Miranda Thain – Creative Producer
Don’t get me wrong, there is nothing I like more than the exhilaration of rehearsing a new show, the final lead-up to preview and then creeping into the back of an auditorium to share that first performance with a room packed with young people, heads all focussed intently forward watching a story unfold. But I also like the quiet that comes afterwards, when I can return to my desk and to my emails and to gazing out of the window contemplating the show that is now on the road and the next one which is still just a genesis of disparate ideas.
Today as I gaze out of the window I feel very pleased that a few hundred miles away our brave and beautiful opera, My Mother Told Me Not to Stare, is being performed to teenagers in Chester and at the same time more than 5,000 miles away across an ocean, dancers in Toronto are beginning rehearsals with our artists and will soon be performing FIVE to children and families there.

On face value, the two shows could not be more different – My Mother Told Me Not to Stare is a rich, gothic operetta with puppets, projection, instrumentalists, poetry and a story that is sung. It is a fairytale world with a sincere message about the way that the adult world treats children. It is also a ‘proper trip to the theatre’, in two acts with an interval in which one should eat sweets. In contrast, FIVE is a contemporary dance installation for Early Years with no words, dancers who suck lemons and chase each other with toilet brushes, a space through which you promenade.

But perhaps these two pieces of theatre have more in common than we think? Certainly, listening to children at Washington Arts Centre in the interval of My Mother last week trying to emulate the operatic voices they had heard reminded me of the letters we had received from parents who had spied their four year olds trying contemporary dance moves by launching themselves from sofas following performances of FIVE. Both pieces have been described as ‘high art’ for children, both pieces have been taken to the hearts and imaginations of young people and both pieces generate anxiety amongst grown-ups because they are unusual and so demand that their audience trusts us to take them on a journey – trust that children give willingly, some adults a little more cautiously because contemporary opera is challenging to the ears or there is no plush velvet seat in the darkness in which to hide.
But I’m thrilled that they come and share this special experience with their children and I’m thrilled that children are so full of braveness and curiosity that they seize these opportunities, however unusual, and laugh and fidget and groan and sing in all the places they should and shouldn’t. Best of all that they know that this magic is for them.
Tomorrow my thoughts will turn to girl pirates and a little boy called Tom who goes on an adventure to find some treasure and ends up disguising his ship with an upside down house. I have great faith in children to come on this adventure with us too.
Miranda
Find more information about FIVE and The Night Pirates on Theatre Hullabaloo’s website.