Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Mothering Children's Theatre
On the weekend I found myself at a very unique gathering in Kagoshima, Japan. It was a gathering of Mothers, belonging to an association known as the Kodomo Gekijou (The Children’s Theatre), who had assembled for their annual meeting to discuss their progress in helping children to lead happy lives through providing access to workshops, theatre shows and other interactive artistic experiences.
The thing that all these mothers have in common is a passion for children’s theatre and particularly for companies like Kazenoko that have been around since they were children themselves. Every year they invite theatre companies that have a long history of creating theatre for children to their conference, keen to connect and get their input. This year Douke Gekidan (specialising in political theatre for high schoolers) from North Kyushu, Ningyo Gekidan from Osaka and Musubi Gekidan from Nagoya (both specialising in puppetry) were among the companies present. It was a great opportunity for me to meet artists from other companies in Japan making theatre for children but also to get to understand the unique power of the Kodomo Gekijou in Kyushu.
Kodomo Gekijou, once operating as a very small, grass roots organisation, accessing an audience in the community that the theatre companies would not normally have had access have recently grown into an organisation that acts as a producer, taking a fee to organise performance opportunities. Whilst in some parts of Kyushu, some performances could not take place without them, in other parts of the island, they are acting as a middleman, and costing the theatre companies 5% of profits. The theatre companies are hoping that Kodomo Gekijou will start looking to attract corporate sponsorship to subsidise these performances, particularly those that are for smaller audiences. Needless to say, the dialogue between the theatre companies and the Kodomo Gekijou is open and therefore, they have a healthy relationship that will sustain into the future. It was a very fruitful conference for this reason.
It made me reflect on the touring mechanisms in place in Australia and there is no doubt, we do not have anything as grass roots as Kodomo Gekijou.
On the Sunday evening, I was witness to an extraordinary performance of Furato Burato (The Kazenoko Kyushu Two- Hander, that has been in repertoire for 4 years). It was the show’s final performance, produced by Kazenoko Kyushu in association with Kokomo Gekijou at a community hall. Final because the actors that created it with director, Asano-san, both have to leave the show for different reasons: Kibo-san (father of 3 under the age of 5) is changing profession and Kariya-san is taking on the management role of Kazenoko Kyushu President.
The mothers of Kodomo Gekijou in Kagoshima were instrumental in the development of the piece; providing feedback for the new work following each tour to Kagoshima and developed a very strong relationship with the piece. By the end of the performance, many of the mothers were in tears. That night, feeling like a bit of an intruder (but made to feel VERY welcome), I attended a party held at a local Izakaya (bar) hosted by the Kodomo Gekihou for the Furato Burato creative team. It was a beautiful night, and one by one, everyone spoke passionately about the show; expressing their initial doubts, their gradual satisfaction with the development of the piece and finally, their great sorrow that it is all over, and that they will not see the actors that they have become so familiar with on stage anymore.
To say the very least, anyone thinking that Japanese women are short on opinions, would change their minds after listening to the speeches made that night. Most left at the reasonable hour of midnight, some carrying sleeping children home on their shoulders. But it was a special night for the creative team, which went on into the small hours, aided by Karakoe and fuelled by a cheap Nomihodai (all you can drink).
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Lewis Jones:
ReplyDeleteThanks Liz ... sounds like the ultimate demand driven model
July 16 at 2:28pm · Delete