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https://dcmslibraries.blog.gov.uk/2018/11/19/drama-the-library-and-senior-citizens/

Drama, the library and senior citizens

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Outcome: communities, Outcome: culture

[Editor’s note: Guest post written by Dr. Ron Wiener, a senior sociodrama trainer, about his work with older people in libraries in the US and in England.]

Experience in the United States

In 2015 I was invited to go to Warwick in New York state to help establish a drama group for senior citizens in the town library. I had been running two drama groups for the over 50’s in West Yorkshire for a number of years. An American dramatist, Linda Richmond, had read about my work and at a conference in Oxford, asked me to come to her town to start a group there.

I did a play in a day, open to all senior citizens in the town, where we created a play from scratch which we then performed in the evening for an audience. There were 15 participants who produced a play about actors arriving for an audition. This group then became the nucleus for an ongoing group – ‘Acting for Change’. The library itself was awarded the title of the best small library in America in 2016.

Photo of a group of women outside a stone building striking dramatic poses
Members of the senior improv group Acting for Change demonstrate their work in front of Warwick library. Photo credit: William Neumann

An article about the first year of this work was published in the Journal of Psychodrama, Sociometry and Group Psychotherapy, vol. 65, No 1, Spring 2017 pp99-110: 'Acting for Change, by Linda Richmond and Ron Wiener'.

This September (2018) I went back to Warwick to work with the still flourishing group and also to run a workshop with Linda for libraries in the surrounding areas. This has led to Linda offering a course for potential workshop leaders to run sessions in other local libraries.

Theatre groups in England

The two groups I run in this country consist of a social improvisation group in Leeds and a performing group in Huddersfield who create all of their own plays which are then performed in a variety of community settings. These have been published: The Handy Book of Unscripted Plays (lulu 2017) Franc Chamberlain, Professor of Drama, Theatre and Performance, University of Huddersfield said: "This book offers some of the scenarios and scripts created by the Curtain Up Players ... They will be useful as starting points for amateur theatre groups as well as school, college and university sessions and group workers of many persuasions."

In October we delivered a new play ‘Marriage Lines’ to a monthly group based at Huddersfield Central Library. “I thought today’s performance by the Curtain Up theatre group in Huddersfield library was brilliant. They were really funny and entertaining and the audience seemed to really enjoy singing along to all the songs.” Nicola Boundy – Huddersfield Library

Photo of a row of older people dressed in 1940s period outfits
The Curtain Up players. Photo credit: Dr Ron Wiener

Why is this work important?

We live in an age where loneliness is an issue for older people and where support services are diminishing in an age of austerity. Involvement in a drama group creates social capital where relationships are formed, cognitive skills continue to be practiced and new roles created.

As Kath Ogden, a long time member of the Curtain Up Players put it; “I like the enjoyment of being together and having a laugh. I appreciate the support, we’re a bit like a family, we’re there for each other.” All of the work in all the groups is unscripted which saves actors from having to learn lines, a problem with faltering memories in later life, but necessitates embracing spontaneity and creativity. For community audiences it means a day out, meeting others, something new and a lift in their spirits.

To find out more about the Curtain Up players, follow them on facebook. If you are interested in setting up a similar group in your library, please contact Ron.

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Please note, this is a guest blog. Views expressed here do not necessarily represent the views of DCMS or the Libraries Taskforce

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2 comments

  1. Comment by Marian Benedicto posted on

    Love participating in IMPROV---

  2. Comment by Monika posted on

    These are very interesting workshops. We would like to know the rules of work. We are looking for a library that will oblige us for a study visit for 2-3 days as part of the ERASMUS Program.