The Georgia Straight

REVOLVER FESTIVAL

ADVENTURES IN THEATRE

- > BY ANDREA WARNER

In 1999, David Mott and Daniel Martin were just theatre kids, emerging artists who wanted to create but didn’t know how. “We just wanted informatio­n,” Mott tells the Straight, over the phone from his office. “It was sort of the dawn of the Internet, so it wasn’t easy to get informatio­n at that point. We didn’t know how to produce plays. We didn’t know where to get materials, we didn’t know how to connect with other artists. So what we really needed was a network.”

That network began as Mott and Martin founded Upintheair Theatre, and in 2003, they launched their first theatre festival, Walking Fish, featuring short-form works by emerging artists over the course of a weekend. In 2010, they broadened the concept with Neandertha­l Arts, accepting national emerging artists and companies on the cusp of touring, and expanding to two weeks. And then, in 2013, revolver Festival was born.

Mott sees revolver, which runs Wednesday (May 24) to June 4, as the pinnacle of what he and Martin hoped to achieve almost two decades ago.

“Our objective was to create a network of artists that came from different methodolog­ies and schools of thought, different areas of the country, different practices, different art forms,” he says. “We were just trying to connect them because it felt very separated. What we really wanted was revolver, ultimately, and it took us this long to put it together.”

It’s the festival they wished had existed when they were kids, Mott says.

“If you look at other festivals across the country, you realize that ours is on par with things like Summerwork­s [in Toronto] and Undercurre­nts, which is happening in Ottawa,” Mott says. “And we pay really well, as well as we can; we do performanc­e guarantees as well as box-office splits. Not all of the other festivals do that. We’re working to give these opportunit­ies that you just don’t see. I mean, an emerging artist gets a cheque to create a show and then they get a box-office split—that’s a unique thing on the West Coast.”

The festival hasn’t changed tremendous­ly in its first five years, but one shift has been Mott and Martin’s decision to broaden the scope of the artists they support.

“Revolver has become more open in its definition of emerging to include emerging and midcareer artists that still need exposure and work,” Mott explains. He says that not only has this allowed them to bring in more sophistica­ted work, it’s helped with their commitment to diversity.

“We’re really keen to try to make sure that underrepre­sented groups are having an opportunit­y to be shown on stages,” Mott says. “For a really long time it’s been very Eurocentri­c and white, to be completely straight with you, and that has to change. And we’re doing our best to get that out. But it’s difficult to actually connect with those communitie­s. It’s been difficult to convince them that we’re altruistic and we actually want to help them, as opposed to take advantage of them or take over their work.…we want to give them an opportunit­y.”

Mott says Upintheair has been a champion of gender parity since the Walking Fish days, when the majority of directors and writers were women. They have consulted with indigenous communitie­s to increase representa­tion and break down barriers. It’s also been important to them to present queer content and gay issues.

There’s a refreshing­ly broad spectrum of lived experience and wild imaginatio­n in revolver’s 2017 programmin­g. Last Train In is a work by theatre artist and filmmaker Adam Grant Warren, who was born with cerebral palsy. The Princess Show is an adventure musical that cites Rupaul’s Drag Race, Dungeons & Dragons, and The Legend of Zelda as three of its influences. Neon-ね音 is a Japanese and English piece by Mayumi Yoshida about her late grandmothe­r. But Spawn, about a young pregnant woman haunted by a traditiona­l Coast Salish story and the drowning death of her mother, is Mott’s biggest thrill.

“It’s the piece that is the riskiest of all,” Mott says. “It’s most exciting to me. The content is excellent. I personally love history and myth, I’ve always loved these two factors as they come together. It’s also by a really interestin­g emerging artist, Cheyenne Scott, who I met at the Yukon Arts Centre as part of Magnetic North [Theatre Festival] last year. She’s creating the show with Nyla Carpentier, who’s a local indigenous artist and dancer that we also have a long experience with. They’re trying to use traditiona­l materials to do the developmen­t of all of the set, costumes, and prop pieces.”

It’s this kind of creativity and spirit that Mott hopes exemplifie­s revolver, ensuring the festival’s position as a purveyor and producer of innovation and opportunit­y, the likes of which he and Martin used to only dream about. Giving emerging artists this visibility and this showcase—that is Mott’s definition of success.

“When you produce at the high level of…the Arts Club, or those highlevel, A houses, that’s a different kind of thing than the raw, energetic work that’s happening right now, that most don’t know is happening,” Mott says. “We believe so dearly in bringing those people together, and we’ve succeeded in doing that.”

Revolver Festival runs from Wednesday to next Sunday (May 24 to June 4) at the Cultch and the Russian Hall.

 ??  ?? Clockwise from top: Cheyenne Scott, star of the myth-infused Spawn (Jessica White photo); and David Mott and Daniel Martin, founders of Upintheair Theatre.
Clockwise from top: Cheyenne Scott, star of the myth-infused Spawn (Jessica White photo); and David Mott and Daniel Martin, founders of Upintheair Theatre.

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