The Common
Charter Hall, Okehampton, March 14th, 7.30pm
Beaford Arts and China Plate present The Common. Spring 2014, five writers went to
North Devon to explore what the rural environment means to its people. They got to
know old farming families, incomers and returnees. They met rural life in mugs of
tea at farmhouse kitchen tables, on windswept hills, under rusting barn roofs and
from 'backies' on a farmer's quad bike.
These encounters and conversations fed the writing of The Common, a performance work
of five dialogues about life and land. Two performers (Charlotte Melia and Martin
Hyder) play ten characters examining their relationships with each other and the
landscape which connects them with life itself.
Rural arts organisation and cultural ambassadors for North Devon's Biosphere
Reserve, Beaford Arts initiated this project. "In north Devon, we've always known
the value of our land." says Mark Wallace, Director of Beaford Arts "Now, as a
UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and as one of Natural England's Nature Improvement Areas,
we're increasingly under the national and international spotlight. But it's the
rural communities, living with the land for generations, who made this landscape.
This new show is about the values we still hold in common - about the voices which
should still be heard."
Six months on from its world premiere in North Devon, The Common is going on tour to
four other NIAs - Meres & Moses, Morecambe Bay, Birmingham and Wild Purbeck. The
Common is a local play with national significance, it captures the environmental
zeitgeist and its universal relevance makes for vital viewing in every rural
community.
One of the five writers, Inua Ellams, said "It was a job of listening, of
conversations that were heart breaking, overwhelming, passionate and multi-layered.
When it came to writing, I didn't know where to start, but an idea crystallised
after I met a farmer, his wife and two sons."
"They told stories and anecdotes to illustrate how complicated a process it would
be. How there are some aspects of the land that simply cannot be valued, that are
(by that definition) priceless. He referred to us as townies, and he and his
colleagues as country folk. He did not like townies. As a black African I'm used to
prejudice, I found it refreshing, dare I say thrilling, to be prejudiced because of
where I lived rather than the colour of my skin. As we talked and I asked the right
questions, he began to relax and slowly 'you townies' became 'those townies'. We
'othered' them so we could point and laugh."
Talking about her part in the development process, another of the writing team, Charlotte Josephine explains "The piece I wrote was mainly inspired by meeting photographer Rosie Anderson. I read her charming 'personal post on a place called home' on her website on the train down and knew we'd be friends. Her passionate post about the closing of Hatherleigh Market really struck a chord with me. It's heart-breaking when we sacrifice tradition, community and culture for financial gain."
The Common will be performed in Charter Hall, Okehampton, March 14th, 7.30pm
Tickets are free but limited so booking is essential. Bookings through Eventbrite: Talking about her part in the development process, another of the writing team, Charlotte Josephine explains "The piece I wrote was mainly inspired by meeting photographer Rosie Anderson. I read her charming 'personal post on a place called home' on her website on the train down and knew we'd be friends. Her passionate post about the closing of Hatherleigh Market really struck a chord with me. It's heart-breaking when we sacrifice tradition, community and culture for financial gain."
Beaford Arts The Common - Photos copyright (All rights reserved)
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Beaford Arts www.beaford-arts.org.uk
China Plate www.chinaplatetheatre.com
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