Showing posts with label female playwrights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label female playwrights. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 May 2013

The Adaptation Debate

In case you've missed them, over the past few days there have been several articles and letters in The Australian. Rosemary Neill published this article on the weekend, and then this follow-up. Ralph Myers responded. We sent this letter we sent to the paper today:

We’re 7-ON, a group of seven mid-career playwrights. We are writing in response to the recent series of articles regarding the place of adaptations on the current Australian stage.

It is a pity that this debate is descending into an acrimonious ‘us and them’ dispute. There are bigger and more interesting, and we think, more urgent questions to ask: about the nature of change in our industry; about ‘what is writing?’ in an age of remix and reproduction; about sustainability in the arts and in arts careers; about the monoculture we see on so many of our stages and how we might change it to reflect the diversity of Australia in 2013 and our globalised world; about the place of the Live in a culture where people spend most of their time in front of screens; about innovation—what it is and how we might create space for it to flourish; about the diminishing scale of productions outside the mainstages ... and much more.

With regard to the original article—we have nothing against adaptations, we think of them as the writer collaborating with Shakespeare or Ibsen or whoever, giving us a dialogue with our predecessors and the past, but in an idiom readily accessible to the present, in a way which illuminates the present. We would, though, like to look beyond the obvious texts to adapt, and be bolder in our approaches. 

Back to Myers’ article, it was interesting to note that the four writers he picks out for approbation are male, and that the only female writer mentioned is dismissed as a stereotyped rejected and embittered woman who’s past her prime.

The seven of us don't agree amongst ourselves on every aspect of this debate. Some of us uphold the idea that plays aren't literature, while others reject it; some believe adaptors have the right to 'steal and corrupt' from the ancients, though not the recently-dead like Miller—if you don’t like the script as written, then don’t do it. (And how very, very hard-won are the copyrights that allow writers to make a living while alive, and then provide for their descendants.) Some of us love the results of these ‘corrupted’ classics. Some don’t. And we’d like to point out that any notion of someone being ‘best’ or even ‘worst’ at their craft is, at base, a subjective opinion. But all of that is okay. Divergence of opinion is healthy.

There should be a place for adaptations on our stages, of course there should—but not at the expense of new work. Ideally, the new writing informs the adaptation, and the classic informs the new. Both matter, both need the other.

But there’s no denying the fact that writing an original play is a much more difficult, and much braver, undertaking than adapting, where all the heavy lifting has been done by the playwright. And obviously, if there are no new plays, there are no future classics.


Sunday, 3 October 2010

We couldn't help noticing ...

We’re really pleased that the theatre companies have taken responsibility for a more than token inclusion of female directors in their 2011 seasons. Perhaps they were inspired by the many and various forums, events, newspaper articles, and blog posts bemoaning the paucity of women directors and writers when last year's subscription seasons were announced? But ... we couldn’t help noticing ...

1. Sydney Theatre Company
Main Season:
In The Next Room by Sarah Ruhl (American) female playwright.
Bloodland is listed as ‘story by Kathy Marika, Stephen Page and Wayne Blair’.
But it is as yet unwritten, according to Stephen Page, who spoke for it at the season launch. Don’t know that you can count this in terms of female writer numbers really ...

So … That’s 1 (overseas) female playwright in a season of 12 plays.

2. Belvoir Street Theatre
Upstairs:
Neighbourhood Watch by Lally Katz.

Downstairs:
The Dark Room by Angela Betzien.

That’s 2 plays by (Australian) female playwrights in an overall season of 13 plays.

3. Griffin Theatre Company
Main season:
This Year's Ashes by Jane Bodie.

Independent Season:
Smashed by Lally Katz.

That’s 2 out of 8.

4. Ensemble Theatre (and yes, we know they don’t receive public/government arts subsidy, but still ... )

No female writers in a season of 8 plays.


So … out of 41 plays being presented by/through Sydney professional mainstage theatre companies in 2011 there are just 5 plays by female writers, and one of those is by an American, and 2 are by (bless her!) Lally Katz.

This comes to (approximately) 12%.

And who buys the tickets? Mostly women, we know. So ... predominantly female audiences are listening to ... predominantly male voices.

Theatre companies all ... that’s pathetic actually, don’t you think?

Monday, 29 March 2010

More on the Women Artists Thing ...

We discovered this article - a little after the event - but it's a subject that clearly isn't going to go away any time soon, so ... for your interest, men and women of the theatre, click here to read The glass curtain by Anne Marie Welsh, first published in The San Diego Union-Tribune in 2005.