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022_000014/0000

Living Through Extremes in Process Drama

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Autor
Bethlenfalvy Ádám
Field of science
Általános oktatás / Education, general (including training, pedagogy, didactics) (12831)
Series
Collection Károli
Type of publication
monográfia
022_000014/0263
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Seite 264 [264]
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022_000014/0263

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APPENDICES APPENDIX E EXCERPTS FROM AN INTERVIEW WITH CECILY O’NEILL Budapest, 27" August 2011 by Ädäm Bethlenfalvy AB: It is obvious that process drama is really close to theatre. Creating a theatre event with the participants involved in it, with the teacher giving most of the form and the participants giving most of the content. So my first question would be how would you define theatre? What makes good theatre for you? CON: Good theatre for me is something that engages me. That moves me from where I am, either emotionally or intellectually to a new place, where I see things anew. Where I have a new insight or perspective over, I realise something that connects up other pieces of knowledge, or understanding or wisdom. Not that I will necessarily be able to put that into words. The greatest art defies explanation. What we see at the end of King Lear, not very hopeful necessarily, but we had an experience that has moved us, changed us, disturbed us. Made us uneasy. Lady Gregory said that theatre should be a wise disturber of the peace. Not in the sense of disturbing the peace so that you end up provoking a riot or driving people crazy. But that in a way the best theatre will leave us with a sense of unease, of the ground having shifted a little bit. And that is a hard thing to do. For me the hardest thing to do is to switch of the inner critic. You are always thinking: why are they doing that, why are the lights so bad, or why did the director decide to do that? And a really good piece of theatre will stop that, and that is so rare. That makes me quite an annoying theatre companion. AB: Would that mean that you consider a process drama successful if it creates a similar unease? CON: Absolutely. And that is rare. I think the work we did this week the closest it came to that was when the king and Anita, that moment when I had no idea what was going to happen, it was a challenge for the group to find words that would be satisfying enough to make that encounter meaningful and not just an easy solution. If he had said I don’t need to look at you with my eyes, to feel you have a good heart, and you are the girl for me and that stuff. You know. It was more complex than that... AB: But I was feeling in that moment that actually people were working to remove that unease. They are trying to resolve the situation in some sense. CON: Of course they are. + 263 +

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