Transcript Brook
B. 1925 London
Educated :Oxford
1970 formed
CIRT
International
Centre for
Theatre Research
Bouffe du Nord,
Artaud
Brecht
Meyerhold
Grotowski
‘Responsibility to theatre-going audiences,
remembering that, as a performing group,
we cannot survive without a relationship
with the people who keep the theatre in
existence’
‘To create a relationship with the people
who would never cross the door to a
theatre in a thousand years, by seeing
them on their own ground in schools,
meeting places and open-air places’
‘The responsibility to itself and it’s
craft….the actor…must
constantly…develop himself in relation to
others…through group exercises…and, at
the same time, increase the general
understanding of the mysterious nature of
that craft itself by trying out things that
have not been tried before’, Kaleidoscope
1978
‘Our first principle, we decided, was to
make culture, in the sense of culture that
turns milk into yoghurt - we aimed to
create a nucleus of actors who could later
bring ferment to any wider group with
whom they worked. In this way, we hoped
that the special privileged conditions we
were making for a small number of people
could eventually enter into the theatre’s
mainstream’
CIRT took established actors from all over
the world to extend them
Looked for people to bring different
colours-’something that goes through to
the soul’
Sense of the individual but within a team
‘..the real exercise with a group of actors
is not for the person by himself….it’s to
make the group more sensitive to itself.’
Active research and preparation as
‘clearing of paths’ - a point where body,
intellect and emotions are open
Emphasis on ‘preparation’ rather than
‘training’
Like Grotowski’s via negativa, ‘unlearning’
the actor - no box of tricks
PB ‘Bring everything back to the level
where there is no effort.’
What is theatre?
Exercises and games
Improvised performances - carpet shows
Touring
Language
Sense of community
TIME !
develop actors capacity to articulate
inner impulses, conveying them externally
- ‘Transparency’
make these forms as simple and economic
ie clear, as possible - ‘distillation’ unsettle actors habitual responses and
open up different energies, using different
performing conditions and audiences
use structure and play as interwoven
use research as self-research - evolution
and individual development in which
theatre is the means but not the end.
‘Theatre as a means to go beyond theatre’
Theatre as re-membering : mythical
narratives or fables actualised here and
now thus ‘re-uniting the community, in all
it’s diversity, within the same shared
experience’
Trying to create an international language
of sound, ‘an exploration of the musical
power of language in ancient rituals
where sound is everything’
With Ted Hughes
Language and production called ‘Orghast’
Epic Indian poem 15 times longer than
the Bible
10 years to ‘rehearse’
Nine hour adaptation, 1985
Toured in English and French
Because it ‘cover(s) the whole of human
experience’
‘..Brook in fact used the Mahabharata to
revolutionize theatre itself, and to assert it
as spectacle’ and ‘is thus a bold attempt
to give theatre life again’ Vijay Mishra, "The
Great Indian Epic and Peter Brook," in Meanjin,
1988
adaptation of Hamlet
the performance mixes scenes from the
play-ending in the death of Ophelia-with a
discussion among the actors on theories
of acting.These passages are culled from
Craig,Meyerhold,Stanislavsky,Brecht and
Artaud’
bare stage, 3 chairs, no French actors
‘Shoot first, ask questions afterwards is
experience first, and only afterwards try
to discover what that means. That goes
through every side of the experience,
including rehearsal, preparation, even like
tonight, talking about theatre’
‘We wanted to get away from the idea of
a company, and yet we did not want to
shut ourselves away from the world, in a
laboratory’
Read off the paper Barry ! (P2)
Peter Brook ‘A Theatrical Casebook’
comiled by David Williams
‘Peter Brook and the Mahabarata’ edited
by David Williams
‘The Open Door : Thoughts on Acting and
Theatre’
lots of other books
the Internet
interview on ‘The South Bank Show’