Full Houses: mobility and complicity in the dramas of real buildings.

Authors

  • Paul Davies university of queensland

Abstract

One popular form of site-specific theatre as it developed through the 1980s involved the production of plays in ‘real’ houses. John Krizanc’s Tamara (1981) premiered in Toronto and subsequently ran for nine years in a Hollywood mansion. Later, the Welsh group Brith Gof, applying a different formula, staged Tri Bywyd (Three Lives, 1995) in a purpose-built, scaffolding structure inspired by the designs of Bernard Tschumi – essentially a ‘house’ where the walls and furniture were transparent. This article examines a Melbourne play, Living Rooms, first produced in 1986 by TheatreWorks – one of a number of alternative companies grouped as Australia’s Next Wave movement. Living Rooms deployed similar staging strategies to Tamara, effectively dividing its audiences into separate groups and rotating them through several rooms in a former family mansion where discrete scenes, each depicting an episode in the building’s history, were enacted simultaneously. Like Tamara, Living Rooms proved immediately popular with its suburban audiences and this success derives, I would argue, from the interplay of diegetic and real spaces inherent in the design of both plays. 

Author Biography

Paul Davies, university of queensland

PhD candidate in the department of english media studies and art history. Paul Davies graduated with a Masters Degree in English Literature from
Queensland University in 1972. He trained as a script editor at Crawford
Productions in 1974 and subsequently wrote more than a 100 episodes for a
dozen television series including Homicide, The Sullivans, Blue Heelers,
Stingers and Something In The Air. He has also authored several films and
six plays, two of which (Storming Mont Albert By Tram and On Shifting
Sandshoes) received Australian Writer's Guild Awards.

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Published

2011-03-31

How to Cite

Davies, P. (2011). Full Houses: mobility and complicity in the dramas of real buildings. Popular Entertainment Studies, 2(1), 79–95. Retrieved from https://novaojs.newcastle.edu.au/kulumun/index.php/pes/article/view/32

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Section

Articles