Lights, camera, fiction. Ali Bacon thinks about taking to the stage
Something I touched on in a very ancient blog post and am
now thinking about a lot more, is that all writing is a performance, because like
all artistic endeavours it assumes an audience, an audience whose expectations
may be satisfied, disappointed, exceeded, subverted, but always taken into account.
(Even if writing is therapeutic or introspective, i.e. the audience is the writer
her/himself, that audience still needs satisfaction.)
But this isn’t about philosophy or therapy. It’s about the
writer as a performer, as in on stage. I could include Youtube and audio tapes
but I’m thinking of those times when as authors we’re asked to stand
up in public and read our own words.
I admit I used to hate it, not because it
involved ‘public speaking’ - I was always fine with giving talks and
presentations in work situations –but reading my own work felt like presenting myself , my creations, my inner world – which
sent me in to an unusually shrinking violet state of mind. Not surprisingly my first efforts at reading
to an audience were not great. I was, I suspect, a bit wooden, and I know for a
fact that even if I started slowly I always cantered to the end in the hope of
sitting down again as quickly as possible.
Getting a taste for stardom |
But last November, this suddenly changed. Perhaps it was the
Stroud Short Stories venue (warm welcome, big crowd) or the fact that this was performance for its own sake i.e. not linked to any
book-buying or selling event, that made the difference, or maybe it was just
because the readers ahead of me gave such brilliant entertainment of different
kinds, I stood up and, as I read, I realised I was actually enjoying my moment in
the limelight. It was a shock but a good shock, a shock I might even like to have
again.
Since then I’ve taken been taking in other short story
events, although so far only in the audience. Story Friday which takes place every
two months in Bath
is similar in some ways to Stroud Short Stories. Work is submitted and the ‘prize’ is selection
for the next reading event, although in both cases it’s made clear that the
criteria for selection are not just quality of writing but how well your
contribution fits with the specified theme and the other selections, i.e. it’s
about the audience experience as much as the writing. I first went along in December last year and
the story that has left the biggest impression was a comedy in two voices with
a reader for each voice. Was it a story? Was it a play? Does it matter? It was
a great performance.
Cleveland Pools - stories are waiting |
Dance performance by the pool |
But how are we as writers going to grasp the performance
nettle? Excerpts of novels do not make for great performance IMO because they
will never tell the whole story, but if we do need to tackle book launch
reading we can at least hone our presentation and delivery and I’m grateful
that on my late lamented MA course Lucy English, novelist and performance poet, gave us some great tips on reading aloud. (No 1 rule: Speak as slowly as you
possibly can!)
Orna Ross at the new Hawkesbury Upton Litfest |
But at other recent events it has struck me that fiction for
performance has its own demands in terms of form and content as well as in the
strength of the presentation. In April at Hawkesbury Upton, Orna Ross, Shirley Wright and John Holland demonstrated the strengths for an audience (in the right hands) of poetry and flash
fiction, and I remember how well Pauline Masurel’s short stories came across
last year in Winterbourne Library.
Does the spoken word need to pack a different kind
of punch to the written word? I was fascinated to see A Word in Your Ear
offering a workshop – sadly I couldn’t make it - in writing short stories for
performance. But around here there are a growing number of ‘live
fiction’ events (Word of Mouth at Bristol Thunderbolt, the Bristol group Heads and Tales,
Philip Douch in and around Cheltenham and a
new Sunday night initiative in Stroud) and since I seem to be ‘between novels’ I’m
planning to be in the audience of more of them. I actually prefer to hear rather than read short fiction and so it will be a pleasure to sit
back and let these people entertain me - and then to work out
how to make my next bid for stardom.
Comments
I've gone from being a terrified teenager to someone who enjoys reading their work, providing the audience is not too unruly.
I recently read a couple of short stories aloud at the RLF Brum meeting. One was 'Overheard In A Graveyard' from the book of the same title. It's a quite intense and emotional piece, and I was far from sure my acting ability was up to it - but it went okay. One audience member said they'd wanted to ask a question, but had been too choked up to speak. Of course, I'm choosing to believe that they meant choked with tears, and not with laughter.