Language & communication take centre stage in new digital play
From writer Alun Saunders (Pobol Y Cwm, A Good Clean Heart: Best Playwright Wales Theatre Awards 2016), Deaf & Fabulous Productions and Taking Flight Theatre comes Fow, a heartfelt, funny and entertaining drama rehearsed and recorded especially for online audiences.
This trilingual piece is presented in association with The Welfare Ystradgynlais and Theatrau Sir Gâr, with tickets available from both venues for all performances between 29th April and 5th May.
Lissa is defensive, deaf and failing university – the last thing she needs right now is to fall in love. SiĂ´n is a sheltered Pontardawe boy with rock star dreams, desperately in love and about to have his heart broken. And JoshâŚwell Josh just wants to beat the end of level Boss. With humour, honesty and A LOT of breakdowns in communication, FOW asks audiences how we fall in love when we donât hear each other and finds there is always a way if you just look hard enough.
The show intersperses Cymraeg, English and British Sign Language and is based on an idea by Deaf actress Stephanie Back, who also plays the role of Lissa. The cast of three is completed by Jed OâReilly and Taking Flight regular Ioan Gwyn, both of whom are known for work on S4C (Stwnsh Sadwrn, Pobol Y Cwm).
Steph explains a little more about how why she felt this story needed to be told:
âMy passion for Fow comes from my personal story. I was born hearing and became profoundly Deaf at 15; I couldnât sign, and lip-reading was impossible. I was without language. At university I started to find my cultural identity through language; I found a community where sign language was a first language, I found my identity, where I belonged. The Deaf community; the language we were using (BSL) didnât have the same rights as spoken English. There was power in our hands and a passion to fight for our right to be seen. Moving back to Wales and exploring my Welsh heritage led me to discover that Welsh has suffered a similar treatment to BSL. I felt this had to be explored, the politics, the oppression, the history â different but the same. The transformative power of language and the importance of this in our identity is this projects stimulus. We need a positive communication story now more than everâ.
Fow puts hearing audiences in a position that will be very familiar to Deaf audiences – Lissa uses BSL, SiĂ´n mainly uses Welsh and Josh mainly uses English â so only someone who understands all three languages will follow every word of the play. Audiences will be sent a link to watch the show, with a live Q&A following selected performances, plus a link to rewatch the show with captions for those who want to catch anything they might have missed first time around.
Director Elise Davison explains:
âItâs quite a leap of faith for audiences to take to choose to watch something they may not completely understand, but the feedback weâve had from test audiences during the development of the piece has been amazing â from Hearing audience members, Deaf audience members Welsh speakers, non-Welsh speakers alike, everyone has commented on how they followed what was happening, and that when they didnât, they still enjoyed it – that it gave them a new perspective. The actors working on the show are all so good at what they do that they convey the meaning with much more than the words. So whilst Alun has written us a beautiful script, he has written it knowing that parts of the audience wonât be following every word, and as a result itâs a really visual piece â which is of course really unusual for digital theatreâ.
A truly heart-warming love story told online in different languages, including BSL, Cymraeg and English. Fow was set to be a theatre piece touring last year. COVID19 put a temporary stop to those plans so the companies set to reimagining the piece for a digital platform. The script has been re-written to present the story as a series of real-time overlapping, interspersed monologues. It has grown into a funny, direct and unembarrassed exploration of communication breakdown in contemporary relationships. Designed by Becky Davies, with sound design by Daniel Lawrence, this is digital theatre as youâve never seen it before. Fow explores language, culture, communication, identity, relationships with a specific focus on Welsh culture and the Welsh language can intersect with Deaf culture and BSL.
Well known nationally for their inclusive brand of theatre-making; Taking Flight make bold, unusual theatre productions with D/deaf, disabled and non-disabled performers. Their work tours Wales and beyond and they often find themselves in out of the way places, performing in woodlands, castle grounds, community centres or shopping arcades as well as traditional theatre venues & schools. So has moving work online provided any specific challenges to them?
Elise continues:
âThis will be my third digital production since Coronvirus restrictions begun last year. Being an integrated company, we are really concerned that the gains that have been made in increasing access for both performers and audiences are not lost in the rush to create online work. Iâm really interested in looking at how we can use the digital findings of the last year to improve access to arts events. For many of us itâs the first time we have had to self-isolate or work from home but for others this is not a new thing and wonât be something that changes after lockdown. For many people getting to or being in a theatre isnât a possibility. What this time has provided is the opportunity to be able to explore ways of providing an equality of experience that isnât just streaming, that goes some way to create an immersive event that can be enjoyed on a physical or digital platform or through a mixture of both. To me that throws up some really exciting possibilitiesâ.
Fow is suitable for audiences aged 14+(due to strong language and sex references). You can find out more about Fow at takingflighttheatre.org.uk/fow and tickets can be booked online on a âPay What You Canâ basis from Theatrau Sir Gâr www.theatrausirgar.co.uk or The Welfare Ystradgynlais.
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