Thursday 23 June 2016

The Sound of Music

The Sound of Music
Accidentally found myself in the same building as Nigel Facade this week. In the EU funded Sage. If irony was the only casualty of the Leave campaign's dangerous hate-mongoring we might be able to weather it with the usual British method of satire and eye-rolling. As it is, our choice today is stark and binary: love or fear, together or isolated, in or out.
Poetically, I've been subsumed by a sudden attack of the lurgy ever since, rendering me hard of hearing and full of bile: much like the man himself.
I can't remember another time in my privileged life when I've felt so on edge in a public space. We saw the telly vans first. Then the protestors, singing and shouting 'Welcome to Gateshead. Everyone is welcome here' I had an overwhelming urge to join them without yet knowing why. Then the extra security at the door. A pile of glossy programmes slipped out from beneath black clothed tables. 'Blueprint for Brexit'. Fuck. Alec went to pick up our tickets as I made a beeline for the loo. A tall man in a suit lurched into my path and stood too close. He wanted to know which event I was attending before letting me use the facilities. I was shaking as I entered the bathroom. We were at the EU FUNDED SAGE to support two artists who, inspired by Rachel Carson, are spending a year making work on the Northumbrian Coast. Environmental artists in one room. Nationalist piss-artist in another. I was so angry as we walked across the concourse of the EU FUNDED SAGE, with it's perfect view of our bridged cities.
We could hear the pomp and ceremony blasting through the supposed sound proofing, interrupting the gentle ebb and flow of tides and poetry. As the evening wore on I became increasingly aware of how few of us there were compared to the capacity next door. My mind wandered to fantasies of crawling up the lighting rig and unfurling a banner above Farage's head. My heart raced, time dragged. Our number dwindled. It was difficult to concentrate, impossible to relax. 
I know I'm singing into an echo chamber of Remainians, but illness is making me sentimental and increasingly likely to make references to the Sound of Music. (Blame THAT poster).
The threat to our green and pleasant land isn't coming from the outside, from immigrants or EU red tape, it's already here in the fateful history-repeating marriage between power-hungry right-wing career politicians and the disenfranchised masses. 
Whatever result emerges tomorrow the country is already divided. Ideally we make love and art and heal our communities and educate and nurture each other and share what we've got and STOP projecting everything that's difficult onto Others. If the alternative is to put on our travelling clothes and make for the hills, I hear Vienna is lovely this time of year.
VOTE REMAIN.

Thursday 28 May 2015

I Told You This Would Happen - On Tour




Hello.

I'm going to put some thoughts about touring I Told You This Would Happen here because this show is really hard, and also really brilliant to perform.

I can't promise there won't be spoilers. So if you haven't seen the show and plan to, read on at your own risk. If you like knowing what's going to happen before they do, maybe join a group or something, because life happens man.

Thursday 28 May
We opened in Hull last night. Part of the story I'm telling happened in Hull. I realised as the Humber Bridge loomed from behind the bend of the M62 that I hadn't been back since. Good, I decided. I'm back on my own terms. Frankie's Tavern, the docks, the station. Still, good. 

The tech didn't finish until 19:40, I was on at 20:00. Less good. (Nobody's fault, brilliant and patient technicians getting to grips with a technically nuanced show). Lounged at the desk, sharpening my pencils, feeling more in the room than I remember feeling during the previews. Back then, I was deafened by my heart gulping in my ears, tonight I'm enjoying the pre-show music.

Clearance, first move, start talking: to the people in the room Kathryn. There are people here to hear you. I don't want to be here, I don't want to do this (I'm talking though, the words are coming out, in the right order). I feel this to a certain extent with every show, it's a hard story to tell, I have to get to a dark place by the end, and at the beginning that feels like a crazy thing to be volunteering myself for. But it's written in such a way that the play just happens to me, and the more I let it, the better it is. There was a catharsis when I wrote it, and there is in the playing too. 

I make eye contact with a couple in the front row, there's an interesting woman on the end, another older couple further stage right, a man I come to silently refer to as 'the reviewer' for reasons unknown to me, and a sporty looking man in the middle, on his own, possibly straight from the gym, what made him book this? I wonder. He's precisely who I want to have this conversation with tonight. Come on then, you're on.

Off to Halifax this morning. Raging thirst. 
Me: There's a retail park behind this roundabout, I'm just going to pop in there, want anything?
Tech: You really do know Hull then.
Me: Yeah.

In Boots: all Boots shops look the same except when you're a time traveller and it's 2007 and that's not the pharmacist you remember. 
Bought some vocal zones, because I'm here for a show. Still good.

Tech: So was it just coincidence then, that the tour started in Hull?
Me: Yeah. 

I slip Dr John into the cd player. Nicked my boyfriend's car cd case before I left. Feels good to be blasting some good blues as we zip up the flyover, past the Humber churning mud. 
Feels good to be playing music I listen to with someone brilliant. Feels good to be doing this on my own terms, and not on my own.

Halifax is lovely.

Friday 29 May

The get-in in Halifax made me want to take up smoking. The anticipation of performing filled my stomach with acid, at twenty to curtain up I'm having that kind of full body flush usually reserved for being sick. 

The show was fun though. Endless technical hitches gave my relationship with the space a live quality that allowed me to play, and we got some nice laughs.

I learnt I don't need feedback. I asked my producers to send out a feedback form with the programme sheet. What was I thinking?! People can have whatever reaction they want to this show, and frankly it's none of my business. 

Toying with the idea of collating any feedback I get and posting it to Douglas McPherson in a glass box with a big TICK painted on the side of it. 

Dear #tigerdouglas, 
Here is some testimony of what subsidised art means to people in rural communities and anywhere else that isn't ONE POSTCODE IN LONDON (who wouldn't see work like this or anything else without subsidy). 
A bientôt,
Beaumont x

PS. Turns out Capitalism isn't an entirely fair system and money has a funny way of making its way back to the same people. Measuring success on ticket revenue is a bit like the star rating system some of you critic types still go in for - pretty fucking arbitrary and entirely based on the bias of the critic or system.

And just one measure of many.

And I'm getting off topic.

Saturday 30 May

Cleaner show on the tech side of things meant it was easier for last night's audience to join the dots, and they were wonderfully with me through the whole thing. Chipping in with 'yeah's and 'oh no's. Looking forward to tonight, and a whole day in sunny Hexham with no get-in.

Tuesday 2 June

There's a thing that happens about two thirds of the way through the show, after we've had a few laughs, and around about the time of the 'fucking' slide, when people stop looking at me. Maybe it's counter transference on my part, but it feels a bit like I've betrayed them with what our relationship is about. I'm really pleased with this as a dynamic. It enacts the subject matter. 

To the woman who cried. I am sorry, but I hope it helped.

Doncaster tomorrow.




And now through the medium of interpretive dance...

I'm more used to considering 'the medium of interpretive dance' as a punchline than something I might actually do.

I've gotten stitches since I was a kid. Not sure when they started, but the most memorable was during sport's day when I was 8. One of the kids in the year below drew a picture of me lying on the track as his assignment on 'Sports Day'. My adorably sensitive neighbour came to tell me, lest I spot it on the noticeboard outside their classroom and be upset. 'A girl fell over'.

Curious thing is I was quite a good sprinter, I did a fair bit of dance in my extra curricular activities and had strong legs. The year before Mam had videoed me in the relay: we pasted the competition: 'you were so far out front I couldn't keep the other kids in the frame'. 

It got to the point last year when I was getting stitches while driving. A car. It was because I'd stopped breathing, I do that sometimes. It's a way I let myself know I'm stressed, or more to the point, it's a way my body let's the me in charge, the me that lives in my head, that firmly believes in mind over matter, that can make my body-self feel things by thinking them into being, it's how my body let's that me know she's maybe a little bit stressed.



And breathing, well you're not supposed to think about that are you? It just happens automatically. If I were to hyperventilate due to my stitch and pass out, my body would regulate my breathing while I was out for the count. Try not thinking about something you know you're not supposed to think about because it might have terrible, embarrassing consequences. Don't think about cocks. Now don't picture the last cock you saw in curious detail, I'm being serious here, whatever you do put the image of that great big chicken down. Sometimes, if I catch it early enough, I can talk my diaphragm down from the precipice. Breathe in 2, 3, out 2, 3. You're ok, you're, you're ok. (I was recently given the brilliantly sensible advice of concentrating on the out breath, because as we've already covered, your body is all tooled up to deal with the in-breath thing on it's own).

Anyway, long story short a few too many instances of 'I can't breathe, I can't breathe', the familiar stabbing pain in my ribs, tightening of the windpipe, rising panic, soon abbreviates itself to 'I can't breathe, I can't b-. I can't-. I can't.' And so I don't do as much exercise as I would like, for fear that I can't.

It's no coincidence that my psychotherapy course has recently taken a swerve toward neuroscientific study of the brain in the body: how the body thinks and the brain feels. So this year's resolution, late and only half made for fear that I can't, is to start a revolution in my body politics: no more shall mind rule over matter. I've promised myself a reconciliation between the limbs and organs that exist beneath my head and the 'me' that floats above. 

So my first audition of the year came right on cue: as things do once you open yourself up to an idea. The Mayers Ensemble is a cross discipline experiment run by dancer, choreographer and theatre maker Pauline Mayers to find a common language between 'dancers' and 'actors', so that maybe we could drop the labels and all move and talk and make some work together. 

Perfect.

The audition was tough. It was a room full of dancers, before I knew it we were lunging rhythmically to music that was fartoofasttobelungingtoo. I got a stitch within the first ten minutes. 'This is not for me' I thought. I pushed on. 'I'll never get this job' I thought. I pushed on. 'This is what you wanted' I thought'. 'Fuck off' I thought.

I got the job.

The escape route out of that tightened fist round my oesophagus has always been dancing. I enjoy dancing, and so I kid myself it isn't 'exercise' like running or step aerobics, but something nearer fun. Last week the Mayers Ensemble came together to do some dancing.  Last week dancing was exercise.

When it comes to contemporary dance I don't know my arse from my elbow, but it turns out  either are as good as the other as a starting point; and for someone who isn't always comfortable being up and personal with my own body being in touch with everyone else's from the word go has brought with it some interesting challenges to how I think about bodies and how I feel about thinking.

Amanda is a beautiful, physically strong dancer. Because her body is really strong. It bulges and flattens according to what it needs to be able to do. It is a doing body, poetic and expressive. There's something knowable about her body that I don't always feel towards my own. She starts from the body and lets it think for her. 

By day five, my mood was low. I was spending a lot of time thinking about pain thresholds (and the efficacy of deep heat creams). There is no getting round physical pain. Even if you know it's making you fitter, stronger, more bendy. The relentless physical challenge of each day forced me to feel, and not only my body, but the feelings I carry that I don't want to feel. The shame, the anger, the sadness that I am so adept at bottling, dissociating from, thinking away. 

'This is what my body does' I kept thinking. This is part of how it expresses itself. My solo pieces were frenetic, distressing to watch, tiring to perform. But they were also a release, of who knows what.

At the end of the first week I got home and cried and I didn't know why. Well, I didn't know in the way I was used to 'knowing'. A girl fell over.

I'm glad to be starting from the other side of the spectrum: to start with the body. Usually my head does all the work and the body comes along for the ride. As with the show I wrote, which was my way to think myself better after a traumatic relationship.

My lovely new partner summed it up the other night when he said 'you told your past like a story and it's only starting to hit me that this really happened, to you.' And frankly, it's only just started dawning on me. 

Tuesday 28 October 2014

Wor Lass

When Fuel asked me to write about a woman who inspired me, I knew I couldn't limit myself to just the one. But was there a way to bring many women together in one idea? 

Who inspired me?

To inspire:
  1. 1) fill (someone) with the urge or ability to do or feel something, especially to do something creative.

    2) create (a feeling, especially a positive one) in a person

    3) animate someone with (a feeling).

    4) give rise to
  2. 5) breathe in (air); inhale

Who filled me with ability to do or feel something? Who created feelings in me, animated me, gave rise to me? Who gave me breath? Perhaps I took the question a little literally: 

'But everyone will write about their Mam', I thought.

This has been a good year for me: a year for putting down roots artistically and emotionally too. As a backdrop to a run of work with, and produced by North East companies, I made the decision to stay. Sure, my stuff is still in storage, but there's a flat on the horizon, and it's in Gateshead - where my Mam comes from. Home has always been more of an idea than a place, growing up as an expat you get used to not feeling at home when you are at home. I made a friend in Theodor Adorno at University, but have increasingly felt a need to know feelingly where I come from.

In studying transactional analysis and script theory I was taken with the idea that motifs repeat down family trees: that families can pass on 'scripts'. You see it played out time and again on the BBC's 'Who Do You Think You Are' -  professional actors who happen to be amateur yachting enthusiasts find out they come from a line of seaman, etc. I started to wonder whether the women who went before me passed anything on. 

My matriarchal line

Lucky for me, me Mam has an encyclopedic memory, and gave me a lot of detail that Ancestry.co.uk couldn't. That already had me thinking about who passes down the stories, men's names move forward, but it seemed to be the women who passed the legends down from one generation to the next. Thing about looking up your female ancestors is they disappear behind men's names, either their husbands' or their Dads', so tracing mothers requires a little more digging. That's where the title 'Wor Lass' became obvious, women are labelled in relation to someone else, if not a husband then a father. It's also a Geordie term of endearment and one that can be applied across the board, to sisters and daughters as well as mams and wives. 

I was primed to be told wor lot were barn stormers and ball breakers, shaking placards on the barricades and marching for their rights. What I found, was that my line accepted their marching orders and got in line with everyone else. The first story Mam told me was about my great grandmother's sisters, who used to go to town during wartime rationing 'to queue'. A queue meant there was something worth queuing for, so you joined the line and asked questions later. This became a metaphor for me throughout the development of the piece, as I started to spot more and more lines that my lineage lived on.

As a sub plot to the development of this piece I was also working as a 'Local Engagement Specialist' for Fuel's sister project 'New Theatre in your Neighbourhood.' Talks with ARC made it very clear that the communities they wanted to reach out to are the old mining villages in County Durham, communities who wouldn't necessarily think of travelling to the theatre for an evening's entertainment. There was only one thing for it, I was going to have to gatecrash some village halls and find out what the craic is.


Tatting pattern courtesy of Trimdon 'Craft and Chat' group


I wish I could remember how to knit. Thankfully I can talk, which is the other major activity at craft afternoons. The craft and chat session in Trimdon has been going for 30 years. The women who attend take it in turns to introduce new crafts to the group, but there's always the option of bringing whatever bit of knitting, crocheting, bobbin lace or tatting you happen to be working on, and cracking on over a cuppa. There they were again, more lines, of yarn and wool and thread weaving and looping as the lasses talked. I took notes. 

So I did what anyone with an approaching deadline and limited time would do: I drew a tenuous literary connection between me and my ancestry. Their lines and mine. They worked on washing lines and factory lines and here's me wanging on over a blank page. Every new thing I found out about my family seemed to demark a greater distance. They left school, got married, had children: that was success. I'm doing my third degree, happily independent, and would quite like a french bulldog. The lines they drew to mark what was allowed or desirable look like sentences to me, life sentences that is, of drudgery and acceptance - but only because there wasn't any choice, the inevitability got my back up. 

When I sat down to write 'Wor Lass' the first two lines rhymed: 


I've been invited here to tell all you'se
About a woman who inspired me muse (!)

That's alright I told myself, there's a strong rhythm to draw people in, a cheeky allusion to the openings of epic ballads, and a knowing bathos about writing heroic couplets in Geordie. Canny craic. But then the second pair of lines had to rhyme too, and now I'm writing poetry. Oh bliddy hell. Thing is it fits (my scansion might not always) but what's more inevitable than rhyme? What is less likely as the subject of a string of heroic couplets than a series of Gateshead lasses who worked in factories and other (grander) people's houses? Somehow it let me feel more connected to these women who, whether it seems likely or not inevitably lead down to me. And what's more 'Wor Lass' who has to borrow names from Da's and Husbands is suddenly sharing an heroic playing field with Odysseus, maybe. Indulge me. No more tapestry and tatting for ye pet, you're the epic main event noo. And if it's good enough for Chaucer's 'Legend of Good Women'…  Reet, what else rhymes with 'family tree'…?


Oh, and you’ll never guess what: I started recording my first radio drama this week, playing a factory worker in a munitions factory on Tyneside. This one’s for ye Wor Lass. 


Wor Lass

I’ve been invited here to tell all youse
About a woman who inspired me muse (!)

I sat and thought about who got us here?
Who’s stood behind me yammerin’ in me ear

To keep on keeping on and keep ya heed?
Thing is most of those lasses are well deed.

And that got me to thinking about lines
The ones we stand in from the start of time

The kin now buried deep, from yonks ago
Who shaped what we are, but they’ll nevaa know.

And so I started digging for me roots
Past factory clocks and clarty miners’ boots

In censuses the women disappear
You need to knaa whose lass they were, each year

I mean you need their Da or husband’s name
If Mam’s and wives you’re looking to reclaim.

Sometimes they nudge you back by saying ‘née’
Naysaying being labelled in this way.

There’s nee mistaking lineage for the lads
Ancestry gans: ‘here’s me, and there’s wor lass.’

Wor lass! That’s it! I’ll sing her famously
She’s one and many simultaneously

She’s mams and wives and sisters, maids and gannys
She’s mine and yours, she’s wors, and she’s dead canny.

I’ll sing the bords doon from my family tree
Find names for who made me phenomenally

Replace ‘Wor Lass’ with Kathy, Florrie, Lizzie
Wor Mary, Meggy, Rosie, Winnie, Kitty.

And youse could find ya own if you’re not busy
For now I’ll lend ya my lot in this ditty.

“Reet Mam!” I hollered “who comes afore Nanna?
Were we on’t pickets? Did we march from Jarra?”

“Whey nar” Mam said (and her name is Patricia)
“They just cracked on, nee feminist militia.”

Oh.

“Did they not want to change the status quo?”
“You divvent wish for owt if you divvent know -

They just cracked on, the lads went doon the pit
The lasses left school and got on with it.

They towed the line, there wasn’t any choice
Nee buggar telt them that they had a voice.

During the war wor Lizzie’s sisters, two
Would gan doon Gateshead high street just to queue-”

“To queue?” “Aye, well with rationing still on
You saw a line and joined it-“ “now haddon”

“I’m telling ya! Wor Katie and wor Bella
What are we waiting for?” “Whey what’ they tell her?”

“Whatever bit of meat or veg was on
You got in line before it was all gone.

(They had a press packed chocka with molasses
Come World War Three they’d still be sweet them lasses)”

“And what about wor Lizzie?” “Your great gran?
He ran the Askew Arms, but she was banned.”

“He didn’t let her serve behind the bar?”
“No, she refused, felt it a step too far -

“The bar’s nee place for lasses”, so she said
She worked in Sinclairs packing tabs instead.”

Nee place for lasses; what we waiting for?
I follow lines cued by who went before.

Me Nanna, Kathy, was a cracking singer
Worked in Osrams: had asbestos fingers

From testing light bulbs, picking oot the duds;
Would pass yah bait straight oot the oven, nee gloves

“How Nanna man! That’s red hot! Where’s a cloth?”
“Yee’d be nee use on line, yee, ya tae soft.”

Her Mam, wor Florrie, filled her washing lines
With giving birth at hyem a full six times

But only two bairns made it oot the cot
She planted four graves with Forget-me-nots

Nee National Health to help those poor bairns in
And naen for us if the bastard Tories win.

Not one for soft touch, Flo kept up her guard:
“Away with ya slavour”; grief makes you hard.

In factories and at hyem they worked on lines
My lineage file along the winding Tyne

Next, great great grandma, Flo’s Mam, Mary Ann
Had ten bairns, although not to the same man

Widowed at twenty six and mam of two
She left Derry for Felling, to start anew

And lost nee time in courtin’ a new Da
For Rosie and Maggie who didn’t knaa

That Florrie was already on her way
Arriving six months past the wedding day!

Eeeeh scandal! Worse, hypocrisy to boot
She threw wor Lizzie and wor Meggy oot

For getting preggers afore they’d been wed
Coincidentally both by men called Ned.

Meanwhile wor Rosie grafted doon Armstrongs
Making cartridge cases, but afore long

The war was over and her contract too
Was put on short time, or to me and you

A zero hours deal. Sound familiar?
S’Almost as if progress is not linear.

When Wall Street crashed wor Rosie headed South
Laid off and paid off, living hand to mouth

She found a family in that London who
Were looking for a maid, and said she’d do.

Living in service did not gan to plan
The cook was always pissed, she missed her Mam

So Rosie caught a train to come back hyem
“Cockneys” she’d say, “you canna understand them.”

Three of her sisters had since gotten wed
Wor Lizzie and Meggy had married the Neds

Wor Florrie had led the charge down the aisle
Winnie, Kitty, Norah still in single file.

Poor Rosie, an old maid in more ways than one
Still mourned the lad she lost in World War I.

When Kitty started courting, Rosie ‘changed’
They said the menopause made her deranged

Maybe she finally grieved all her losses
Father, sister, lover buried under crosses.

She crowded Kitty’s twosome: suitor flew
“I would be married if it weren’t for you”

The line was drawn between these half sisters
Neither were missus to anymore misters.

Not hitched at thirty and you’re on the shelf -
I’m glad to be free of that sentence myself.

The Beaumonts lead on to Isabella
Living in service ‘til she meets her fella

Miners die young, so did this poor codger
Bella eventually married the lodger.

Her bairn, wor Ella, stops me in my tracks
A mishap at home, she ran oot the back

Starched apron, flat iron, an ember let fly
Her daughter, wor Ethel, watched her Mam die.

And then in another cruel twist of fate
She orphaned her son, who was sent away.

Grasping at straws noo, one more Mary Ann
1831: far as I can gan.
  
These lines I follow are getting hazy
Wor names are misspelt, scribes getting lazy

Beaumont is Bowman; but with no arrow
To give me a route down straight or narrow

Lines that would link up more roots of my tree
That lead from these lasses reet doon to me

The lines that join birth date with when you’re dead
That quick dash between in which whole lives are led.

Wor lass joined the queue, and worked on the line
Made weapons and warriors along the Tyne

She loved and she lost and she buried in droves
Her husbands and bairns in neat little rows.

Wor lass towed the line, wor lass knew no choice
Nobody had told her that she had a voice.

She sings to me now, sends a call down the line
I’m freelance, and free-wheeling on my own time

No forgone conclusion on whether to wed
I stayed at school and make theatre instead.

Wor lass stands behind me, wor lass is good craic
She’s driving me forward e’en as I look back.

Here is my line; cued by who went before:
Haway wor lass what are you waiting for?