ABOUT PLAYBACK THEATRE
Playback Theatre is an original form of improvisational theatre in which
audience or group members tell stories from their lives and watch them enacted
on the spot. Whether in theatres, workshops, educational or clinical settings,
Playback Theatre draws people closer as they see their common humanity.
Playback Theatre was founded in 1975
in the Mid-Hudson Valley in New York by Jonathan Fox with Jo Salas and other
members of the original Playback Theatre company. Since then, Playback Theatre
has reached hundreds of settings and locations. A support organization, the
International Playback Theatre Network, provides connection and information
for Playback practitioners on five continents.
A group of people in a room, a hall,
a theatre. They face a row of actors sitting on boxes. On one side sits a
musician with an array of instruments. On the other, an emcee, who waits next to
an empty chair. This is for the "teller," who will come from the audience to
tell a personal story. Then, in a ritualized process, using mime, music and
spoken scenes, the players will act out the story. After one teller, another
will come. In this way, the individuals in the audience will witness a theatre
of their own stories. 
Playback Theatre is used in educational, therapeutic, social change, and arts
settings, either as performance, with a company of trained actors and a defined
audience; or as a group event led by an individual, in which participants become
actors as well as tellers for each other. Playback Theatre companies now
exist in many localities, usually calling themselves after their town, such as
Melbourne Playback Theatre, or Köln Playback Theatre.
Founded in 1975 by Jonathan Fox, a
student of improvisation who had studied oral traditional tale-telling and
psychodrama, the original Playback Theatre Company made its home in Dutchess and
Ulster Counties of New York State, just north of New York City. This group,
while developing the basis of the Playback form, took it to schools, prisons,
centers for the elderly, conferences, and festivals in an effort to encourage
individuals from all walks of society to let their story be heard. They also
performed monthly for the public-at-large.
The playback theatre idea has
inspired many people. Playback companies now exist on seven continents. The
International Playback Theatre Network was founded in 1990 to support Playback
activity throughout the world. As of 2006, the IPTN has 100 company and 300
individual members from 50 countries. For links to many PT companies and other
information about Playback, see the home page of the
International Playback Theatre Network
International
Playback conferences have taken place in Sydney, Australia (1992), in a village
north of Helsinki, Finland (1993), in Olympia, Washington (1995), Perth,
Australia, (1997), York, England (1999) and Shizuoka, Japan (2003). In 2007 it
is being held in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
To meet the demand for training
which this level of growth has created, Jonathan Fox and guest faculty teach at
the School of Playback Theatre, providing beginning, intermediate and advanced
levels of training in Playback Theatre since 1993.
Books about Playback Theatre are
published by Tusitala Publishing and can be obtained through the Centre
[Click Here] or at
Tusitala Publishing.
Playback Theatre compared to Psychodrama
and Theatre of the Oppressed
Photos of the early years
in playback theatre

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