Isabelle King reviews a Words And Women workshop for the Arts Council supported project 'About'.
On
a characteristically cold November day, a Saturday to be precise, I ventured to
The Curve in The Forum, Norwich, and took up a single seat out of the one
hundred and twenty that made up the auditorium.
But
there was no audience. No performers in the wings. No presentation materials on
view. Seven women took the stage, eight if you include myself, all seated
around a table armed with pens, paper and laptops. No, this was not an
ambiguous production. This was a Words And Women workshop for the ‘About’
project.
As
the new Marketing Assistant for Words And Women, I was lucky enough to sit in
and listen to this, the third in a series of three workshops, where I found out
what ‘About’ is, well... about!
The
project, supported by funding from Arts Council England, was launched by way of
an open competition in August this year. Women from the East of England were
invited to submit a proposal for a short text of 4,000 words or half an hour
long which would explore the life of one woman and
her relationship to place. The woman could be famous or non, contemporary or
historical, fictional or factual. The place had to be within the East of
England. The
primary aim of the project - to create a text which can lend itself to the page
and to performance.
Twelve
promising runners-up were chosen to take part in
The Tough Room, a workshop tutored by poet Hannah Walker, and the four winners - Jenny Ayres, Lilie Ferrari, Tess Little
and Thea Smiley - are receiving ongoing mentoring for their pieces through
workshops and on-line tuition. Belona Greenwood and Lynne Bryan of Words And
Women, Hannah, and Adina Levay, Director of Norwich’s Chalk Circle Theatre
Company, are the mentors. Adina will also take the completed texts and direct
them for the stage. The results will be on show during Words And Women’s
International Women’s Day event, Sunday 8th March, at The Fusion
Digital Gallery, The Forum, Norwich.
The
workshop I attended gave me a really exciting insight into what audiences can
expect on the 8th March. What struck me most was the variety of the
work being developed. Two are based in Norwich, one on the Bungay Straight, and
one in Knebworth. Three are historical and one contemporary. The women explored
range from regional rebel Jane Sellars, hung in
Norwich 1631, to the fiery alter ego of an 1880’s prostitute.
It
was also fascinating to learn how the writers are dealing with one particularly
challenging aspect of the ‘About’ project; the fact that they are writing for
both page and stage. One of the most unique things about the project is that
the pieces are written to translate to both forms. But how does writing for
prose with a view to performance affect the process?
Actress
and playwright, Jenny Ayres, finds it easiest to write specifically with
performance in mind. Her piece explores the voices of the Hertfordshire railway
women of World War Two in which she incorporates the theatrical device of a
chorus to comment on the action that takes place. Jenny will think about how
the work translates to the page later on in the writing process and has been
looking at short stories by Janice Galloway and Helen Simpson which mimic
scripts as a possible way forward.
Thea
Smiley however, has found it stifling to write with theatricality in mind. Her
piece follows the journey of a recently bereaved woman who annually takes a
particular walk along a hazardous road for reasons which only become clear as
the text progresses.
Thea
explained at the workshop how initially she felt more comfortable with
forgetting the audience and writing solely in prose as she finds the form more
freeing. When she read it out loud however, it was interesting to discover how
the piece transcended. We heard, not just a detailed account of one woman’s
experience told in first person, but a powerfully intimate monologue.
Though
each writer seems to have a different process, all four firmly agreed on one
point - how refreshing it is to write
invigorating and un-apologetically raw roles for women which actresses can
really get their teeth stuck into.
The
workshop came to a close with Adina
talking about her plans to develop the texts into performance. She
explained that sets would be entirely minimal, directing the main focus to the
actresses themselves.
This
certainly resonates with the project’s concept. I felt similarly about the room
in which we sat. It could have been just another auditorium were it not for the
women who occupied it, discussing and debating writing, altogether making their
‘About’ a very exciting one.
Isabelle King is the Marketing Assistant for Words And Women. She's worked as an actress in
theatre, film and radio in the UK and abroad; a career in which she has
predominantly been seen in various Shakespearian guises. She's the founder of literary event
Books Talk Back, which is hosted in London and Norwich, including at The
British Library with support from The Eccles Centre. Isabelle's creative
writing has been short-listed for the Ideastap/Writers' Centre Norwich national
fiction competition and she also writes and produces arts journalism pieces for
Future Radio.