The Crick Crack Club

The Crick Crack Club

The Crick Crack Club is a London based performance storytelling promoter, founded in 1988. It programs public performances of storytelling (mainly for adult audiences) in theaters, and art centers nationally; tours artists and their work; provides training and direction; mentors and supports new artists, undertakes research and advises on the use of storytellers in museums and educational settings.[1]

Contents

Programming

Crick Crack Club events take place in numerous venues, including the Barbican Centre, the Soho Theatre, Northern Stage, the Unicorn Theatre, Tristan Bates Theatre, Cheltenham Literature Festival, The Wellcome Collection, and many others. The performances and the artists The Crick Crack Club programmes, commissions and promotes varies over time. It works with a core of around a dozen UK-based established performance storytellers (plus additional international artists from Northern Europe, the USA and the wider world) plus between five and ten new emerging artists – who are generally termed ‘new voices’. The repertoire of each storyteller is different, and artists continually produce new work, alongside continuing to perform shows that are in their permanent repertoire. The Crick Crack Club is primarily interested in the performance and oral retelling of traditional narrative material – fairy tales, folklore mythology, legends and epics – and the content of the vast majority of performances it promotes is based on traditional stories to a greater or lesser extent.

The Crick Crack Club is a Charity. It receives funding from Arts Council England and The Paul Hamlyn Foundation.[2][3]

History

The Crick Crack Club was the first performance storytelling club to be established in the UK.[4] From 1988–1995 26 weekly events took place every autumn and winter. Artists received fees to entertain an audience who had paid an entry fee. Unlike folk clubs there were no ‘floorspots’; from the beginning, it only promoted professional artists and did not encourage amateur participation. It was founded in 1988 by performance storyteller Ben Haggarty with assistance during the first year from Jenny Pearson. In January 1985 Ben Haggarty had organised Britain's first storytelling festival at Battersea Arts Centre - the success of this and a second festival at Watermans Art Centre in 1987 prompted an invitation for him to stage a third, 16 day long, international storytelling festival at London's South Bank Centre in 1989. A list of international artists was drawn up, including Louise Bennett, Vi Hilbert, Abbi Patrix, Eamon Kelly, Seref Tasliova and Punaram Nishad. However, questions arose as to whether there would actually be enough performance storytellers in the UK with the experience and stage presence to hold large adult audiences for a whole evening with appropriate material. This concern led Ben Haggarty to found the Crick Crack Club. Many of today’s leading British storytellers first cut their teeth on adult audiences at the Club. In the autumn of 1988 the first season of 26 weekly events was launched in a pub theatre in Ladbroke Grove, with the expressed aim of trying out new artists and providing an opportunity for established artists (who mainly worked in educational contexts) to develop their skills and repertoire for adult audiences.[5]

Between 1988 and 1995, The Crick Crack Club promoted weekly events in several venues in London. From 1995 to 2001, the club organised monthly events at The Spitz, in Spitalfields, including its renowned 'Grand Lying Contest'.[6] During this time it also organised numerous monthly events and mini-festivals in regional arts venues throughout England and elsewhere in London, including at Battersea Arts Centre, The South Bank Centre and Hoxton Hall. In addition, the Norfolk storyteller, Hugh Lupton, ran a successful monthly branch of the club during this time at the King of Hearts Arts Centre in Norwich.

From 1991–1993 Ben Haggarty was assisted by storyteller Daniel Morden, and in one year they put on 125 events across England and Wales. In 1993, in partnership with David Ambrose of St. Donats Arts Centre in Wales, the Crick Crack Club created what was to become one of the most celebrated and festive annual storytelling festivals: the Beyond the Border International Festival of Storytelling and Epic Singing. Ben Haggarty, the Crick Crack Club's Artistic Director co-directed Beyond the Border from 1993 to 2005 with specific responsibility for choosing the storytellers, while David Ambrose selected the musicians, puppeteers and other theatrical entertainers.

The Crick Crack Club entered a partnership with Barbican Education at Barbican Arts Centre in 2003, and have since programmed nine events a year in the Barbican Pit Theatre. The Club runs monthly events at the Soho Theatre, featuring experimental performances and rarely seen work by established artists, work in development, and performances by new artists. It programmes annual seasons for The Unicorn Theatre and Cheltenham Literature Festival, and works collaboratively with many other theatres, art centres, museums and galleries.[7]

Origins of the name

In the francophone islands of the Caribbean, when a storyteller wants to tell a story, he or she calls ‘Cric?’ and those who want to hear respond with the affirmation ‘Crac!’. Given the Northern British usage of Crack (Irish: Craic) to denote a story, Ben Haggarty coined the name Crick Crack Club in 1988. (Variations of the name have been subsequently used by independent groups in Edinburgh ‘The Guid Craic Club’ , in Newcastle, ‘A Bit Crack’ and in Stockholm ‘ The Crick Crack Café’).

Audio archive

The Crick Crack Club holds the Heritage Lottery Fund funded LCIS audio archive of performance storytelling, which totals over 900 individual recordings, each with its own annotated record. It features over 220 voices, and spans a period from 1983 to 2007. As a study of a reviving art form based on the oral tradition, the material ranges from the raw and experimental, to the polished and formally presented. Most of the material in the archive was originally recorded on an ad hoc basis, with little strategic or long-term view. The archive includes recordings from the experimental club-nights run by The West London Storytelling Unit in London in the early 1980s; material collected by The Company of Storytellers dating from their first tour in 1985 and onwards; recordings collected at the first three UK International Storytelling Festivals in London in 1985, 87 and 89; from Beyond the Border Festival over the years and some more recent recordings from Festival at the Edge, the Barbican Arts Centre and the Unicorn Theatre. It features over 220 voices, including that of Hugh Lupton, TUUP, Sally Pomme Clayton, Ben Haggarty, Abbi Patrix and Laura Simms, as well as superb examples of some of the world's greatest surviving epic singing traditions such as Central Indian Pandavani, Rajasthani Pabuji Ki Phad, Kyrgyz Manas singing (singers of the epic of Manas), the work of Turkish Ashiks and Bangladeshi Palagan and Patuagan performers.

References

  1. ^ 'a treasure house of humour, romance and myth' 13th October 1988, City Limits, Author, Carl Miller'
  2. ^ Paul Hamlyn Foundation Yearbook 2008/2009
  3. ^ Arts Council Annual Review 2009
  4. ^ The New Storytelling, by Simon Heywood, Published by Papyrus ISBN 1898878064
  5. ^ 'the Crick Crack Club, the driving force behind the revival (in storytelling)': 20th August 1994, The Independent, Author, John Windsor'
  6. ^ review by Judith Palmer, The Independent 06.04.1999 The winner of the "Hodja Cup" in 2010 was Hugh Lupton.
  7. ^ McMillan, Ian (1 February 2008). "The Matter of Britain: proving storytelling is alive and well". The Times. http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/books/fiction/article3288810.ece. Retrieved 5 October 2010. "that most vital and exciting storytelling organisation... Thanks in many ways to the Crick Crack Club... storytelling is on the crest of the wave at the moment" 

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Crick, Northamptonshire — Coordinates: 52°20′54″N 1°08′15″W / 52.3484°N 1.1374°W / 52.3484; 1.1374 …   Wikipedia

  • List of The Archers characters — This is a list of many of the characters from the long running British radio soap The Archers. A list of all Archers characters, and the actors who played them, can be found here, although the list ends in 1997. The credits which follow are not… …   Wikipedia

  • 1962 in the United Kingdom — Events from the year 1962 in the United Kingdom.Incumbents*Monarch HM Queen Elizabeth II *Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, Conservative PartyEvents*5 January The Beatles first record , My Bonnie with Tony Sheridan, is released by Polydor. *22… …   Wikipedia

  • Lie — For other uses, see Lie (disambiguation) A lie (also called prevarication, falsehood) is a type of deception in the form of an untruthful statement, especially with the intention to deceive others. To lie is to state something with disregard to… …   Wikipedia

  • Ben Haggarty — (* 1958) ist ein britischer Erzähler (Storyteller). Haggarty begann seine professionelle Laufbahn als Erzähler 1981 am Welfare State International Theatre. 1985 war er Mitbegründer des Beyond the Border International Storytelling Festival, des… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • George Orwell — Eric Blair redirects here. For the politician, see Eric Blair (Ontario politician). George Orwell Orwell s press card portrait, taken in 1933 Born Eric Arthur Blair 25 June 1903( …   Wikipedia

  • literature — /lit euhr euh cheuhr, choor , li treuh /, n. 1. writings in which expression and form, in connection with ideas of permanent and universal interest, are characteristic or essential features, as poetry, novels, history, biography, and essays. 2.… …   Universalium

  • Cultural appropriation — Non Japanese person learns Japanese martial art Cultural appropriation is the adoption of some specific elements of one culture by a different cultural group. It describes acculturation or assimilation, but can imply a negative view towards… …   Wikipedia

  • List of drug-related deaths — The following is a list of notable people who have died from drug related causes. Criteria for inclusion are death from overdose, death from organ failure/illness due to or exacerbated by drug use, or death from suicide/misadventure under the… …   Wikipedia

  • hurt — v 1. ache, smart, burn, sting, bite, nip, pinch, gripe; gnaw, grind, grate, rasp, chafe; throb, palpitate, tingle. 2. injure, wound; cut, scratch, prick, pierce, stab, lancinate; bruise, sprain, strain; beat, pommel, batter, pound, lay on, drub;… …   A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”