When Kate Maguder and I finally met face to face in early 2004 I had come back into the country from Italy and was working a series of gigs in the U.S. to pay some bills. We met on the small front porch of the offices of Ukiah Players Theatre
it was as if two siblings were coming together after a long absence. How we had not been face-to-face is almost mysterious. Her company was founded in 1977, the year of the first People’s Theater Festival in Santa Cruz. UPT joined the People’s Theater Coalition for a period while I was managing it, and we naturally should have crossed paths.
Whether or not we did, the sense that we were working two fronts of the same long campaign was evident from our conversations. Hers had been slowly evolving an approach to local stories of residents through various creative writing workshops and stage productions, that had taken the form of several projects including, “Telling the Truth in a Small Town,” and “The Good War,” and “Of All Places.” Each of the projects involved mining story ideas in group process and transforming them into texts that were the basis of monologues that were woven into an evening performance involving the writer/actors, and shared with the local community.
Kate had discovered our work and decided that a collaboration that brought Digital Storytelling to Ukiah could be built, she chased down some money from the Irvine Foundation, and we set about capturing stories in a series of workshops. Amy Hill, Emily Paulos, Erica Cooperrider, along with Kate and myself all played a role in leading these workshops.
Writing about place comes naturally to most people, but there were still issues about how people perceived a place story. For some, people stories and place stories were inseparable, and they immediately reflected on what happened at the place involving themselves and other characters, not necessarily reflecting upon what was unique about the setting or location that made the place itself the story. Others found a way to integrate their sense of the importance of events and characters, with the meaning of the place itself.
A diverse tapestry of narratives formed through the first two workshops, and then we had to devise a stage production. The main issue was both technical and dramaturgical. How do you show the stories with the live performer, and not have the actors dominated by the projections, and how do you pace and arrange a production, to give a sense of connection and dramatic development to an evening production. We settled on using multiple performance locations on the stage, with two production screens, one a bit more intimate than the other. We reduced some pieces to only a few images to slow down the visual overload. To keep the show moving forward we created an “Our Town” like narrator, local journalist Laura Hamburg, who introduced and interrelated the pieces. And we created interstitial images to carry the transitions, and fill the opposing screen with a consistent visual material
As I had remembered from my work with Dana Atchley’s Next Exit, we also had the problem of getting a performer in sync with a projected image. Through rehearsal, most actors found the rhythm of the piece, and could closely keep up with the advance of the video. We used “rear view mirrors” down stage so they could monitor this as well. But several of the performers just couldn’t get it down, so we had to create essentially powerpoint versions of their digital stories and have the stage manager speed up or slow down with the performers pace. I was surprised we didn’t have to do it more often, but rehearsals, even as few as we had, seemed to get people used to a natural cadence that coincided with the images.
I found one of the most powerful parts of the production was a pre-show slideshow that came out of a small commission of CDS Associate Rob Kershaw. He went around Ukiah and took photographs that were delightful in their insight into the little nooks and crannies of a small town.
When that production was completed in October of 2005, we then had a second task to expand the participation to a larger number of Mendocino counties, and to make a “touring production” for the county in the summer/fall of 2006. Another workshop was organized, and then we reduced the play to a one-woman show with Laura, this time as a waitress closing down a local diner. The waitress ends up explaining why she loves the county to an offstage friend using the digital stories as points in her argument. The production toured six different venues, and following the production their were story circles to have people from the audience share their own stories.
In both productions the principle viewpoint was about the importance of sustaining the unique character of a place, through these wonderful stories, in order to resist the homengenizing influences of industrial redevelopment, in terms of commercial, residential, civic, and agricultural identities. This viewpoint actually served to galvanize more discussions about Smart Growth, and a deeper commitment to sustainable and thoughful planning in these communities, and in this way the project has amplified way beyond the audience of several hundred that were fortunate to see the productions.
It was all quite magical.
Where we go from here is to take the stories and map them, which we have done here on the Storymapping website, and then develop an expanded project to create a working story-capturing booth, a la Storycorps, and a local cel phone story tour, a la Murmur, which they are calling Hear Here. We hope to see these projects emerge in 2007.