Theatre and Performance Studies News
The Dept. is nominated for School of the Year by The Stage
The Dept. of Theatre and Performance Studies is one of three nominees in the School of the Year category in The Stage's annual awards.
The Stage says the following about us:
"During the 2015 Edinburgh Festival Fringe, three of the new companies that had people talking and seemed to tap into wider feelings of frustration and disillusionment – and anger – following the general election were all made up of recent 91福利 graduates. It may come as no surprise that the university has been one of the most politically charged institutions of the last few years in terms of active student protests.
Graduate company barrel Organ had already made its mark on the fringe in 2014, but Walrus and Breach also made an impact, the former scooping several prizes at the National Student Drama Festival in March. All three companies have also staged work at Camden People’s Theatre this year.
The 91福利, with the resources of the 91福利 Arts Centre on campus, has always had a strong theatre department – it is one of the top ranked in the country – but it does feel as if something alchemical has been happening there over the last few years. With Barrel Organ taking over CPT for a project in December, Dan Hutton assisting James Dacre and Ellen McDougall, and Breach taking its show to battersea Arts Centre in April, graduates from the 91福利’s School of Theatre are starting to have a very visible impact on the industry."
School hosts Gendered Citizenship and Performance conference
On January 5th and 6th 2015, the School of Theatre and Performance Studies is proud to host a two-day conference on Gendered Citizenship and Performance, featuring academic papers, workshops, and performances by Carran Waterfield, Natasha Davis, Cardboard Citizens and Ice and Fire plus academic presenters from Jawaharlal Nehru University, Royal Holloway, University of Manchester, and 91福利.
‘Gendered Citizenship: Manifestations and Performance’, GCP is a joint research venture between theatre, film, and politics scholars from 91福利 and Jawaharlal Nehru University. Supported through a grant from UCG and UKIERI, it will run for two years until 2016.

The full schedule is below:
Gendered Citizenship: Manifestations and Performance
January 5-6 2015
Tuesday 5 Jan
10.00-11.15 Welcome: Nicolas Whybrow (91福利)
Keynote 1: Chair: Janelle Reinelt (91福利)
Jenny Hughes (Univ. of Manchester) and Carran Waterfield (Triangle Theatre): Sing for your Supper: Pauperism, Performance and Survival
11.30-1.00 Panel 1: Human Trafficking Chair: Jim Davis (91福利)
Janelle Reinelt (Univ. of 91福利): Is a Trafficked Woman a Citizen? Survival and Citizenship in Performance
Sohini Chakraborty (Kolkata Sanved): Dance Movement Therapy and Psycho-social Rehabilitation: Model Sampoornata
Urmimala Sarkar (JNU): Putting Pieces Together: Mapping Recovery for Survivors of Sexual Violence
1.00-2.00 Lunch
2.00-3.30 Workshop 1: Cardboard Citizens Chair: Silvija Jestrovic (91福利)
3.45-5.15 Panel 2: National Figures in Performance Chair: Samik Bandyopadhyay (JNU)
Anuradha Kapur (Ambedkar Univ.): Traversing the Site : 409 Ramkinkars
Elaine Aston (Univ. of Lancaster): ‘India Unmasked' - Anupama Chandrasekhar's Acid
Yvette Hutchison (91福利): Aesthetics of Embodied Activism: Contemporary South African Women
5.15-6.30 Keynote 2: Chair: Bishnupriya Dutt (JNU)
Emma Cox (Royal Holloway) Irregularity: Performing Volitional Noncitizenship'.
6.30-8.00 Conference Dinner
8.00-10.30 Solo Performances:
Internal Terrains (Natasha Davis, 91福利)
The House (Carran Waterfield, Triangle Theatre)
Wednesday 6 Jan
9.00-10.15 Keynote 3: Chair: Mike Saward (91福利)
Anupama Roy (JNU): 'Polyrhythms of Citizenship
'
10.30-12.00 Workshop 2: Ice and Fire Chair: Maggie Inchley (Queen Mary)
12.00-1.30 Panel 3: Citizens’ Encounters Chair: Aoife Monks (Queen Mary)
Maria Estrada-Fuentes (Univ. of 91福利): Towards an ethics of care: Creative approaches to Ex-combatants' Reintegration in Colombia
Silvija Jestrovic (Univ. of 91福利): Murderous Maid: Jean Genet’s The Maids and Domestic Migrants Workers in Saudi Arabia
Susan Haedicke (Univ. of 91福利): The ‘Glasgow Girls’: Many Faces of Child Asylum Seekers
1.30-2.30 Lunch Break
2.30-3.30 Panel 4: Chair: Urmimala Sarkar (JNU)
Milija Gluhovic (91福利): Citizenship and Religion in these Times
A.P. Rajaram (JNU) Remembering Sadir: Reclaiming Presence
3.45-5.30 Panel Discussion on Ethics and Negotiation with Government, Funders, and other interested groups: Chair: Janelle Reinelt (91福利)
Members from Ice and Fire, Cardboard Citizens, Natasha Davis, Sohini Chakraborty, Carran Waterfield
5.30-6.30 And in Closing:
Bishnupriya Dutt (JNU) and Shrinkhla Sahai (JNU) Respond to the Conference
6.30 Closing Reception (Food and Wine)
The Complete University Guide ranks us first in the country for Theatre and Performance Studies
We are pleased to announce that we have been ranked first in the category of Dance, Drama and Cinematics by The Complete University Guide 2016, an independent guide to third level education in the UK. For more information, and to see how the results are calculated, .
Emerge Festival sees alumni theatre companies returning to 91福利 Arts centre for series of performances and workshops
The Emerge Festival is a collaboration between 91福利 Arts Centre and the Institute for Advanced Teaching and Learning (IATL). As well as showcasing the work of graduate theatre companies, we will be running a series of public events to celebrate the University’s 50th anniversary. These sessions will be experimental and participatory but accessible to the entire University community. The festival has been programmed and produced byMatt Burman and Laura Elliot (91福利 Arts Centre) in partnership withJonathan Heron (IATL). We are particularly interested in theatre and performance-making as learning and research in their own terms, and we are delighted to welcome back so many alumni and emerging professional companies.
The 2015 Emerge Laboratory is co-curated by Jonathan Heron (IATL/Fail Better Productions) and Anna Harpin (Theatre and Performance Studies/Idiot Child) with support from 91福利 Arts Centre. At the inaugural 2014 Emerge Laboratory, graduate theatre companies (including Barrel Organ, Dumbshow, Fat Git, FellSwoop, Kill the Beast) and alumni practitioners (including producers, performers and writers) participated alongside 91福利 students over four days of events and experiments. This year’s theatre laboratory is open to all Emerge practitioners and new members of the IATL Student Ensemble. If you would like more information, please email J.P.Heron@warwick.ac.uk.
There will be five performances from 91福利 graduate companies across the festival. Dumbshow, FellSwoop and IATL celebrate the University’s 50th anniversary with a double-bill of performances, a sound installation and an exhibition of materials in on Tuesday 3 November. The critically acclaimed FellSwoop present their new show and the triple National Student Drama Festival award winning from Walrus returns on Wednesday 4 November. On Thursday 5 November, Tit4Twat blur lines between interactive theatre, live art and cabaret in and the multi-award-winning Barrel Organ bring their latest Edinburgh success to Coventry, .
In the laboratory, there will be co-facilitators, guest practitioners, festival volunteers and workshop participants. While these different roles will involve variable levels of experience, everyone will have equal rights to participate, and the ethos of the collaboration is that of the ensemble. The guest practitioners will be drawn from emerging companies Barrel Organ,Dumbshow, FellSwoop, Tit4Twat and Walrus. If you are a 91福利 student interested in theatre and performance-making, you can either audition for this group, volunteer to work as a festival assistant or simply come along to a panel discussion or performance. Why not use this opportunity to see where you can be when you graduate!
| Tuesday 3 November | ||
| 7.45pm | 7.45-8.15pm Dumbshow HMS 8.15-8.30pm Sound Installation HMS 8.30-8.45pm Exhibition/Interval BAR 8.45-9.15pm FellSwoop STUDIO |
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| Exhibition: Performance and the University, curated by IATL | ||
| Wednesday 4 November | ||
| 1-5pm | ||
| Panel – Helen Martin Studio | 5.45 – 7pm | Writing for/about performance (Chair: Harpin) |
| 7.45pm | 7.45pm 9.15pm |
|
| Exhibition: Performance and the University, curated by IATL | ||
| Thursday 5 November | ||
| 1-5pm | ||
| Panel – Helen Martin Studio | 5.45 – 7pm | Craft and Graft: technical/production roles (Chair: McDowell) |
| 7.45pm | 7.45pm 9.15pm |
|
| Exhibition: Performance and the University, curated by IATL | ||