Producing Trans Performance: ‘Transness’ beyond testimony in I, Joan (2022)

Producing Trans Performance: ‘Transness’ beyond testimony in I, Joan (2022)

Abstract

Trans performance has arrived in the last twenty years. Having previously encountered producing narratives that frame trans people as either undertrained or impossible to find, I approach the Shakespeare Globe’s staging of I, Joan (2022) by Charlie Josephine as a case study on the possible futures of trans-led creativity. Josephine’s trans retelling of the Joan of Arc story, coupled with the Globe’s commitment to a creative team of mostly gender-diverse creatives, signals a significant shift in what ‘trans’ means for producing venues. I, Joan is an experiment, I argue, in valuing transness beyond utilitarian educational aims and towards a vital cultural standpoint. In this presentation, I adopt I, Joan as a case study in mapping shifts in producing cultures since the emergence of named ‘trans performance’ and ‘trans theatre’ in the late 2000s – whether as a genre or method – and its current creative focus away from typically one-person testimonials to collective expressions of ‘transness’. In particular, I map this shift in relationship to the critical agent of the producer role and the creative arguments for what trans professionals, including but also beyond the performer role, bring to a collaborative process.

Building on an ongoing survey of trans performance, I consider the comfortability (for producers) of trans testimony as educational has (possibly inadvertently) siloed trans voices and rendered them ‘manageable’, ‘self-contained’, and ‘safe’. However, today there is evidence that producers see an audience and a need for radical transness beyond testimony. Drawing on Legacy Russell’s Glitch Feminism (2020), this presentation will offer an overview of trans performance innovations in the last few years and argue for a renewed producing criteria when programming trans-led works.

Previous

Enclothed Cognition

Next

Why trans performance matters: cisgenderism and performance making since 2010