Its no surprise, therefore, that some of the centre's current members have become energetic partners with 1st Framework in a number of community arts initiatives in recent years. By making touring projects with young professional arts practitioners The Over 60s Drama Group has succeeded in challenging the historical steretypical idea that older people are reluctant to embrace new ideas or use new technology. They now have a well deserved reputation for making high quality innovative projects which encourage people of all ages to 'lay claim to their futures in diverse and creative ways'. Besides local performances, they have toured 22 cross art form projects to Ireland, Scotland and Australia, taking the projects to locations where there is little local arts provision including dis-used Miners Welfare Associations, Military Hospitals, schools, community centres and residential homes. However, their projects are also welcomed by the arts 'establishment' including West Yorkshire Playhouse, Institute of Contemporary Art, British Library, Serpentine Galley and Sadlers Wells Theatre . In 1996 the partnership won first prize for their production of 'Stories' in Ireland during the European Year of Lifelong Learning. Georgina Dobson who took the role of Ariel in a production of the Tempest at the Edinburgh Festival entertains most Tuesday nights at a gay bar in Mayfair. 'A cab comes to collect her on cabaret night almost every week. She has a great singing voice and the songs she likes to sing seem to go down very well.' Maxine seemed to take it for granted that I would understand. And of course, I did.

The Mary Ward Centre provides the 'incubator' in which projects are developed in a weekly class. Eventually when conditions are right, money raised, project partners and venues found the intergenerational teams pack their suitcases and hit the road. On tour last year with Green Candle Dance Company, 1st Framework took their 'join-in-the-production' approach to community arts to venues somewhere near you. They began with Peter Avery's skeleton script, describing simple and abstract visual ideas of 'home', and a core professional company of dancers, musicians, designers and technical crew, and went out to five different regions, staying in each for ten days, and developing the show with local arts organisations, schools, colleges, community groups, brass bands, dance groups, special needs centres, asylum seekers, choirs and older people. In each place a specially chosen venue was 'home' to the final production, presented as a promenade performance unique to each place, with different groups contributing to different scenes before an exuberant finale brought everyone involved to their feet, dancing to music played by a brass band. Artistic Director Peter Avery says of the West Midlands residency in Sandwell, 'One of our abiding memories will be of the various Sandwell groups between the afternoon and evening shows spread out in the sun across the grass of the municipal gardens playing rough cricket, learning tribal dances and exchanging Marmite sandwiches.'

Not only did local groups have a lot of fun from taking part, but the workshop format allows for significant and difficult issues and differing concerns to be explored through the inter-play of improvisation, music, theatre and dance.

In an effort toward sustainable development of this type of community learning 1st Framework have been assisting groups to make their own websites with hyperlinks to strengthen contacts across sectors They've been greatly assisted in this by Community Action Network and Rural Development Agency who are currently running joint training and support on First Class intranet systems. With computer hardware supplied by Sainsbury's. The websites are already helping in the development of projects to mark 2001 International Year of The Volunteer. The original project website of 'Home' can still be seen at www.can-online.org.uk/~home.

'All of us learned quite a lot', said Peter. 'Although it's easy enough to make sure that people enjoy themselves and have a good time, we do set high standards and take a few risks in the interests of stretching people's imagination and increasing their sense of achievement'.

1st Framework's latest partnership project involves The Baylis Programme from English National Opera's Education Department and a cast of local people from Southwark who are interested in taking part in Bertolt Brecht's Threepenny Opera.

'After volunteers for the chorus have been recruited and we've held auditions for the main parts we'll do some exploratory workshops so that everyone gets a sense of what Brecht had a mind. We will be looking closely at the two film versions - French and German made in Berlin by Pabst in the 30's with many of the original cast. Pabst worked with Brecht and Weill and the film has an intruiging ending, not at all as the play. In the film the beggars do disrupt the Coronation Procession, while Mac languishes in Jail Polly buys an old city bank with the gangs 'takings' , Mac escapes, Tiger Brown 'confiscates' Macs bail just before he looses his job as Head of Police , and later joins Mac, Polly and the Peachums on the Board of a reputable old city bank.

After three performances in Bishopsgate Goods Yard, Braithwaite Hall in Croydon and the Sands Film Studios in Rotherhithe the production will return to the original film studios in Berlin where Pabst made his film with Brecht and Weill. The studios are now a very radical Adult Education Institute / Housing co-op called UFA Fabrik . The first ideas about Threepenny Opera were sparked off during an exchange visit between The Mary Ward Over Sixties Drama Group and German Social Work Students from Berlin in 1999 International Year of Older People. Maxine says ' Raising money for this type of activity is very tough, people are often totally mystyfied as to how we make the projects. Ageist attitudes are changing slowly, but dismissive opinions about what older people can achieve are fairly depressing. I'll never forget a quote from one of our oldest participants Babs Perry who suffered three massive strokes but valiantly continued to tour with the projects 'without a doubt the biggest obstacle people like me have to over come once they have their stroke is other peoples low expectations of what we can still achieve'.

Intergenerational projects provide employment for young people in the creative industries, work experience for students, community development opportunities and participation in a high quality arts education project for older people. They also bring home a wealth of information about other countries innovative projects are distributed to practitioners in this field. When 1st Framework got back from Australia having represented the UK as part of International Year of Older People it made income from selling the information sheets to local officers from the Departments of Health and Education. The Australians are way ahead with strategy and policies which address the issues of a rapidly aging society. That presumably is why they were chosen to host International Year of Older People.

Still on the funding issue Maxine explained. 'In our experience its a lot easier to raise goods and services 'In Kind' instead of cash, for example 'Japan Airlines gave us a substantial reduction on our Australian tickets, sometimes we get free use of a venue for the project or the free use of a couple of rooms big enough to hold the workshops in. In the Midlands we were working in very isolated locations with no food nearby. It was winter, the volunteers and artists were fed each lunch time by the Local Bangladeshi Women's group who were taking part in the 'Home' project. All these generous gestures, whatever scale, have a great effect on the atmosphere and quality of the final product.'

No one who has seen the enthusiasm and mutual learning generated by this kind of work - which is usually done to exceptionally high standards despite shoe string budgets, with aspirations and outcomes that are often difficult to 'sell' to funding bodies, whose funding criteria don't always allow for 'joined up' initiatives across separate and different statuary and voluntary organisations, on a local, national and inter-national scale - could be in any doubt about its value and importance. It is just the kind of response which will save ordinary people - especially those in deprived communities and groups - from the worst excesses of current policy directives, which seem determined to either reform or reprimand the socially excluded in the name of neighbourhood renewal.

Mary Ward was right. In the struggle to promote 'equalisation' in society - or in today's language, 'greater equity and social justice' - the poor and the overlooked still need to share in the 'hundreds of pleasures and opportunities that fall mainly to the rich'. A sound analysis and a rousing speech or two from Keir Hardie and Sydney Webb no doubt helped to create and sustain the labour movement at a critical moment in its history, but I would bet money in the bank that it was also the pleasure to be gained from taking part in collective and creative activities - for their own sake - that also helped to lift the people's spirits when the going was really tough.

Although I do accept that New Labour - and the resources made available to counter social exclusion and to promote community regeneration by the DTI and the DfEE- are concerned about the intransigence of poverty, and about the accelerating gap between the knowledge- rich and the knowledge- poor in our society, it is important to remember that good community arts can help to get in touch with the places that 'straight' policy and 'formal' educational initiatives fail to reach.

If you are currently working in community based education, or have any kind of responsibility for providing community based learning in the 'brave new world' of the Learning and Skills Councils, it is important not to underestimate the power of ' the pleasure principle'. If you don't have contact with your local arts organisations and community arts activists - its probably time to get in touch. You may well discover just the right injection of energy and idealism you could be looking for, and some good ideas about getting local groups involved in activities that help to re-build damaged solidarities and provide new opportunities for learning - as well as taking time out to enjoy themselves.

THIS IS THE FIRST IN A SERIES OF ACCOUNTS BY JANE THOMPSON OF VISITS SHE IS MAKING TO PROJECTS IN THE SEARCH FOR INSPIRATION AND GOOD IDEAS TO SHARE WITH OUR READERS. IF YOU ARE INVOLVED IN SUCH A PROJECT AND WOULD LIKE TO INVITE JANE ALONG, PLEASE CONTACT HER AT NIACE
tel. 0116 2044275 or
email jane.thompson@niace.org.uk

 

y

back to Our Library

Do you need more information from Our Library?

send us an e-mail:+