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Community Spotlight: Lori Constable

By Ginny Butsch posted 12-22-2015 22:11

  

 

One of the main goals for our Theatre Education Community is to help theatre students and professionals from all over connect and identify with each other in order to build resources and support the theatre education field. We shine a spotlight on a different member every other week by conducting a simple interview.

Our latest Spotlight Member is Lori Constable, currently the troupe director for Troupe 7789 at Chanhassen High School in Chanhassen, Minnesota. Lori has served as Troupe Director at five schools and as a Chapter Director in both Australia and Minnesota. Her vast array of theatre experiences from around the globe allow her to provide top-notch advice to our Community members.

Ginny: Tell us about how you first got involved in theatre.

Lori: The first time I got involved with ITS was when I was in high school at Mililani High School in Mililani, Oahu. Our new theatre director enrolled us as a troupe and we went to Maui for the state festival. I didn’t really know what was going on, but did as we’d prepared: performed a cutting from our production of Ghosts, entered the duet mime contest, using a piece I’d done in a previous high school production at a different school, and entered solo mime.

I have a photo of the director from Castle High School coming up to me after the ceremony and shaking my hand to congratulate me and my classmates on our success. Apparently, that was a big deal, because this director brought musicals to the International Festival every other year. I just thought it was a fun opportunity to go somewhere and hang out with kids who were as crazy about theatre as I was.

Ginny: What inspired you to become a teacher?

Lori: Through the years, theatre has afforded me a safe haven, somewhere to explore who I was, who I wanted to be, who I never thought of being. All the while surrounded by those who didn’t value me for my clothes or my parents’ income or my looks…just what I brought to the production experience.

In college (University of Wisconsin at Madison—go Badgers), I understood that theatre was more, much more than about producing a play. It was about how we, as a culture, examined ourselves and our place in history. I learned that the various movements in theatrical practice were reflections of paradigms and value systems that were, in turn, shaped by events in every conceivable component of our civilization. What we did, what we made, what we accomplished or destroyed… all of that needed to be processed and art was the way humanity made sense of itself. The fact that theatre arts was a collaborative effort brought together disparate ways of examining that exploration. Watching a collaboratively conceived Japanese Noh performance, participating in a Richard Schechner original production, playing a male (despite my obvious propensities of being female) in a production of Dr. Faustus, stage managing German Expressionism…all the while soaking up the teachings of some incredibly gifted instructors, opened my eyes to the academic and scholarly side of drama.

Fast forward twenty years and I am teaching theatre in a different culture, one where students can study carefully constructed courses and syllabi, put together by scholarly experts who participate in IDEA and more…and I fall in love even more with the opportunities that the study of theatre and drama can afford. My students and I learn about indigenous stories of the ‘Dreamtime’ in Aboriginal culture and use these experiences to create playbuilt performances of our own. I guide my students through the study of how the singularity of Tragedy in Sophoclean drama gave way to the shared cultural tragedy of plays like Angels in America. The practice of Commedia dell’Arte means that my students get to learn about how drama was influential not only in the indictments of societal status and privilege, but the pragmatic and marketable benefits of being a ‘shill’.

And I could go on and on…

Ginny: What is your proudest accomplishment?

Lori: I don’t think I could isolate just one, because the small moments of a SPED student in my most recent Commedia performance assessment, marveling at the comedic joy going on around her on stage is just as inspiring as watching the faces of the students who learn they will be representing their state at ITF…or as inspiring as watching your students go on to various careers in acting, writing, government (one of my former students travels with Secretary John Kerry!) and more, but all understanding how their involvement in theatre helped get them there.

I always joke in my programs about my three greatest productions being my three children…and having just seen the youngest of them perform as Dot in her university production of  Sunday in the Park with George gave me all the ‘feels’ of seeing good theatre done well…by someone I love.

Ginny: What is the resource you most recommend to others in your profession?

Lori: Resources like the ITF are valuable, for their own unique needs, yet there are so many more that are out there. Perhaps having lived in a different country with a much smaller demographic meant that I could have closer connection to professional organizations, but I know that there are similar groups here. Having attended my first AATE conference this past August proved that to me. The theme of brain development and theatre at this year’s conference simply confirmed what most of us already know—the arts, specifically theatre arts, provides ways of looking at the world in myriad ways simultaneously. What an enriching, invigorating, and empowering reminder! I must confess that I miss the sustaining work done by those involved with Drama New South Wales, Drama Australia, IDEA, and the secondary drama teachers group with whom I developed my drama teaching curriculum and professional approach. I am seeking those people out now that I have returned to the US, and finding them, but not to the degree that I had previously.

Ginny: Do you have any tips for new theatre teachers?

Lori: Find and build support networks. Whether those are in person, through blogs and networking, etc., listen and share with others. Read like crazy in terms of not only plays, but the pedagogy of theatre education. Get involved politically and support the arts as a viable and vital component to the development of young people and society at large. See plays or read plays regularly and get together with people afterword to talk about them. Share curriculum, talk about it, discuss the Standards, revisit your curriculum. And don’t compare yourself, to anyone. Just be the best you personally can be.

Ginny: Why do you believe theatre is important?

Lori: Oh, my word, if you haven’t figured that out by now after all my verbosity, I couldn’t possibly tell you! Theatre is life, film is art, television is furniture…or something like that.

Lori is as much of an advocate as she is a teacher. Her zeal for connecting with others to share ideas and advice improves the theatre education field as a whole and is at the heart of the reason why our Community exists. If you enjoyed Loris interview as much as I did, add her as a contact in the Community!

Do you know someone who deserves a moment in the Spotlight? Tell me their name and why at gbutsch@schooltheatre.org. Want to read more Community Spotlights? You can find them here.

 

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