EA2 Form

“Sleep is a naturally reoccurring state of mind and body characterised by an altered state of consciousness” (Sherbet Lemon Theatre, 2018), and is a major part of everyday life. For our debut performance, we are extremely interested in individual experiences with sleep and how they differ from person to person. We are specifically interested in hearing from people who suffer from: sleep paralysis, narcolepsy, insomnia and night terrors. We are also interested in hearing from people who have been blind since birth, to speak with them about their dreams. Like Arts Council England “we want as many people as possible to be stimulated by arts and culture wherever they are” (Arts Council England, 2013, 6), and we feel that using real people’s words will achieve this.

 

 

In order to carry out interviews in the most ethical way possible, it is my job to fill out an EA2 (Ethical Approval) Form. The main reason for filling out an EA2 Form is to highlight any ethical issues with the project at hand, and how they are to be addressed by us at Sherbet Lemon Theatre.FINAL FINAL EA2 FORM                                                             Figure 1: Section from Sherbet Lemon Theatre’s EA2 Form.

 

Figure 1 is an example of how the EA2 form was used to address ethical issues within our research. If you would like to see a full copy of the completed EA2 Form, please see the ‘Technical Documents’ tab.
H.M.

 

 

Arts Council England (2013) Great Art and Culture for Everyone: 10 Year Strategic Framework 2010-2020. England: Arts Council England.

Sherbet Lemon Theatre (2018) The Truth About Bedtime… [live performance]. Performed by Sherbet Lemon Theatre. Lincoln: Lincoln Performing Arts Centre, 21 May.

Making our Manifesto

When deciding on how we want to be viewed as a company and considering how we want our externally facing materials to reflect us, it is important we bare in mind the style of theatre and audience we are trying to appeal to. I have recently sat down with our company director and stage manager to get a better sense of what their aspirations for the company are and from there I have begun drafting our Manifesto and Mission Statement. My intentions are to create a manifesto that articulates the importance of audience and reality within our company. I hope to demonstrate the level of engagement we are hoping to encapsulate within performance and present the fundamental basis of our companies future work. Our mission Statement is slightly more colloquial as I intend on using this to portray the relaxed environment we intend on creating throughout our companies productions. We want to create theatre that is easily accessible to those who wouldn’t normally visit a traditional theatre space. It is important to us that we can create an environment where participation and audience reaction is encouraged and embraced. We intend on creating a theatre environment that allows our audience to relax and go back to the basics. Our mission statement encourages our audience to consider what is truly important to us as humans, the things we cannot live without, and take some time to stop clouding their day to day lives with the worries and stress of ‘living’.

 

Sherbet Lemon Theatre Manifesto

We are Sherbet Lemon Theatre. We are a group of artists who devise performance incorporating verbatim techniques to portray the reality of our day to day lives. We take the sweet and sour of being human and address the aspects we cannot live without! We invite our audience to take a step back from the complications of life and instead acknowledge the essentials. We create a comfortable and relaxed environment where our audience can feel immersed in our performance. This is vital to us as a company as we want to involve real people through their words and experiences.

 

Sherbet Lemon Theatre Mission Statement

Life can be overwhelming sometimes. The complications that fog our day to day lives can get in the way of what we truly need as humans. We invite you to take a step back from the complications of your everyday life and focus in on the essentials.  

We are an all female collective inspired to create original performance. We want to tell the stories of real people using their own words to add a sense of authenticity to our performance. We take the sweet and sour of being human and address the aspects we cannot live without! We want to create a relaxed atmosphere where everyone can feel comfortable and involved in the action around them.  

Our style of theatre is inclusive, relatable, sweet and a little bit sour. We are Sherbet Lemon Theatre!

 

E.L.

 

 

Fundraiser

Hi, I’m Emma and I’m in charge of fundraising here at Sherbet Lemon Theatre. In my role I will be responsible for creating and holding events in order to raise money to pay for the cost of putting on our show. This will be our debut production for Sherbet Lemon Theatre, focusing on sleep as a fundamental part of being human and the ways it can impact our day to day lives. Through our fundraising campaign, I’ll be making sure that we generate enough funds in order to pay for all of our set, props and costumes along with any other expenses we encounter. Working with some of the other members of our team, I’ll be organising and running events up until our performance in May, so look out for ways to get involved in our fundraising campaign over on our social media. I’m looking forward to coming up with fun and creative fundraising ideas and working with rest of our wonderful company to produce our show.

E.R.

Being Truthful

Hi guys, Ellie here.

It’s been a very interesting couple of weeks and I’m really enjoying watching our ideas about sleep come to life and starting to think about how certain scenes can fit together.

After deciding that the focus of our performance would be sleep, and how vital it is to our existence, we decided to gather as much research as we possibly could. Rather naively, I had never realised how complicated sleep is. One of the things I found most fascinating is that there are five stages in an average sleep cycle (the final one of those stages is REM sleep, Rapid Eye Movement) and there are generally multiple cycles in one night’s sleep.

After watching The Duke at LPAC on the 8th of February we have really thought about what we want to achieve with this performance and therefore changed our approach. The Duke was simplistic in both style and set, with the majority of the one-man-show by Shôn Dale-Jones being performed sat at a desk. My favourite part about the show was that the actor greeted each audience member individually, giving a sense of inclusivity and appreciation, something that we have realised is very important to us as a company. The Duke has inspired us to keep the show simple and honest and therefore we have decided to abandon some of the game-show type scenes that we were working on and focus on verbatim theatre, which will be at the heart of our production. In order to portray people’s stories in a truthful way, we decided that we would audio record interviews (with the participants consent) and use these to both inspire and potentially feature in our final performance. One of Arts Council England’s five goals for arts and culture is that is should be “for everyone” (Arts Council England, undated) and this is something we are taking very seriously in our devising process. We want our performance to be accessible for as many people as possible, and are even looking into whether we would be able to audio describe the performance for the blind. In using the words of a vast range people in our performance, we hope that the show we be both about and for everyone, as every individual has a different experience/relationship with sleep.

As the dramaturg it will be my job to record and edit these interviews and decide where in the piece they may feature. Therefore, my focus in the last couple of weeks has been how to be both trusting and truthful in an interview. As someone who suffers with insomnia I have always been interested in sleep disorders and therefore started researching different disorders and the potential causes of them. As such, we are hoping to interview people who experience sleep or dreams in unusual ways including people who suffer with sleep disorders. Initially we talked about sleep amongst ourselves and came to the realisation that as a group we have experienced a range of sleep disorders, from something relatively pleasant such as lucid dreaming to the horror or night terrors. As such, the first interviews I conducted were with members of the group. Whether these feature in the final performance or not they will be crucial to the process as it has given us further insight into these sleep disorders and the effect they can have on daily life.

My hope is that I can do the people whose stories we are collecting justice, as I aspire to be as truthful to their words as I possibly can.

E.W.

 

Works Cited

Dale-Jones, S. (2018) The Duke [live performance]. Performed by Shôn Dale-Jones. Lincoln: Lincoln Performing Arts Centre, 8 February.

Arts Council England (undated) Arts Council: Our Mission and Strategy. Available from https://www.artscouncil.org.uk/about-us/our-mission-and-strategy-0 [accessed 21 February 2018].

 

A fresh start!

Well, it’s been an interesting week here at Sherby Lem HQ. After seeing The Duke (2017) on the 9th of February we have decided to take a cleaner, more streamlined approach to our storytelling. Instead of making work which was beginning to feel gimmicky and a tad juvenile we have decided that, although we want to keep our playful energy and comedic style, we are very keen that this comes across in a natural way, rather than forcing the comedy we have decided that we will create scenes which use the situations for comedic purposes. This change in direction has given us all a massive burst of creative energy and we are so excited for you all to see the final product!

 

E.H.

 

Works Cited

Dale-Jones, S. (2017) The Duke [live performance]. Performed by Shon Dale-Jones. Lincoln: Lincoln Performing Arts Centre, 9 February 2018.