Public Engagement: Difference between revisions

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Materials generated in the workshops will be used to create a theatre piece for two professional actors and members of the local community. One actor will play the part of a rhapsode arriving in Durham, determined to perform Homer’s Odyssey; the other will act as an interjecting member of the audience, demanding to know who this great Homer was, and offering his own (locally inflected) conjectures.
We are currently exploring the possibility of using the materials generated to create a theatre piece for two professional actors and members of the local community. As currently envisaged, one actor will play the part of a rhapsode arriving in Durham, determined to perform Homer’s ''Odyssey''; the other will act as an interjecting member of the audience, demanding to know who this great Homer was, and offering his own (locally inflected) conjectures.





Revision as of 10:43, 11 December 2013

Homer Drawing 1.jpg

We have established an on-going collaboration with Changeling Productions, a theatre company who specialise in performances outside theatres, and have an excellent track-record for community engagement, particularly in areas of social and economic deprivation. In the year 2013/14, Changeling Productions delivered music and theatre workshops in County Durham, exploring Homeric poetry. These were designed to test the hypothesis that imagining the author is an effective means of establishing a personal relationship with the text.

Changeling Productions adopted a three-pronged approach, offering sessions not only in local schools, but also addressing members of the public through street performances, and setting up workshops in a local library and in the Spennymoor Vacant Shop, managed by Creative Communities.

Festival Walk 1.jpg

We are currently exploring the possibility of using the materials generated to create a theatre piece for two professional actors and members of the local community. As currently envisaged, one actor will play the part of a rhapsode arriving in Durham, determined to perform Homer’s Odyssey; the other will act as an interjecting member of the audience, demanding to know who this great Homer was, and offering his own (locally inflected) conjectures.