The Scotsman

Take a leap of faith for a show that you will never forget

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The Reason I Jump

North Kelvin Meadow, Glasgow

IN NORTH Kelvin Meadow, at the end of a busy day, the world is suddenly still, and very beautiful. Beyond the gate into the meadow and children’s wood, a soft breeze ruffles the tops of the young trees; and in five sunlit spaces and clearings – linked in any order by a maze-like series of paths – five people wait to talk to us about their experience of being autistic, and about their response to Naoki Higashida’s remarkable book about his own autism, The Reason I Jump, first published in Japan in 2007. The book takes the form of 58 questions that non-autistic people commonly ask those with autism; but this beautiful, free-flowing National Theatre of Scotland show – created by director Graham Eatough and dramaturg Clare Duffy with the company – succeeds brilliantl­y in referring to those questions, while not being unduly constraine­d by them. Each performer tells an intensely individual tale, from 60-year-old Michael who knew that he was different before autism even had a name, through brilliant young Calum bouncing on a small trampoline as he recreates Naoki’s pleasure in jumping, to Nicola and Emma, stars of Edinburgh’s Lung Ha company, who talk searchingl­y about the reasons for autism, as well as about the values they embrace, and about their own individual responses to the autistic life, from hatching out caterpilla­rs in jars to taking up judo.

At the centre of the maze there is a labyrinth, marked out in stones on the ground; at its entrance sits young Coery, who has non-verbal autism, inviting us in via the voice of his tablet computer. We walk through it, asking our own questions, our hearts perhaps open enough – after an hour in the meadow – to hear some answers; then we all gather to watch actor Fletcher Math-

ers and the company re-enact one of the strange, haunting short stories that occasional­ly interrupt Naoki’s text, using irresistib­le, wide-eyed anime masks.

And what we learn, I think, is that at this critical moment, humanity has everything to gain from its diversity, and everything to lose, if it continues to exclude those whose very difference is their strength. Working with this unique acting company, in this unique setting, Graham Eatough has put together an experience that compels us to drop our usual sense of urgency, to enter into a different way of thinking, and to spend an hour or two considerin­g what really matters, in our brief experience of life on earth; and it is, in its quiet way, as unforgetta­ble and life-enhancing a show as I can recall seeing in almost 40 years on the theatre trail.

JOYCE MCMILLAN

Until 23 June

 ??  ?? The Reason I Jump is a lifeenhanc­ing show which makes us consider what really matters
The Reason I Jump is a lifeenhanc­ing show which makes us consider what really matters

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