They’re only saying what you’ve already been thinking.
MULTIPLE BAD THINGS is theatre. It is not real. But in a world where self-righteously indignant voices so often drown out the most disenfranchised and vulnerable, this theatre sometimes feels real.
At a time like this, in a placeless warehouse at the end of the world, three employees approach a possibly futile task. Struggling to work together, they grapple with questions of inclusion and equity. They are forced to test the limits of their bodies, their cooperation, and their capacity to care. Civility slips, bad behaviour escalates, and reality distorts.
Back to Back Theatre is a global leader for challenging the assumptions of what is possible on the stage, and in ourselves. For over 30 years, their ensemble of performers has created epic and arresting theatre that weaves together the personal, political, and cosmic.
Known for groundbreaking productions that tour the world—Ganesh Versus The Third Reich, Small Metal Objects—MULTIPLE BAD THINGS is their latest.
In the making of this new work, Back to Back Theatre invites new voices into the devising room. Zoë Barry’s score is assembled from collected field recordings of bad things. Anna Cordingley’s design demands the actors’ physical participation to reach its manifestation.
DIRECTORS NOTE
INGRID VOORENDT: What have we paid attention to across the process of making this work?
TAMARA SEARLE: We’ve paid attention to creating performance tasks and dramaturgy from the perspectives of this particular group of makers and actors. We’ve paid attention to specific dramatic threads in relation to these actors: empathy, borders, territory, extinction, identity politics.
Can you speak about boundaries?
INGRID VOORENDT: Our perspectives are shaped by our boundaries. We see the world from our place in it. We secure our boundaries by stating our place and our perspective over and over again, cementing our identities and, perhaps, trapping ourselves inside them. To make work together, collaboratively, we have to be prepared to shift our boundaries, to open our borders to other ways of thinking, seeing, experiencing, voicing. We have to recognise the limitations of a singular perspective. We have to leave the safety of the familiar. Different perspectives create different maps. Dramaturgy is a kind of cartography of performance.
Can you speak about the relationship between control and chaos in the process?
TAMARA SEARLE: The work is practicing letting go of control continually, ceding control to what is emergent. Inviting chaos, and waiting as long as possible to shape it. There is control in the craft, and chaos in the instincts. There is control in technique, and chaos in an ensemble devising. There is control in trust. And there is chaos in these acts of trust as well – we don’t have complete control.
Can a mainstage performance making process be responsive, organic and relational, like a workshop?
INGRID VOORENDT: Workshops are about experiments and conversations and play. There’s space for tangential thought and for mess. Maybe it’s about the degree of openness and for how long this openness is maintained. Our work is grounded in community practice, meaning relationships come first. We are always balancing care with ambition.
Can you speak about one of our visual references?
TAMARA SEARLE: In Arthur Boyd’s Australian Scapegoat, a light from a setting pink sun splatters a sky and a landscape. A black goat transmogrifies its fourth leg into a human leg. This human form rises in in a trenchcoat and blue gumboot above the goat. The violent pink was an initial attraction, but this chimeric figure became a motif for the moral ambiguity between abuser and victim in the culture wars.
In our process we’ve tried to turn toward suffering, rather than away from it. We’ve attempted to imagine ourselves into the faultlines of human conflict, and to improvise from this place.
INGRID VOORENDT: Is it alright to live our small lives? Or is it necessary for us to take on the politics of the world, especially at this time?
TAMARA SEARLE: We are making theatre because we believe that together we can imagine new ways to be, to care, and to change.
Key image: Jeff Busby
Video: Robert D'Ottavi
Malthouse Theatre presents Back to Back Theatre’s MULTIPLE BAD THINGS. MULTIPLE BAD THINGS has been co-commissioned by Kunstenfestivaldesarts (Brussels), The Keir Foundation, The Anthony Costa Foundation, Geelong Arts Centre and Back to Back Theatre’s New Work Donor Circle, with development support from Festival d’Automne (Paris), Une Parkinson Foundation, Sidney Myer Fund and Give Where You Live.
This presentation has been supported by the City of Melbourne Arts Grants, and by the Restart Investment to Sustain and Expand (RISE) Fund–an Australian Government initiative.
Back to Back Theatre is supported by the Australian Government through Creative Australia, its principal arts investment and advisory body, the Victorian Government through Creative Victoria, and the City of Greater Geelong.
DEVISORS /
Bron Batten, Breanna Deleo, Natasha Jynel, Simon Laherty, Sarah Mainwaring, Ben Oakes, Scott Price, Tamara Searle, Ingrid Voorendt
DIRECTORS /
Tamara Searle, Ingrid Voorendt
CAST /
Bron Batten, Simon Laherty, Sarah Mainwaring, Scott Price
COMPOSER & SOUND DESIGNER /
Zoë Barry
SET & COSTUME DESIGNER /
Anna Cordingley
LIGHTING DESIGNER /
Richard Vabre
AV DESIGNER /
Rhian Hinkley
HELPLINE VOICEOVER /
Rachel Griffiths
SCRIPT CONSULTANT /
Melissa Reeves
CREATIVE DEVELOPMENT /
Michael Chan, Mark Deans, Alana Hoggart, Francesca Neri, Tamika Simpson
SET CONSTRUCTION /
Kinetic Sets
SCREEN CONSTRUCTION /
Reveal Productions
SCENIC ART /
Patrick Jones
STAGE MANAGER /
Alana Hoggart
PRODUCTION ASSOCIATE /
Jordi Edwards
SOUND ENGINEER /
Peter Monks
Event & ticketing details
Performance Times
Duration
60 minutes
Content notes
This show contains coarse language, adult themes, sexual references, and partial nudity.
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