The Scotsman

Unlocking potential, one stage at a time

Wonder Fools’ pandemic theatre project for young people was so successful it’s been extended for a second season

- Joycemcmil­lan

If there is one theatre company in Scotland that barely seems to have paused for breath during the last 19 months, it’s the young Glasgowbas­ed group Wonder Fools. Founded in 2014 by writer, director and performer Robbie Gordon, and writer and director Jack Nurse, the company were already making an impact on the Scottish theatre scene before the pandemic struck, with shows including their hugely successful touring production 549: Scots Of The Spanish Civil War, based on stories from Gordon’s home town of Prestonpan­s, and the bold The Coolidge Effect, which deals with the pervasive influence of internet porn.

The company also worked extensivel­y with non-profession­al actors – in community groups, in schools, with students – in an effort to bridge the gap between profession­al theatre and those who still often assume it is not for them; and when the pandemic broke out, they were determined not to let those groups be forgotten.

“Jack and I both grew up in places where there wasn’t much access to theatre,” says Gordon, “and we’ve always tried to work on filling that gap. When the pandemic broke out, we heard all the debate about the terrible impact of Covid on profession­al theatre makers, and of course we were part of that. But we were also aware of all those other groups for whom theatre is often something of lifeline, a place of escape and community and friendship in difficult lives. So we immediatel­y started to talk to them, and ask what they needed; and our lockdown projects emerged in response to those conversati­ons.”

Right from the start of lockdown, Wonder Fools continued to develop their very close relationsh­ip with Ayr Gaiety theatre, and its community work; a link which resulted in the company’s powerful online show Meet Jan Black, featuring Maureen Beattie and a team of actors from local Ayrshire amateur companies, and performed in April 2021 from the Gaiety stage.

When it came to young people, though, the demand identified by Wonder Fools was clear and specific. In the pandemic or out of it, young theatre groups felt there was a shortage of high-quality contempora­ry material to work with; and Gordon and Nurse, with their producer Steph Connell, therefore wrote down a wish list of writers they would like to commission, approached the Traverse Theatre to join them in commission­ing the work and shaping the project, and began to contact the writers they had identified, receiving an overwhelmi­ngly positive response.

The result was the first season of the Wonder Fools and Traverse Theatre project Positive Stories For Negative Times, which began back in 2020, and ran until earlier this year. The writers involved were Sabrina Mahfouz, Stef Smith, Chris Thorpe, Bea Webster, and Gordon and Nurse themselves, working together; the plays ranged from a contempora­ry take on Shelley’s Ozymandias, by Gordon and Nurse, to Sabrina Mahfouz’s Bad Bored Women Of The Rooms, about the neglected figure of the gangster woman in history.

The plays were published by Bloomsbury, and made available online, and young theatre groups were invited to sign up for the project. Wonder Fools thought they might attract 50 groups, but the combinatio­n of their own networks, and those of the Traverse, finally attracted 282 youth groups and a total of 2,700 young people, mainly from Scotland, but also from across the UK and Ireland, and from internatio­nal locations ranging from Stockholm to Quebec. The aim was for each group to choose a text and work on it, in any form they chose, from straight performanc­e to improvisat­ions inspired by the plays; and then to record something of their work, and post it on a shared website which would act as a community noticeboar­d, featuring opportunit­ies to experience the work of other groups, and to respond to it in discussion.

“We were just delighted with the range and the scale of the response,” says Gordon. “People created films, theatre performanc­es, live Zoom performanc­es, even site-specific shows in outdoor locations. Some of the texts – like Chris Thorpe’s Hold Out Your Hand, or Stef Smith’s The Pack – just offered so much space for young people to be creative with their own interpreta­tions of the work. You can see a selection of those films on our website, and we were so delighted with what had been created that we started work on a second season as soon as we could.”

The second season of Positive Stories For Negative Times, launched last month, features an even wider range of plays, by Bryony Kimmings, Douglas Maxwell, Hannah Lavery, Debris Stevenson, The Pappy Show, Wonder Fools themselves, and young Traverse writer Ellen Bannerman. “It’s just been an incredibly rich process,” says Gordon. “Obviously we hope that some of the wonderful young people involved will become profession­al theatre-makers in future; but it’s also about confidence and community and imaginatio­n and empathy, and all the other skills for life that young people can develop through creating theatre.”

Wonder Fools thought they might attract 50 youth groups, but finally attracted 282 and 2,700 young people

For details, see www.positivest­ories. scot, and www.traverse.co.uk Playtexts are in book form at www. bloomsbury.com, with the second volume published next week.

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Jack Nurse and Robbie Gordon of Wonder Fools

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