The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

A shameless act

Internet shaming or vigilantis­m is explored in the world premiere of Shame at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe. Michael Alexander spoke to the show’s St Andrews-raised artistic director, Allie Butler

- malexander@thecourier.co.uk

When former Dundee High pupil Glen Allan Wilson – now of St Andrews University – appeared at Perth Sheriff Court on Tuesday and pled guilty to blackmaili­ng underage girls into sending him sexually explicit videos and pictures, it emerged he had threatened to send indecent images to family and friends and publish them on social media unless they provided him with further pictures.

Internet shaming is to be explored in the world premiere of mixed media show Shame, which has opened at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

Actress Belle Jones was inspired to write the show after seeing the online shaming of a teenage girl in 2013. The girl had been filmed performing a sex act on 24 men on a drunken night out in Magaluf and the images had gone viral.

Belle said: “I felt physically sick at the thought of what she must be going through. I wanted to create a platform for discussion about how we might be able to show solidarity and support to victims of this type of abuse.”

Revenge porn and public shaming have become a form of internet vigilantis­m – a modern-day equivalent of putting someone in the stocks in which targets are publicly humiliated using technology like social media.

Yet with recent figures suggesting one in 10 people have been threatened with revenge porn and 60% of these threats becoming a reality, the humiliatio­n can have devastatin­g consequenc­es, with 50% of revenge porn victims contemplat­ing suicide.

The introducti­on of the Abusive Behaviour and Sexual Harm (Scotland) Act this year – which criminalis­es the non-consensual sharing of intimate media – means that people maliciousl­y sharing naked pictures in Scotland could face up to five years in jail.

But according to Allie Butler – the St Andrews-raised artistic director of the Tidy Carnage theatre company that is putting on the Fringe show – the wider issue of cyber bullying, and the difficulti­es in policing it, are also drawn into focus.

“There was the terrible story last week about the wee boy in England who killed himself because he was being bullied online, and while anything like that is still happening we need to tell these stories,” says Allie, 32, a former pupil of St Leonards School in St Andrews who has worked in theatre since graduating with a degree in English literature from University College London.

“Unfortunat­ely, it is usually girls that these sort of things happen to and it’s usually younger girls. But it can happen to anyone. When I was a teenager we didn’t have Facebook or Twitter or Instagram or any of that stuff. It’s kind of unimaginab­le what teenage life would be like if you were that exposed.”

Allie, who establishe­d Tidy Carnage after moving to Glasgow in 2012, previously worked with Belle on an “all-female redhead cabaret”.

It was Belle who approached her a few years ago about potentiall­y developing and directing Shame. The project moved closer to reality after developmen­t money was secured from Creative Scotland in 2015, and Allie is delighted it is now being put on at the world’s biggest arts festival.

Shame follows the story of young mother, Vicky, whose daughter Keira goes missing after being shamed on social media. Vicky waits alone for her daughter’s return with only Keira’s online existence to turn to.

There are 17 actors in total. But only Vicky – played by Jones (Outlander, Rebus) – is actually on stage. Everyone else is part of a digital cast including Sarah Miele (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child) as Kiera and BBC River City’s Jenny Hulse.

The digital cast appear in a range of vlogs, YouTube videos and mobile phone uploads as part of the mixed media aspect of the show.

The show – which runs until August 13 and then again from August 15 to 28 – also attempts to push the boundaries by spilling into real-life to support the #Unshamed project, an online initiative to support victims of online shaming by sharing videos of camaraderi­e and hope.

 ??  ?? Shame, written by and starring Belle Jones, above, opens at the Edinburgh Fringe today. Below: Allie Butler.
Shame, written by and starring Belle Jones, above, opens at the Edinburgh Fringe today. Below: Allie Butler.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom