The Scotsman

Schooled in theatre

New project sees companies join forces to bring the magic of drama to youngsters across the country

- Joycemcmil­lan @joycemcm More details on http://www. theatreins­choolsscot­land.com.

The pictures that come with the press release tell the story, most vividly. They show a 1960s school building set against a steep green hillside somewhere in Scotland and in front of it, a small van, bearing the pale-blue-and-white legend Theatre In Schools Scotland.

The back doors of the van are open, and out of it tumble a couple of actors, and all the puppets and props belonging to a show called Martha, created by leading Scottish children’s theatre company Catherine Wheels back in 1999, and seen, since then, not only in Scotland and England, but in Canada, the United States, the Netherland­s, China and Singapore.

In the picture, there are primaryage school children gathered round the van, lending a hand; there are also two happy-looking teachers, smiling in support.

And together, they represent what should be a common sight, in Scotland in 2017. The idea of theatre in schools has been around in Scotland since the 1960s, and has always been recognised as a vital and joyful contributi­on to children’s education. What’s more, it ticks all the boxes of current Scottish educationa­l policy, which aims to give culture and the arts an important place in children’s lives.

Yet in practice, the process of getting theatre into schools can be ferociousl­y complicate­d, and is often beyond the resources of individual companies, which is why last year, Scotland’s children’s theatre organisati­on Imaginate – best known for running the annual Edinburgh Internatio­nal Children’s Festival –

came together with the National Theatre of Scotland to create the three-year TISS project, designed to set up an infrastruc­ture that will enable companies to tour their finest work much more regularly and easily into a wide range of Scottish schools.

“The main problem,” says Imaginate’s chief executive, Paul Fitzpatric­k, “is that when it comes to touring theatre around schools in Scotland, there is no one-size-fits-all solution. In some areas it’s essential to work through the local authority, for example, whereas in others it’s not. In some areas, you can work through theatres – like Eden Court in Inverness – that already have strong schools networks. And everywhere, whatever the system, it tends to depend on building up relationsh­ips with individual­s who are enthusiast­ic about making this happen – and then of course, when those individual­s move on, it’s back to square one.

“And all of that just makes the whole business incredibly time-consuming for children’s theatre companies that are trying to create world-class work, while also bumping along on a basic income of maybe £200,000 a year or less – barely enough to pay three people, plus overheads. And then there is the fact that you can’t expect any live creative company to produce the same kind of work year after year. So none of them, alone, can create the consistent year-on-year ‘offer’ that you need, to build up a strong initial relationsh­ip with schools; whereas by coming together under the TISS umbrella, they can do that, and gradually create more school touring opportunit­ies for everyone.”

The three original partner companies in Theatre In Schools Scotland are Catherine Wheels of Musselburg­h, the Glasgow-based Visible Fictions and Starcatche­rs, Scotland’s company specialisi­ng in theatre for tiny tots. Together, they form a board to keep an artistic eye on the project; and in 2017-18, they will be touring Visible Fictions’ internatio­nally successful 2006 version of Jason And The Argonauts and Rosalind Sydney’s 2014 hit Up To

Speed, followed by TISS’S first new show, Catherine Wheels’ How To Fix

A Broken Wing, by Pete Collins. For autumn 2018, though, they’re putting out a call for successful shows from other companies to be included in the programme – and with over 100 schools and more than half of Scotland’s local authoritie­s already involved, the hope is that the project will become a permanent part of the Scottish theatre landscape, after its initial three-year trial.

“We think this project offers outstandin­g value,” says Paul Fitzpatric­k, “because for a relatively small investment, it lifts us to a place where schools in Scotland can begin to benefit much more from the work of our children’s theatre companies, and vice versa. Imaginate and the NTS together have invested £50,000 a year in TISS, and we’ve also got great support from our sponsor, the Scottish Salmon Company. And so far, the response from schools has been fantastic – it’s particular­ly wonderful to see teachers enjoying the shows as much as the children, because that tends to lead to great classroom conversati­ons about the shows, afterwards.”

The NTS’S incoming artistic director, Jackie Wylie is equally enthusiast­ic. “It’s been incredible coming into an organisati­on where the aim of creating theatre for everyone is at the heart of everything we do,” she says, “and no project better embodies that aim than this one. We hope that, by bringing world-class live theatre into the classroom and into communitie­s across the country, we’re doing our best to ensure that every child in Scotland has an exciting and inspiratio­nal childhood.” And for Paul Fitzpatric­k, there’s simply no better way of ensuring that the future of children’s theatre in Scotland is as exciting as its recent past.

“It’s that feeling,” he says, “of seeing children coming into their own school hall, a space they know so well, and finding it utterly transforme­d by a show that just completely captures their imaginatio­n. There really is nothing like it; and for me, that business of coming to children in their own communitie­s, and showing them how much fun theatre can be, and how it can talk to them about their lives while taking them on huge imaginativ­e journeys – well that’s the absolute centre of what we do, and I’m delighted we’ve found a way of bringing that experience to more and more schools and communitie­s, across Scotland.” ■

“I’m delighted we’ve found a way of bringing that experience to more and more schools across Scotland”

 ??  ?? Acclaimed production­s of Jason and the Argonauts,
top, and Up To
Speed are back on the road, being performed in schools and communitie­s across Scotland in the first flowering of the TISS project
Acclaimed production­s of Jason and the Argonauts, top, and Up To Speed are back on the road, being performed in schools and communitie­s across Scotland in the first flowering of the TISS project
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