Teatro Vivo is a site specific theatre company formed in south London, England, in 2005 by theatre director Sophie Austin. The company has expanded from its London base and performed shows in Oxford, Berkshire, Devon and Dorset as well as maintaining a strong presence in London. It creates both new work and adaptations with an element of audience participation, in non-theatre spaces and outdoor venues. [1]
Major works by the company include The Odyssey (2012) on the streets of Deptford, London; Supermarket Shakespeare (2008–10), a series of stories based on Shakespeare plays in Sainsbury's supermarkets across London and Here But There, a retelling of Anton Chekhov's Three Sisters (2006/7) in the now defunct Theatre Museum in Covent Garden. Lyn Gardner writing in The Guardian described the production of Adventures in Wonderland (2013) as "full of raggle-taggle invention, and its cleverness lies in the way it casts the audience as co-conspirators." [2]
Theatre writer Sarah Sigal [3] says Teatro Vivo is an ensemble "focussed on the centrality of the actor/performer's contribution to the process of theatre making and a kind of collaboration wherein all company members make significant contributions to the process." [4]
The Guardian, in an editorial on the company's work said:
Almost anywhere is a possible stage for this most creative of theatre groups. The challenge they set themselves is to break free of tradition, reinterpret the classics and collaborate with their often youthful audience. It is a conspiracy to entertain and provoke that invites the onlooker to be co-conspirator. Absolutely not the West End. Take a raincoat. [5]
Theatre director Sophie Austin formed the company immediately after graduating from the B.A in Theatre Directing Course at Rose Bruford College, London:
"My aim was to create theatre with like minded creatives who enjoyed making work for a new audiences. I had no money for rehearsal space or theatre hire so we had our first meeting in a café and staged our first play in a park. What started out as a budgetary constraint became a central ethos for the company. By performing in these public spaces we were able to reach a really diverse audience and by collaborating with these spaces to tell a story, we were challenged and inspired in equal measure." [6]
Austin's key collaborators since the first production have been Mark Stevenson, who responded to an advert placed in local arts venues in Lewisham, where Austin lived, Laura Hooper and Kas Darley.
The company have formed working partnerships with The Albany Theatre, Deptford, with whom they are an associate company, [7] Greenwich and Lewisham Young People’s Theatre (GLYPT), [8] and Dash Arts. [9] [10]
Austin stepped down as artistic director in July 2019, with Stevenson and Darley becoming joint artistic directors. [11] [12] [13]
In response to lockdown restrictions imposed as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic in 2020 the company put on a special set of online performances of their show the Grimms Collecting Agency, in which they advertised for people to be interviewed. The ‘Grimms’ met people on Zoom and listened to their stories about life under lockdown. [14] This was the first time the company had produced a filmic piece.
In June 2021 the company staged their first production in Dorset, an adaptation of the legend of Ondine at St Catherine's Chapel in Abbotsbury. [15]
In 2021 Teatro Vivo created The Regulars in collaboration with the INN CROWD, [16] a show specifically designed for performance in pubs through 2021 and 2022. There were performances in Dorset and Somerset, and for the first time the company performed in the north of England, in Preston and Blackburn, Lancashire. [17] [18]
On March 18, 2022, Teatro Vivo were announced as Artists of Change alongside Dima Karout. Artists of Change is a new programme of arts residencies, developed in collaboration with Lewisham Council, for its tenure as Borough of Culture. [19] [20]
Production | Based on/adapted from | Venue | Directed by | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|
Doing what Lovers Do | Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare | Manor House Gardens, Hither Green | Sophie Austin | 2005 |
Lovers and Liars | Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare | Manor House Gardens, Hither Green | Sophie Austin | 2006 |
Here but There | Three Sisters by Anton Chekhov | Manor House Library, Lewisham and The Theatre Museum, Covent Garden | Sophie Austin | October 2006 and June 2007 |
Hothouse [21] | Devised | Arcola Theatre, Dalston; Bakehouse Theatre, Blackheath; Horniman Museum, Forest Hill; Albany Theatre, Lewisham | Sophie Austin | November 2008 and September 2009 |
Supermarket Shakespeare [22] | Based on the plays of William Shakespeare | Sainsbury's, Lee Green; Sainsbury's, New Cross; Sainsbury's Forest Hill; Sainsbury's, Lewisham | Sophie Austin | April 2008 April 2009 April 2010 |
The Odyssey [23] | Written by Vic Bryson, Sarah Sigal and Michael Wagg; based on Odyssey by Homer | Urban promenade performance in Deptford, London | Sophie Austin | June and September 2012 |
After the Tempest [24] | The Tempest by William Shakespeare | staged in five parks across London | Sophie Austin | Summer 2013 |
Adventures in Wonderland [25] | Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll | Manor House Library, Lewisham; Catford Broadway Theatre; The Story Museum, Oxford and the Watermill Theatre, Newbury | Sophie Austin | October 2010 July 2011 March 2012 July 2013 |
Mother Courage and Her Children | Mother Courage and Her Children by Bertolt Brecht | The Royal Arsenal site, Woolwich | Sophie Austin | September 2013 |
The Hunter's Grimm [26] | Grimms' Fairy Tales by Brothers Grimm; additional writing by Michael Wagg | Deptford Library; Newbury Watermill; Stratford, London and Catford Broadway Theatre | Sophie Austin | 2014 and 2019 |
The Residents [27] | Written by Teatro Vivo and Michael Wagg | Various houses in London | Sophie Austin | 2016 |
Twistov [28] | Written by Michael Wagg; inspired by Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens | The streets of Shoreditch, London | Sophie Austin | October 2017 |
Evelyn's Roots | Written by Bernadette Russell & Gareth Brierley | The streets of Evelyn Ward, Deptford | Sophie Austin | July 2018 |
The House That Slipped [29] | Devised | Online performances | Mark Stevenson | August 2020 |
Ondine | Vic Bryson, based on the legend of Ondine | St Catherine's Chapel, Abbotsbury, Dorset | Mark Stevenson | June 2021 |
Dangerous Games [30] | Vic Bryson, based on Les Liaisons dangereuses | Deptford, London and Weymouth, Dorset | Mark Stevenson and Kas Darley | March and April 2023 |
Catford is a district in south east London, England, and the administrative centre of the London Borough of Lewisham. It is southwest of Lewisham itself, mostly in the Rushey Green and Catford South wards. The population of Catford, including Bellingham, was 44,905 in 2011.
Deptford is an area on the south bank of the River Thames in southeast London, within the London Borough of Lewisham. It is named after a ford of the River Ravensbourne. From the mid 16th century to the late 19th it was home to Deptford Dockyard, the first of the Royal Dockyards. This was a major shipbuilding dock and attracted Peter the Great to come and study shipbuilding. Deptford and the docks are associated with the knighting of Sir Francis Drake by Queen Elizabeth I aboard the Golden Hind, the legend of Sir Walter Raleigh laying down his cape for Elizabeth, Captain James Cook's third voyage aboard HMS Resolution, and the mysterious apparent murder of Christopher Marlowe in a house along Deptford Strand.
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Lewisham Deptford is a parliamentary constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2015 by Vicky Foxcroft of the Labour Party.
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