November 12, 2012

The Last Time I Was in Egypt...Teaching Playback Theatre


“Mark here, will teach script writing. Julisa will take the directing track. And we have two performing tracks. Chuck will teach acting, and Kimberly…Kimberly…,” the sponsor Essam paused and looked to me for help. “She will teach something…something new called Playback.”

This is how the trainers for a Drama Conference in Upper Egypt were introduced to the 120 participants gathered for 3 ½ days of training over the leap year weekend in 2008.

As the participants made their choices for which foreign teacher they would be with for the weekend, they wanted more information. Essam invited me to explain, to pitch the Playback track. I stood with my interpreter and addressed a sea of eager faces. This was their first Christian Conference solely focusing on drama training ever and they wanted to make the right choice. I did my best to explain.

“From the first time I saw Playback in 2002, I have been excited about the possibilities of this new form of theatre. It is new, created in 1975 in USA, but now there is an International Playback Theatre Network, and there are teams which practice it all over the world. It is simple, beautiful, inexpensive, and powerful, even when performed by amateurs. It also seems that it can be all these things in any language or culture. In a lifetime of being a theatre practitioner, I’ve seen nothing else that makes the most of what theatre has to offer that is special and different than television and films. Theatre, you see, is an immediate art form. The live audience is as important to the success of each show as the actors, play, or any technical element added. Playback is improvised theatre that takes the fun of improv – like the television show “Who’s Line is it Anyway?” and gives it depth and purpose beyond just entertainment. Why? Because the stories, the content of the plays come from the audience. The audience is part of the creative process. The lives of ordinary people become the subject of art. In teaching you Playback, I don’t have to worry about my understanding arabic or the nuances of your beautiful culture. You already know what is taboo, you already know what is funny. I will teach you how to improvise it on stage with adaptable rituals we use in Playback, and you will be ready to perform anywhere and anytime. Come learn playback with me this weekend and be perhaps the very the first to know it and use it in North Africa.”

Sixteen brave souls signed up for the Playback track, which, even after the introduction still felt like a mystery to them. But thankfully for me, they jumped in with both feet from the very first session; giving themselves wholeheartedly to the process of learning Playback. My translator kept remarking about their enthusiasm unhesitating involvement. She said, “I can’t believe they’re doing this! It’s especially unusual for upper Egyptians, because they tend to be more reserved and conservative.”

Where to Begin? Concentration, Observation & Working as a Team
After quick intros in a circle (name/sound/action then everyone immediately copies), I started with an exercise called Diamond Ensemble, a variation on the acting “Mirror exercise” where partners face one another and copy the actions of the leader to the nth degree of exactness. Diamond Ensemble uses 4 people facing the same direction, 3 following the one in the front. There are 3 simple rules: 1. Go very slowly, 2. Don’t make any movements in front of your body, 3. Change leadership when the person in front turns their head more than ¼ turn to the right or left. When done even moderately well, it can look like a choreographed dance. It forces the participants to concentrate, forget about themselves, and pay attention to details. People thought that it was Playback. But I told them that we were just starting off with some exercises and games that would help them in Playback later.

What Did You Learn?
We debriefed the Diamond Ensemble; how it felt, & what they learned. It’s always rewarding to hear people share what the experience brought to them. I asked them how they felt about worshipping God with their bodies. I shared with them how important this has been for me. I believe we all have Spiritual temperaments that long to worship God in more ways than the typical tradition and ritual, Bible study, or celebration in a congregation singing worship songs. There are some of us who best worship God and hear from him by being in nature, or through care giving, or activism – fighting injustice or a righteous cause, there are others who are drawn to simplicity – the ascetics, and then there are some like me who best worship and sense God’s presence through our senses. Through beauty and our body we know his presence or sense his love. An exercise like Diamond Ensemble can be a profoundly worshipful experience when we are moving to worship music or meditating on a passage of Scripture.

For the conference, I’d chosen Isaiah 61:1-4 to be a theme passage and asked them to read it aloud. Later we would try the Diamond Ensemble with the phrases of this passage rolling around in our minds, and sometimes being called out by the leader, or repeated by the group.

But this was all we had time for in our first night together.

Day Two: More Exercises to Prepare for Playback
To work on creating pictures, getting comfortable in one another’s space, and creating depth and levels on stage, we worked on some Sculptures to go with the themes of Isaiah 61:1-4. In teams I observed them discussing and planning at length what they would do and started to worry that they’d ever get to a point this weekend of being able to instantaneously make a Fluid Sculpture or a Freeze Frame Story without first discussing it. But this was an important step in the process and they made pictures reflecting “Release for the prisoners,” “Rebuild the ancient ruins.” And two for “Day of Judgment.”

On the second day I introduced the Fish Tank. “This is kind of a crazy exercise. You’ll think there is no point to it, but you will see later how important it is.”

I asked them to begin walking around the room to fill the space and not bump into one another.  Clap once to start. Two times they freeze. One clap they start again. Then we added a three clap to freeze with an emotion. They started to pay attention to each other as I eliminated the claps and challenged them to start and stop as simultaneously as possible.

Next we eliminated the clapping. Anyone in the group can stop, and if we’re paying attention to one another, the whole group stops. Anyone can start again and we all will follow. I know there are some that like to be the leader, so we’ll limit you to only stopping or starting the group 3 times. Let’s add ages to our walks. I’ll call out “Young child,” or “proud teenager,” or “elderly person” and try your best to copy one another even in the way you portray these ages. It was getting harder!

What’s the point? Is all of this just silliness? Definitely not. They finally got it. They finally started to act as a unit, to start and stop together, sensing organically when to begin, and when to stop.

Later when they were learning all the forms of Playback which require the group to sense when the action needs to come to a stop, they had gotten really good at this.
I kept reminding them of the Fish Tank exercise “You see? You thought I was crazy, but now you know how to stop together, you listen and pay attention to each other. You sense it among yourselves.” I added, “If you are paying attention, and not just about you trying to be a star, you will know what to do, your imagination will take over, and on the spot you will make up something that fits, and works together as a group.”

Almost Ready to Start
The class came in from their lunch break with the room transformed into a Playback performance space. It heightened our expectation of what was finally going to happen. But we still needed to know how, so we took some time to read through and translate the descriptions of the setting, and the players. Having reviewed Jo Salas’ Improvising Real Life, I had made a handout of the nuts and bolts of who does what and how they do it, and how it all works. Before the trip, I’d had some Egyptian friends in LA help with translating the key words, and now I was running down the list of names and descriptions: the conductor, the teller, the actors, the musician, the cloth tree and what is a transformation or correction? I taught them some about how to look and listen for the “essence” of the story, and the structure of stories. We talked about the structure of playback: the conductor’s interview of a teller, the setting up, the enactment, the acknowledgment and “bringing it back to the teller.” It was sometimes tedious to get through these descriptions with translation, but I tried to break it up with activities or exercises to keep us from getting bogged down in words (or wearing out Dalia my translator!). I interspersed some vocal and physical warm ups, and we even had fun with a mini mime lesson: grabbing the steering wheel of a car, and how to get in and out of a car.

Finally we were ready to invite some classmates to the teller’s chair and try out some scenes. We had some terrific stories. Pets running out into busy streets, jumping off running trains, being stranded at JFK airport in New York, finally being free to be myself. I fell in love with my students as I picked up some Arabic along the way. But the phrase I’ll never forget is:

Yalluna Netfallug… “Let’s Watch!”

November 11, 2012

Ethnodoxicologists...What do you call a Filmmaker?

If a musician is an Ethnomusicologist, and a theatre artists is an Ethnodramacologist.

Is a filmmaker an Ethnomoviecologist?

Stephen Cadd grew up a missionary kid in the Philippines. He was always crazy about movies, but found it frustrating that all the films about the Gospel in the library of the Bible School where his parents worked were all Made in America.

As an adult he founded Sword Produtions a film production company committed to helping indigenous peoples make films that suit their own cultures. From their website:

The power of a dramatic film for evangelistic use cannot be overstated. Years of experience have shown this to be one of the most useful tools for evangelism in the 21ST century. Sword Productions has pioneered in producing such films for fifteen twenty years. The cost is very reasonable, considering the fact that the numerical results for the out-reaching churches or groups are quite astonishing. 

Check out the link for a fascinating company using media for the gospel.

October 06, 2012

A Prayer of Thanksgiving and Petition for Creativity

If you're reading and you have the time to approach this article as a devotional, I want you to start by watching this video prayerfully. Here is my prayer. You can join me in it.

Lord, 

As I watch this BBC video with images of your creation, help me to know you better and see who You are more clearly. Thrill my soul with this visual revelation and reminders of how incomparable you are as an artist. Inspire me to worship and serve you more fully, freely and wholly...



Lord, you take my breath away! Open my eyes that I might see the wildness, and beauty and creativity in your creation as often as I breathe or eat. I pray that you will fill me with a growing ability to be like you in creativity. Let me draw near you and learn from you that I might join you in inspiring others to enjoy such lavish, even 'wild' creativity, and let that in us be part of what draws the lost to you. I pray for your church, Lord, that this creative nature of yours be embraced and celebrated.


I run in the path of your commands for you have set my heart free. Psalm 119:32  





October 04, 2012

Sharing @ Singapore Bible College: Created in the image of God who is creative.

My heart's desire is to inspire you to more fully embrace a communicable attribute of God: His Creativity.

Creativity is a part of his nature that he has put in all of you to varying degrees. 

I know that embracing creativity will draw you closer in your relationship with the Creator.

I know it will make you far more interesting and well rounded. 

Since you are or will be leaders in your churches, and because you love him, you desire to be witnesses to the world of the hope we have in Jesus. I want to inspire you, the students in the SBC’s Student Missionary Fellowship (and the readers of this article!) to be free to explore the fullness of God’s creativity in your experience of Christianity.

Q: What's holds us back?

Much of what we practice in our faith as evangelical believers comes from a cognitive approach to faith. 

Those who are wired, or drawn toward knowing God primarily through the study of and preaching of God's word are also the ones who are drawn toward vocational ministry or teaching in our churches. They teach out of their blessed experience that this THE WAY to know and walk with God. Much of our New Testament and theology was penned by the strong role model we have in the left-brain scholar/leader the Apostle Paul. Because of this we almost exclusively taught and use what some have called our left brain as we approach and experience him. 

This group here today are Bible School students, so I would presume to guess that many of you are very comfortable with this cognitive approach to our Christianity. You experience God and hear him profoundly as you read and study the Word of God, or listen to a sermon or lecture.

Yet, after seeing that video (in the previous post), you are reminded of God's incredible diversity and beauty in creation. 

In light of this, I want to suggest that God has blessed those he created in his image with a diversity of ways we can experience Him, draw near Him, hear from him and share his good news with others. 

Q: What do you mean by a diversity of approaches?

It may come as a surprise to some of you that there are those who feel more close to him as you walk in the Botanic Gardens

or care for those who suffer

or through disciplines of solitude, simplicity, fasting 

or on your own sitting in his presence and adoring him. 

You might think of traditions as dry and meaningless, but there are many who love ritual and tradition because they know God better in and through them. In them, we identify with countless believers through the ages as we follow a church calendar/liturgy or certain rituals.

Did you know that God created some of us wired to best experience life and God himself through our senses and beauty? This type of wiring isn’t celebrated or even acknowledged in many of our churches. Our senses? The word sensual has negative connotations, and we rarely hear sermons from Song of Songs or Ecclessiates, or the laments in Psalms. We don't look to John the Baptist as a role model. God wired some of his children to approach him best through their sense and beauty, and these, by and large are the Artists among us. The ones who seem a little too “out there.” Quite frankly, they seem a little wild and dangerous! Quite a bit like some of the wildlife we saw in that video of God's creation!

Q: What is the positive and negative impact in a church where creative believers are released to explore the arts in the mission of the church?

You can be sure that any creatively wired people here are resonating with what I’ve been talking about. You’re glad that the organisers have chosen this topic for today! 

So, let’s just start with the positive impact of TODAY: Merely bringing it up gives a group of people here a fresh affirmation that God did indeed make you artistic and creative and he loves you for it. It give you hope. From my lifetime experience in the evangelical church, I know many of creative believers are withering in our churches.

There are also some negatives: Those who don’t yet know Jesus who are wired this way will not be drawn to him when the appealing, radical, creative part of his nature is hidden in our worship and expression of faith.

BUT, I know why you resist. I admit it. Artists are...
  • messy 
  • moody
  • misunderstood
  • easily offended
  • can seem undisciplined
  • love spontaneity and improvisation (when the other need a PLAN)
  • they are not likely to be grounded in their discipleship or the Word.

And so the more logical lovers of order and protocols who lead the church keep these people leashed, or even worse, try to change them into their image. (Well, I have to admit, changing some of those things on this list is a very good idea! I'm glad Rory Noland wrote his books for artists on Christian Character Formation, The Heart of the Artist, and Thriving as an Artist.

The biggest negative of all is: If we’re not engaging and empowering and sharing what that extra dose of creativity God has put in the Artists among us, we are sadly experiencing, worshipping, and sharing only part of what he is

Q: Many feel that arts are only for professionals and rarely experience creativity and stand on the sidelines. What are ways that non-professionals can be engaged and drawn in to join on the mission of God?


Ok. Imagine I’m 6 years old and I’ve just learned to make a paper airplane with my other 6 year old friends and we have fun flying them and seeing how far they will go. I’m excited to show it to my dad. I’ve enjoyed learning how to make it, see how well it flies…and I want to give it to him. Now, my dad works for NASA and is a pilot for Space Shuttles. He’s flown rockets and has a doctorate in Aerospace Engineering. This little airplane is silly compared to what he knows and can do. But how do you think my father will respond to receiving this gift?

Do you see the allegory?

Let's face it. Even professional art isn't much better than a paper airplane compared to the ART we saw in that "Wonderful World" video!

I can BET you’ve had a lifetime of being hammered into believing that art has no value unless it is professional, excellent art (however one might define excellent!). 

That is rubbish and a lie from the pit of hell where the Deceiver has convinced so many hearts and minds to not even try. Perhaps even the majority of hearts and minds.

God wants us to enjoy creativity, just because it is enjoyable to create. 

There is value in the process. Engaging, practicing the arts is a way we can share in a part of what makes us different from the other animals and made in His image.

I would guess that many of your background in engaging the arts was taking years of piano or violin lessons that came with exams on how you must play the correct way. Or maybe you were more than once embarrassed by what a teacher or a peer said about an art project you made in primary school. No. Stop it. Not everyone is going to be a professional, but that doesn’t mean you can get great joy from exploring and dabbling, and using that right half of your brain which God also made and called “good”.

So what if you are an amateur? 

Go ahead. Make your own greeting cards, carry around a sketch book, learn how to decorate cakes, take a guitar class, or a singing class, or learn flamenco dancing, respond to something that has moved you with writing a poem about it. You will be more spiritually whole when you do.

September 18, 2012

Best Books for Prep in Cross Cultural Work


For me, in recent years I've focused on Playback/improv as a basic toolkit when working across cultures. Enter admitting I'm a novice of their culture and don't want to download more American culture and styles they've picked up from movies and imported TV shows.
I want to explore with them and see what and how THEY use drama and tell their stories, and I give them some fresh tools they can massage and make their own.

ALSO: 
In our esteem, the BEST books on prep for working cross culturally are by Sherwood and Judith Lingenfelter (from Biola then Fuller). They both have their doctorates in Cultural Anthropology and have taught for years at both Biola and Fuller. They do a lot of training with Wycliffe and other organizations.

I think these books should be required reading for EVERYONE working cross culturally. Brilliant, insightful. Would save A LOT of mess ups.