Tag Archives: Theatre

In-Yer-Face Theatre: A Contemporary Form of Drama

4.48 Psychosis by Sarah Kane

‘In the 1990s, a revolution took place in British theatre. Out went all those boring politically correct plays with tiny casts portraying self-pitying victims; overthrown were all those pale imitations of European directors’ theatre; brushed aside were all those shreds of self-regarding physical theatre and long-winded, baggy state-of-the-nation plays.
In their place, came a storm of new writing, vivid new plays about contemporary life by a brat-pack of funky young playwrights. For a few heady years, theatre was the new rock ‘n’ roll – a really cool place to be. At last, here was drama that really seemed to make a difference. It sweated newness out of every pore.’ Aleks Sierz

In-yer-face is a form of drama that first appeared during the 1990s in Great Britain, and is often regarded as a direct response from Thatcher’s children to their own sociopolitical and sociocultural context. In his book, Aleks Sierz, a faculty member of Boston University London and co-editor of Theatre Voice, describes In-Yer-Face theatre as the work of young playwrights who break with conventional theatrical codes to confront the vulgar and the shocking. They present aggressive material to affect the audience and arouse public consciousness. By exceeding all limits, they challenge representational norms and place the spectator out of his comfort zone. Sierz presents this new type of drama as an ‘explosive new writing scene’.

‘In-your-face’ is a perfectly adequate expression to convey the writers’ intentions to surprise and disturb the British public. As Sierz puts it on his website, ‘in-yer-face theatre is the kind of theatre which grabs the audience by the scruff of the neck and shakes it until it gets the message.’ The mise-en-scène and the dialogues literally blow up in the audience’s face. The Oxford English dictionary defines the slang term as an ‘exclamation of scorn or derision’, ‘bold or aggressive, blatant, provocative.’ Its first employment can be traced back to 1976 in the United States, mainly within the field of sports journalism. But its first use to describe contemporary theatre practices originates in Simon Gray’s Japes, which premiered in February 2001 in London. In this play, the main protagonist, a middle-aged author, tempers against a new kind of writing that he describes as ‘in your face’. Here is an extract:

‘And you know—you know the worst thing—the worst thing is that they speak grammatically. They construct sentences. Construct them! And with some elegance. Why? Tell me why? (Little pause.) Actually, I know why. So that the verbs and nouns stick out—in your face. In your face. That’s the phrase, isn’t it? That’s the phrase! In your face!’

In-yer-face theatre achieved further recognition at a 2002 conference organised by the University of the West of England, and where Sierz, main speaker of the event, already acknowledged the new art as a ‘historical phenomenon’. He stated that it was not a movement, but an ‘arena’ or a ‘sensibility’ that described only ‘a part of the body of works during the 1990s’.

When confronted to the difficult issue of conceptualization and categorisation, a play or a form of theatre can easily find itself crushed under expectations and responsibilities generated by its attribution to a specific genre. The report on the conference published by Writernet stipulates that ‘it disrupts the artistic integrity through preconceived notions of a play because of a simplified label. Plays and playwrights risk being annexed or ‘ghetto-ised’ when given a superficial monolithic focus.’ Thus critics have contemplated the works of the people associated with in-yer-face theatre through the lenses of different pre-established theories, such as metaphysical theatre, postmodernism, Artaud’s theatre of cruelty and Lacan’s post-structuralism. But in-yer-face theatre desired to claim its own existence outside any previous literary and cultural thesis. Yet Sierz accepted the restrictions of the label and recognized in-yer-face theatrical practices as London-centric and limited in their scope. Thus, it has mainly remained a British experience, and although it has expanded abroad, its international impact is quite narrow, mostly reaching Anglo-Saxon countries. Many well-known places have welcomed in-yer-face plays, such as the Royal Court Theatre, the Bush Theatre, the Hampstead Theatre, the Soho Theatre, the Theatre Royal Stratford East, the Tricycle, the Finborough and the Almeida, all based in London. It spread in other English cities like Manchester, Birmingham, Newcastle, Bolton and West Yorkshire, and widened to Edinburgh and to America.

Phaedra's love by Sarah Kane

But how do we recognize in yer-face style? First, one must bear in mind Sierz’s words: the language and images are meant to shock the audience by its extremism, unsettle them by its emotional frankness. The playwrights question moral norms and focus on a more experiential theatre, where the audience has to feel the profound emotions displayed on stage. And they go as far they can get, allowing all sorts of moral deviations and forbidden behaviours. People have sex in front of you, nudity is over-present, violence breaks out, taboos are broken, language is obscene. The themes of the plays evolve around humiliation, abuse, dehumanization and unmentionable subjects. Social structures are disrupted, conventional dramatic devices are subverted, and the powerful, visceral voice of youth forces you to react to such decadence. They do not consider the theatrical experience to be a source of pleasure at all costs: entertainment is not its primary objective. They want us to abhor in order to reflect, just like Greek tragedies perceived the tragic hero as a cathartic figure, inspiring fear and forcing the spectator to reflect on cruelty and inhumanity.

Although this kind of drama is quite unique and holds a very specific aesthetic, we cannot help but connect it with earlier theatrical practices and theorists. Even Sierz mentions several inspirations and related playwrights on his personal website. He goes all the way back to Nemirovitch-Danchenko, who would have said to Stanislavski that ‘new plays attract audiences because they discover in them new answers to the problem of living’. A purpose set by this emerging group of writers, who confronts the problem of living through an outburst of theatrical creativity and controversy, conveying their answer to the audience through crude dialogues and a new type of violence. Sierz also mentions Alfred Jarry (theatre of the Absurd) and Antonin Artaud (theatre of Cruelty) as major influences. Both have tackled the subject of violence, and have critiqued men’s stupidity and modern life through a new kind of writing. Artaud once wrote that ‘without an element of cruelty at the root of every spectacle, the theatre is not possible’. He praised the experiential sense of theatre; that is to make the audience fully engage with the emotions presented on stage, just like the writers of in-yer-face want to achieve:

‘The theatre will never find itself again except by furnishing the spectator with the truthful precipitates of dreams, in which his taste for crime, his erotic obsessions, his savagery, his chimeras, his utopian sense of life and matter, even his cannibalism, pour out on a level not counterfeit and illusory, but interior. […] If theatre wants to find itself needed once more, it must present everything in love, crime, war and madness.’

In 1964, Peter Brook wrote an introduction to Peter Weiss’ Marat/Sade which already formulated ideas later claimed by in-yer-face writers, and echoed the need to make audiences face violence. ‘Starting with its title, everything about this play is designed to crack the spectator on the jaw, then douse him with ice-cold water, then force him to assess intelligently what has happened to him, then give him a kick in the balls, then bring him back to his senses again.’ Isn’t that what in-yer-face theatre achieves? Ten years later, Howard Brenton asked contemporary theatre to become a place for ‘really savage insights’. Notice the similar lexical field of violence, savagery, and brutality. The stage becomes a confrontational space; a boxing fight takes place between the author and the audience, and the actors have carte blanche to carry out the playwrights’ critique of modern life. Pugnacious and limitless, the works of these authors gravitate around issues of violence, masculinity, the myth of post-feminism and the futility of consumerism.

At least twenty people are closely connected to in-yer-face theatre, and Alex Sierz provides a detailed list of names on his website. Yet the names of two playwrights stand out: Sarah Kane and Mark Ravenhill. Kane’s work deals with themes such as sexual desire, death, pain, redemptive love and psychological and physical suffering. The poetic intensity of her language explores the use of extreme violence in a new form of theatre, which deconstructs conventional stage practices. Kane suffered from severe depression through many years of her life, but kept writing, and her own life experiences acted as a reservoir of inspiration for her plays. She originally wanted to be a poet, but found herself unable to express her feelings through poetry . Theatre allowed her to convey her deepest thoughts because, as she once wrote: ‘theatre has no memory, which makes it the most existential of the arts’.

The Coronation of Poppea, Mark Ravenhill

Mark Ravenhill is famous for his playShopping and Fucking, and for his involvement at the heart of the new British playwriting landscape of the 1990s/2000s. Yet he has expressed his respect for historical theatre several times, wishing more directors would concentrate on the classics. He has stated that today’s directors force themselves into the ‘eternal present’ instead of enriching their work with past influences. Still Ravenhill’s plays inhabit in-yer-face’s style, anchored in the same violence of words, and his later work has become even more experimental.

Many other works and artists could be associated to (or paralleled to) in-yer-face’s straightforward and disconcerting style. For instance, Krystian Lupa, Polish director, envisions theatre as an instrument to explore and transgress the boundaries of individuality. Looking at the ethics of art and breaking theatre’s traditional conventions, he presents scenes of extreme psychological, sexual and physical violence to shock the audience, in the same way as Kane or Ravenhill. Nudity, crudity, rape, porn, drugs and death: Lupa represents the world in its boldest and most cruel aspect. Just as in-yer-face writers do.

George Devine, first artistic director of the English Stage Company, has once said: ‘I want theatre to be continuously disturbing’. Theatre in the 21st century seems to be all about disturbing, shocking and confusing the spectator, shake him off his comfortable seat. He has to take an active part, even if he is not willing to, and has to, more than simply watch, LIVE the terrible events that occur on stage. Thus theatre becomes an experiential moment, where you can defy your social and personal boundaries, where you test the limits of being a spectator and go beyond what you can bear emotionally. In that sense, the spectator is completely free of interpretation. As Kane has stated:

If a play is good, it breathes its own air and has a life and voice of its own. What you take that voice to be saying is no concern of mine. It is what it is. Take it or leave it.’

Works Cited

– Artaud, Antonin. Theatre of Cruelty: First Manifesto, (1932)
– Eldridge, David. “In-Yer-face and After”. Intellect 23.1 (Mar. 2003): 55–58. (Abstract.)
– Gray, Simon, Japes, (premiered in London Feb. 2001)
– Sierz, Aleks. In-Yer-Face Theatre: British Drama Today. London: Faber and Faber,( 2001)
– Sierz, Aleks, In-Yer-Face Theatre, Website. 5 Oct. 2000, last modified in 2010.
– “In-Yer-Face? British Drama in the 1990s”. University of the West of England, Bristol.( 6–7 September 2002), Writernet 2003. (Conference report posted on writernet.co.uk, in both HTML and PDF versions).
– “News 2002: Shocking Plays Have Academic Appeal.” Press release. University of the West of England (30 August 2002.)

Compte Rendu de la Pièce Derniers Coups de Ciseaux

Derniers coups de ciseauxLe petit théâtre des Mathurins, l’un de ces rares trésors cachés dans Paris, petit théâtre qui résiste encore et toujours à l’envahisseur et survit face aux grandes salles, stades et autres scènes colossales faites pour le spectaculaire. Ici donc, une jolie petite entrée, classique. L’eternel velours rouge. Les sièges un peu bas. Les strapontins de côté. Et une scène si proche du public qu’on pourrait la toucher. Même ceux au balcon, les “pauvres” comme les appelle le capitaine (Olivier Solivérès), se trouvent face aux acteurs, au niveau de leur têtes. De quoi aider à créer des liens entre la scène et la salle, élément principal  de la pièce qui fonctionne sur ce rapport intime et chaleureux entre comédien et spectateur. Car cette pièce n’est pas comme les autres – le public a son mot à dire, et même le plus important des rôles. Sa sentence est irrévocable – c’est lui qui a le mot final vis-à-vis du dénouement de la pièce.

La troupe au completOn découvre à l’arrivée un décor que l’on connait tous – un salon de coiffure empli de produits en tout genre, de sièges à casques sèche-cheveux et de personnages atypiques des plus décoiffant. Des personnages stéréotypés, certes, mais qui continuent à nous faire rire et poussent le cliché jusqu’au bout, de manière à l’assumer et à critiquer les présupposés de notre société. Un coiffeur gay jusqu’au bout des doigts, une bombe sexuelle qui sait jouer de ses atouts mais qui n’est pas très futée, une bourgeoise un peu snob qui n’a pas peur de montrer qu’elle a de l’argent, un businessman toujours sérieux et pressé et qui ne dévoile jamais un sourire, et enfin des policiers pas toujours des plus efficaces, l’un timide et incertain, l’autre grande gueule, les nerfs à vif (ayant arrêté la cigarette la veille) et prêt à mordre le premier qui lui tombe sous la main. On suit d’abord la vie quotidienne de ce salon de coiffure, les flirts, les commérages et les malentendus avec la voisine, puis survient le meurtre de cette dernière. Les suspects sont enfermés dans le salon et doivent être interrogés, selon les règles d’art d’une enquête policière. Ils se livrent à nous. Jusque là, rien de bien nouveau, et on rit déjà beaucoup. Jusqu’à ce que le capitaine s’adresse à nous directement, brisant l’illusion d’un quatrième mur et cassant avec les conventions théâtrales.

Des suspects hauts en couleurs!Dans cette étrange affaire criminelle, très basique (voire un peu simpliste), c’est nous qui mettons les suspects en difficulté, et par la même occasion les comédiens, parfois en pleine improvisation. Nous choisissons l’assassin, nous traçons le chemin que va suivre l’histoire. Voila pourquoi il faut rester simple. Bien sûr, l’audience est guidée par les acteurs eux-mêmes, par leurs gestes, leurs interventions et les motivations qui se cachent derrière chaque attitude. Mais malgré tout, nous restons libres dans nos interventions. Car oui, nous dialoguons directement avec les acteurs/personnages, et souvent la distinction entre théâtre et réalité se confond. Les acteurs eux-mêmes réagissent au public et perdent parfois la face, étouffant un rire, contraignant tant bien que mal un sourire, faisant des commentaires lucides qui nous rappellent que nous sommes au théâtre. Mais qui du coup donne aux personnages un caractère naturel, non forcé, et proche de celui de l’acteur qui l’interprète.

Les dialogues ne sont pas toujours des plus subtils et l’humour des plus fins, mais on ne manque pas de rire tout de même, un rire franc, simple, comme l’on rirait à une blague un peu légère. Et parmi tout ce brouhaha, certains répliques sont des perles cachées au fond d’un coffre à trésor. Le tout se joue évidemment sur l’originalité du concept et l’excellente interprétation des acteurs. Et surtout sur la participation des spectateurs, dont certaines interventions ne manquent pas de faire rire la salle (et la troupe!) aux éclats! Un spectacle à voir donc, fortement recommandé, rire garanti!

Un frisson de joie, un murmure de plaisir…

Le capitaine et le coiffeur

Derniers coups de ciseaux, spectacle de Marilyn Abrams et Bruce Jordan. D’après Paul Pörtner. Adaptation: Sébastien Azzopardi et Sacha Danino. Mise en scène: Sébastien Azzopardi. Au théâtre des Mathurins, Paris.