Come create a new work that is based on your preference! You'l get a
certificate of completion as well. T.I.E. is an experience. With a
24-hour theatre workshop as its core, T.I.E’s participants are:
introduced to aesthetics of Immersive Theatre, as inspired by the
award-winning work Information for/from Outsiders: Chronicles from
Kashmir; guided through a practical exploration of these strategies;
mentored in the creation of their own, social-justice focused,
Immersive Theatre performance; shepherded through processes that
develop their skills as actors, designers, directors and writers;
supported in their quests to apply ideas from T.I.E. to social justice
issues that challenge particular communities and contexts. For more
information, go to www.TheatreAndJustice.org TESTIMONIALS Thank you
so much for your beautiful workshop!!! I was so moved so much of the
time, and left after the 24 hours feeling entirely satiated and
immersed in new ideas. I will be reflecting on our work with you for
a long time to come! ~~Tara K. [A highlight of the T.I.E. experience
was] Learning about your work in Kashmir especially its sensitivity
and depth, experiencing comradeship in isolation and stress, and being
exposed to some of the tools you have developed in your work. It
helped demystify immersive work for me! ~~ Sam Q. ‘I learn by going
where I have to go’ was written on a fortune cookie […] it was the
perfect finale to my past two days – because I had just finished 24
hours straight in an immersion theater workshop conducted at Santa Fe
Playhouse by Nandita Dinesh. You read what you believed you read
correctly. ‘Immersion theater’ is a pretty accurate descriptor.
The workshop entailed staying awake close to 24 hours, from 1 pm
Saturday to 1 pm Sunday, while creating performance pieces. There was
some impressive work achieved in spite of, because of, in the process
of, dealing with the various physical and mental constraints. It’s
hard to describe such a lengthy and varied and sometimes sleepy event
using anything other than metaphors. It went by a lot faster than you
might think. It’s a bit like tap-dancing inside a submarine that
skims the surface, then sinks lower into the depths, then emerges back
to the surface while screenplay music plays in the background. The
full quote from the Roethke poem reads (how appropriately): ‘I wake
to sleep, and take my waking slow/I learn by going where I have to
go’. ~~ Darryl W.
music
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23/12/2019 Last update