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ARTIFICIAL HELLS

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incidental people<br />

Games were also a structuring principle for The Blackie’s theatrical<br />

experiments in the late 1960s and early ’70s. Unlike the work of Augusto<br />

Boal (whom Bill Harpe met twice), participatory performances at The<br />

Blackie tended less towards ‘a rehearsal for revolution’ than towards a<br />

melancholic exposé of how society really operated. 84 These extended social<br />

games, often based on government statistics, included The To- Hell- With-<br />

Human- Rights Show (December 1968) and Educational Darts (March 1971).<br />

In Sanctuary (November 1969), performed at Quarry Bank High School,<br />

the participating audience were assigned different types of housing on the<br />

basis of filling in a form, which included questions about their income and<br />

number of dependents. The housing ranged from ‘Breck Moor’ (a large<br />

detached house) to ‘Box Street’ (slum dwellings), each of which was<br />

provided with appropriate entertainment: at the former, sherry and chess;<br />

at the latter, brown ale (but no bottle opener). The action unfolded from<br />

this point, with four improvised performances emerging simultaneously<br />

from these scenarios. Some participants would obey the law (which moved<br />

very slowly and bureaucratically, in order to mirror real life), while others<br />

broke it and were arrested, imprisoned, and so on. 85 Half structured, half<br />

improvised, such productions positioned themselves against the education<br />

programmes of theatre companies (in that they allowed the audience to<br />

produce the work themselves, rather than learning about somebody else’s<br />

performance) but they also worked against theatrical productions in which<br />

the audience members all experience the same thing simultaneously; in<br />

Sanctuary there were at least four possible types of audience experience.<br />

Berman, by contrast, found it more difficult to introduce participatory<br />

theatre to Inter- Action’s repertoire, since there were so few good playwrights<br />

interested in exploring this genre. He ended up producing his own<br />

plays, based on a formula defining the amount of changes that an audience<br />

could make in the work, from pantomime (where only one answer is possible<br />

within the script) to theatrical situations where the outcome is entirely<br />

unplanned. His play The Nudist Campers Grow and Grow (1968) began with<br />

actors playing Adam and Eve, dressed in synthetic fig leaves, entering the<br />

theatre from Hyde Park, and performing from behind two bushes. Their<br />

dialogue concerned a debate about whether or not they could be seen nude,<br />

eventually inviting the audience to take off their clothes and join them<br />

behind the bushes onstage – which people did. The more usual format for<br />

Inter- Action projects, however, was one- act theatre (as compiled in<br />

Berman’s Ten of The Best, 1979) or the popular interactive entertainment of<br />

the Fun Art Bus.<br />

The pre- eminence of performance as the community arts medium par<br />

excellence was facilitated by two events: the Theatre Act of 1968 (in which<br />

the Lord Chamberlain ceased to be the censor of what theatre could be<br />

shown in public) and the launch of Time Out magazine in 1969 (which<br />

listed all cultural productions in London indiscriminately of status or<br />

183

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