Can we change our future through performance?

As I am writing this piece in London, we are in the midst of a late summer heatwave with headlines declaring the ‘unprecedented seventh consecutive day of 30C heat’. It strikes my attention not just because of its abnormality for this time of year, but also because I am currently working on a collaboration around unliveable heat as part of UCL’s Performing Planet Activism Programme. I can’t help but draw parallels between the present I am experiencing and the projected future I am reading about. The findings around extreme heat are for a collaboration between our research programme on the role of knowledge in adapting to climate change, and the Wise Ram Theatre. It seeks to bring together scientific research and performance to develop a piece of work which responds to the increasing heat we will be confronted with. While I am no thespian, and nor am I expert in the intricacies of ecodramaturgy - a term that has been coined to encapsulate the ‘strategies employed by playwrights telling stories that might help us understand and […] act to avert ecological crises’, the preparation for this project has highlighted the way in which performance through theatre, but also film (and certainly many other art forms), can awaken us to the reality of climate change.

Through their first production ‘Decomissioned’ written by co-director Molly Anne Sweeney, Wise Ram demonstrates how the severity of climate issues such as sea level rise might be conveyed to wider audiences. Taking the real life story of Fairbourne - a village on the west-coast of Wales whose council have made the decision to stop investing in its sea defences - the play imagines a narrative that seeks to convey the reality of a problem that could affect ‘10% of the world’s population that live in coastal areas fewer than 10 metres above sea level’. While discussing the play, Wise Ram’s other co-director Sofia Bagge tells me that the power of theatre is that it can take challenges that may seem abstract (both in their temporality and ability to comprehend) by relating them to our everyday experiences.

In ‘Decomissioned’ for instance, this takes the form of an annual school camping trip, which one year affected by flooding, has to be re-imagined in a classroom. While seemingly a small disruption, Sofia states that by demonstrating how routine might be broken by the climate events we are more frequently confronted with, it becomes possible to address issues as catastrophic as sea level rise or extreme heat. She states that in order to make something compelling, you have to remove a lot of the detail because otherwise it could become too slow. Indeed, as Smith et al draw attention to ‘Climate change research is difficult new knowledge. It introduces complexities, anxieties and new questions into many areas of life’. By conveying it through performance, however, Sofia remarks that directors have the power to take the audience on a journey and decide how an issue is spoken about or represented.

While performance has the capacity to help us understand complex issues through narrative and imagination, it also prompts us to remember and reflect. In the context of extreme heat and the increased frequency of related events such as forest fires, this can be fundamental in creating a collective memory around incidents that are easily pushed out of our minds, or relegated to the past. The idea of collective amnesia is familiar - there are countless historical events that for various reasons people, communities and governments have wanted to forget. Moments deemed somewhat heroic, or worthy of remembering on the other hand, are repeatedly celebrated and platformed in plays, novels and cinema (World War II rings many bells).

Yet, performance has a vital role to play in helping us to continually confront and reflect on urgent and traumatic events: ‘on stage, history is recalled to serve both the present and the future’. Re-imagining, re-forming and re-conceptualising the climate events that have already begun affecting us can ensure that the unusual summer heat is not dismissed.

However, the ways in which performance can choose to address climate related issues need not be so explicit. That is to say, addressing the climate crisis does not only mean ‘making work about climate change’. As Woynarski states ‘the problem-solution model, drawn on when theatre is utilised to ‘communicate’ specific ecological problems and ‘solutions’, often instrumentalisies performance in a reductive way and largely focuses on content’. This approach she argues ‘does not leave room for the nuance, complexity or intermeshment of contemporary ecological issues’. As I prepare research around humanity surpassing its climate niche’ for our intervention with Wise Ram theatre, I think about how this scientific idea might be conveyed to wider audiences. I reflect on the film Parallel Mothers by Pedro Almodóvar and how it carefully addresses the violence and loss of The Spanish Civil War not by creating a story that centres on this past but rather through an ‘engaging melodrama plot’ about two mothers whose children get switched at birth. The narrative which encourages the audience to reflect on the war is less than a side plot addressing a ‘single victim of falange violence’. It is by no means a film about the Civil War, but through a carefully interwoven narrative that follows the protagonist's journey to have her great-grandfather exhumed at what she hopes is his burial site, Almodóvar touches on issues of national loss that have led his film to be ‘characterised as an intervention … to reckon with the legacy of Franco and the Civil War’. What this conveys is the ability of storytelling to deal with certain issues, whether from our past or our present, in myriad formats. In the context of work that seeks to address the climate crisis, this enables creators and performers to bring it into ‘contact with any and all kinds of theatre’.

Yet while performance can be effective through its implicitness, the opposite can also be true and in certain contexts this may leave room for more obvious stand points on certain issues. In the recent film How to Blow up a Pipeline, the focus and content of the film is clear from the outset, its intent evident in the title. Following the lives of seven protagonists impacted by the effects of climate change, it depicts them working together to destroy the oil pipeline that they deem to be destroying them. Unlike the example above, the film explicitly invites us to engage with climate issues, using the genre of a heist thriller to keep its audience engrossed throughout. While the film’s lasting impact on its audience cannot be certain, what it does do through genre is encourage its viewers to think in a different way. Indeed, while the characters in the film are depicted as ‘eco-terrorists’, they are also the heroes of the story. Unlike mainstream media, this hollywood film thus allows its viewers to engage with direct climate action in a more sympathetic way. As the film’s director states ‘the idea of empathisisng with characters who take action like this without ever condemning them for taking it too far, is something I don’t see in the media’. Unlike the mainstream press around recent protests such as those engaged with the Just Stop Oil campaign, the narrative of this film provides its directors with a way of conveying a different side to this story.

While we are at the beginning of our project with Wise Ram, the methods above make me hopeful about the possibility of conveying the topic of extreme heat and the wider themes of our research around diverse knowledge practices in relation to climate change. As I prepare the research from our side, I look forward to exploring the ways in which we can communicate global temperature rise, the ways in which this will affect urban environments and the specific impact this will have on socio-economically marginalised groups. Through our work we hope to generate emotional and creative responses that can inspire action around these topics, as well as learn and evolve through engaging with different forms of knowledge that exist beyond the policy community. Whether through small and personal stories, or bigger productions, performance can take the climate events we are experiencing and ensure they remain present. Yet as the playwright Kristin Idaszak says, ‘there is no one play or playwright that can take on the immensity of this story. Instead, we need a canon of climate plays, from playwrights of all subject positions and aesthetics’... this could be one of them.


Written by Aishath Green, Research Manager at the Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction on the project Accountable Adaptation.

This work was supported by a UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship: [Grant Number MR/W008572/1]. 

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