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Tactile Paving Completions; An Extant Theatre Pantomime

Super Power Panto is a pantomime happening in March. It's the one of the recent renditions from Extant Theatre, the UK's top theatre company with a speciality in visual impairment.

Network Rail's Rupert Lown gives clarification as to when all tactile paving installation works will be completed across the entire UK train network.

Extant Theatre are a performing arts company that put visual impairment at the heart of all they do. One of their most recent renditions is a pantomime that is touring throughout March: the Super Power Panto. We sent along opera singer Bethan Langford to a performance in Wolverhampton during the first leg of its tour and she joins us to share her thoughts. Extant Theatre is run by visually impaired artistic director, Maria Oshodi. She joins us to give a little insight into her long career as a playwright and what the future looks like for Extant Theatre.

Remaining Super Power Panto dates:
Friday 17th March: Northern Stage, Newcastle
Thursday 23rd and Friday 24th March: Brixton House, London
Tuesday 28 March: Komedia, Brighton

Presenter: Peter White
Producer: Beth Hemmings
Production Coordinator: Liz Poole
Website image description: Peter White sits smiling in the centre of the image, wearing a dark green jumper. Above Peter's head is the tv logo (three individual white squares house each of the three letters). Bottom centre and overlaying the image are the words "In Touch" and the Radio 4 logo (the word Radio in a bold white font, with the number 4 inside a white circle). The background is a bright mid-blue with two rectangles angled diagonally to the right. Both are behind Peter, one of a darker blue and the other is a lighter blue.

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19 minutes

In Touch transcript: 14/03/2023

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THE ATTACHED TRANSCRIPT WAS TYPED FROM A RECORDING AND NOT COPIED FROM AN ORIGINAL SCRIPT. BECAUSE OF THE RISK OF MISHEARING AND THE DIFFICULTY IN SOME CASES OF IDENTIFYING INDIVIDUAL SPEAKERS, THE tv CANNOT VOUCH FOR ITS COMPLETE ACCURACY.

IN TOUCH – Tactile Paving Completions; An Extant Theatre Pantomime

TX: 14.03.2023 2040-2100

PRESENTER: PETER WHITE

PRODUCER: BETH HEMMINGS

White

Good evening.

Clip – Extant Theatre

White

That’s from the latest production from a drama company that has visually impaired actors at the centre of all that it does. We’ll be hearing more about the visually impaired writer and performer who founded it 25 years ago.

But first, a couple of weeks ago we updated you on the progress being made to install tactile paving onto all station platforms in the UK. We established that the Department for Transport will provide £75 million in total for this work to be completed and much more quickly than the original date Network Rail had given of 2029. What we still felt we hadn’t completely understood was that though the project would be funded until 2025 was that a guarantee that the work would be completed on all stations across the UK by that date?

Well, perhaps unsurprisingly, the answer to that question was a little more complicated than we’d anticipated. To try to nail it down totally, we invited Rupert Lown, Network Rail’s Chief Health and Safety Officer, to disentangle it for us once and for all.

Lown

Seventy-five million pounds is set up to incorporate tactiles in the run-up to the end of 2025. That’s out objective, that’s what the timescale and programme is set to deliver. Absolutely seek to achieve that objective. There’s always the complications – poor weather, timetabling arrangements – may get in the way of one or two locations but we very much hope that that would be minimised. So, in essence, that £75 million will be spent in that period of time.

The other thing to think about is obviously it’s going to impact a large number of stations. Just mobilising a workforce to get round to all those stations, to do all that work, takes some time. So, again, part of the complication is trying to make sure that the programme management fits, it’s all programmed in to happen, occasionally things go wrong – you don’t get the right people turn up or the right kit doesn’t turn up on the day – and one or two sites might slip. But because you’ve already spent the money, that’ll just happen and it will just roll on into the next year. So, there won’t be a need to go back for more funding.

White

But your aim is that the five and a half thousand platforms that are yours will be completed by the end of 2025 – that’s the aim?

Lown

So, before the work started 60% of all stations had tactiles and this work is seeking to address the high risk ones. So, it’s covering another 825 stations. I’m not sure of the full number of platforms that that covers but it covers all the significant platforms where we know, for example, that we’ve got accessibility issues.

White

But not all the stations are yours?

Lown

No. That’s a really critical part. So, when you think of the railways, most people think Network Rail – you do the lot and that’s not quite the case. So, people may have heard of Transport for Wales, they take a chunk of the rail network and look after that, places like London Underground look after their areas. So, Network Rail, whilst the biggest provider of infrastructure across Great Britain for the railways, we don’t cover the whole lot. So, it’s a really important part just to have in the backs of people’s minds.

White

Hope you were following that. That was Rupert Lown, Network Rail’s Chief Health and Safety Officer.

Now, as for some of those exceptions, that Rupert mentioned, in the North of England tactile paving might take loner due to the TransPennine Route Upgrade. We’re told that stations that are set to be upgraded, as part of this major bit of work, will have tactile paving installed when their upgrade takes place. This means that they don’t have to complete important work, then effectively rip it up, upgrade the platform and then relay tactile paving. We’ve also now had confirmation from ScotRail that work to complete tactile paving on platforms at all of their 362 station in Scotland will be completed within the year. As for Transport for Wales, they tell us that across the stations that they own in South Wales they’ll have tactile paving by 2025, the rest of Wales is covered by Network Rail. And in Northern Ireland, we understand that work has already been completed – all of their stations have tactile paving already. Let’s hope that’s cleared that up once and for all.

Now: “Extant is a theatre company which puts visually impaired actors and staff at its centre.” Their words. And it’s run by a visually impaired artistic director and chief executive. They’ve been going now for 25 years but if you’re expecting their work to be rather staid and static, forget it, their productions are full of movement, action and a fair bit of chaos, to be honest, and defy description, which is why I’m delighted to hand that bit over to our reviewer tonight, to explain their latest offering, which is a pantomime in March. Opera singer, Bethan Langford, fresh from her own performance at last summer’s tv Proms, has been to a performance of Super Power Panto in Wolverhampton.

So, Bethan, what will people see and hear if they go?

Langford

Right, so it’s my job to define the undefinable, let’s give this a go. Well, I went along to the premier, to the opening night, of this pantomime last week and I must say I smiled the entire time, from start to finish. It’s a one hour show with no interval. And we follow our protagonist, Sally Sense, who’s played by a really charming actor, blind actor, Jasmine Thien. And she goes on a voyage of discovery with the audience. And Sally is particularly skilled at astronomy.

Clip – Super Power Panto

And as the audience learn about the solar system with her, she learns about her identity as a blind person in an ableist society. And she discovers who own strengths and ultimately, she finds her superpower. And we hear a lot of the classic panto tropes, a lot of audience participation – he’s behind you – lots of boos and hisses.

White

Because the people who Sally goes to this astronomy class, they’re a pretty nasty lot aren’t they?

Langford

There are, there’s some really great baddies. I think they did a really fun job of picking these awful characters called the poshos – they call themselves the brat pack.

Clip – Super Power Panto

These baddies, I think, are a bit of a stroke of genius, I mean they are quite modern, they’re snobs, there’s a few satirical jokes and it really kind of appeals to both children and adults, I think. And I actually was quite moved a couple of times and kind of left feeling quite uplifted about my own disability and kind of thought – I’m determined to kind of own my own visual impairment and be proud of it.

White

Because Sally comes up trumps, doesn’t she, she gets mocked by this lot but she wins in the end?

Langford

She does, she does and I think there’s a few moments where she actually doubts herself and there’s a really sad moment, where she smashes a cup and she’s on the ground, she says – I’m useless, I just can’t do anything normal people can do. And then she’s reminded by her mum, which is a really nice moment actually, she says – No Sally, just because you can’t do those things, there are other things that you have – strengths inside of you – that others don’t. And that’s where we get to this kind of central moment during the piece where she’s given her superpower by this star in the sky. I won’t give away what superpower she gets but it’s a really special moment.

Clip – Super Power Panto

White

How easy was it to follow, if you’ve got poor sight or no sight because there’s quite a lot going on, isn’t there?

Langford

There is. I think you used the word chaos, which at some points it definitely felt like that. What Extant are trying to achieve is they’re trying to make sure that everybody can universally access their show. So, there’s no headsets, so you don’t have the kind of visually impaired or blind people having to have something different to the sighted audience, which I like. So, the AD is creatively integrated into the show. But due to that aspect, some of the audio description does get lost. There’s a big kafuffle at the end, where they’re all running around in a circle and having a fight and each individual character is audio describing their own moves and, to be honest, I couldn’t really access much of that.

White

There’s also a really – a nice piece where Sally actually gets to explain, possibly to the poshies, but really to the public as a whole, how we describe things, how we like to describe things.

Langford

Yes and that’s what I was talking about really with – if a sighted audience member came to this show, they actually do learn quite a lot about being blind. Sally often says things – she says to the audience – oh please don’t raise your hands because I can’t see, so just shout out. Or she says – The way that I like to describe something is by comparing it to something I can feel. She describes a constellation as a pan.

Clip – Super Power Panto

Everyone seemed to have a really good time. I think it was a shame there weren’t more children there but I guess it was a half past six show on, I think, it was a midweek, so there were mainly adults and it was mainly a blind audience, which was nice. But we must say that everybody on stage is visually impaired, so they were in on the joke that the poshos were mocking Sally, who’s blind, so everyone in the audience, who was also blind or visually impaired, were really cross – so these boos were genuine, we all got really involved. You really felt like you were part of the show and kind of integral to it really.

White

Bethan Langford, you’ve clearly enjoyed yourself, thank you very much for doing that for us.

Langford

Ah, thanks for having me.

White

And if you’d like to have the same experience, there are performances left at Northern Stage Newcastle, this coming Friday; Brixton House in London on 23rd and 24th and the Komedia Brighton on Tuesday 28th March.

Now, if you never know quite what to expect from an Extant production, the same could be said for its founder 25 years ago and artistic director and chief executive for the past 15 years – Maria Oshodi. Well, as well as the author of many plays for Extant, Maria has also been producing and writing other dramas since the early 1980s. She also turns her hand to music, both performing – she’s been in a band – and deejaying. We thought we ought to find out a bit more about this indomitable lady and her varied career. But first, Extant, Maria, what’s your vision of it because you never know, as I said, what you’re going to get with an Extant production except that it’s not going to be a comfortable drawing room drama.

Oshodi

My vision for Extant has always been about tripping up expectations around visual impairment. From the very start, I remember someone describing the work that I was doing at the time as a freelancer as never being pedestrian and I always took that as a big compliment and a sort of a motif really. So, I’ve always felt, myself, to be in the margins, I guess, and looking in and I think that has always given me the privilege, really, of being in that place, as being able to do things in a way that aren’t sort of expected and I wanted to bring that to the heart of the company. And sometimes in performance I was just thinking in that way of how to tell stories in different ways where visually impaired people can be profiled in ways that they might not ordinarily have thought of.

White

As far as this latest production is concerned, one of the things people have been saying to us is there’s a far amount of deliberate chaos in an Oshodi production, would you accept the point that it could be quite confusing for visually impaired people in the audience, there’s audio description but your audio description is woven into the performance itself, so presumably people come on stage and say things that people might otherwise hear in their headphones. I mean you have, after all, been audio description consultant to the National Theatre for the past 10 years, so you know what audio description’s supposed to do. Is that a bit of a problem when you’ve got a production like the one you’ve got here with so much going on?

Oshodi

No. For me it’s a creative challenge of putting a piece together like this and from the outset knowing that live description, inclusive description, audio description – whatever you want to call it – is paramount, is as important the lighting, the sound, the set, everything. So, if something’s not working for me, as a visually impaired director who is more or less blind, you know, I don’t have very much vision at all, I’m not getting something, then we need to rework it and find a way of working it so I do.

White

I suppose the point is you know, because you put this production together, you know what’s going on, is there a danger that you might be so familiar with it, that you wouldn’t actually see the problems that people, who are only going to see it once, would have?

Oshodi

Well, we do bring in visually impaired people in our dress rehearsal to feedback to us about what they were getting and what they weren’t getting, so we’ve done our best to consult with people outside the room because that is always a danger, yes.

White

Can we just talk a little bit more about you? Mixed race girl, growing up first in Nigeria, then in the Britain of the ‘70s and early ‘80s. I’m interested what took you into drama, was it something you always wanted to do?

Oshodi

I think that thing that I said earlier on about feeling like sort of outside on the fringes, something that I’d experienced all my life, even before I became visually impaired. And I remember I was about 16 there was a youth sort of drama group that I started to go to and I got that real strong sense of group and family and a sense of belonging and identity. I began my career as a writer, playwright and I suppose quite successful – I’ve had plays published, plays toured – that was all before I went on to create Extant. So, I’ve always been interested in making theatre and being part of that theatre family. But I think that’s kind of just where I found my home.

White

Right, you obviously – you’re a planner and you don’t give up. What are your future plans, both for Extant and for you?

Oshodi

The big idea was to turn the company inside out and to offer [indistinct words] and mechanisms to visually impaired upcoming artists who would like to learn more about what it means to be an artistic director of a small scale theatre company. So, that’s what we’ve done, we’ve created something called Extant Evolve and we’ve just, this week, put out the advert for the first traineeship which we start in July and lasts for three months and offer a whole range of access to training around producing, financial management, learning about governance, also have a budget to create their own piece of work. The applications are online and the deadline is 24th April, I believe. I’ll be staying on at Extant as a kind of guiding spirit, let’s say, so I’ll be offering support to the trainees but also, I’ll be occupying myself mainly with a PhD and carrying out a PhD on the company’s work with Middlesex University. So, looking at the last 25 years and what we’ve built and what the importance of that has been and creating a kind of legacy in a kind of formal way.

White

So, hopefully, creating a whole troop of future Maria Oshodi’s. Maria Oshodi, thank you very much indeed.

And that’s it for today but we do want your help with a couple of other upcoming programmes. Next week, we’re planning a debate on the question – Is it easier or harder to be a blind person now than in the past? Among the issues, the effect – good and bad – of technology, the level of service you get, the degree of understanding of the issues. What’s been your experience? Do let us know. And we also want to hear from people who’ve recently tried to learn a language, what method did you use – online, face-to-face or something else?

You can email intouch@bbc.co.uk, you can leave voice messages on 0161 8361338 or go to our website on bbc.co.uk/intouch where you’ll find, amongst other things, those dates and venues for the performance of the Super Power Panto.

From me, Peter White, producer Beth Hemmings and studio managers Amy Brennan and Colin Sutton, goodbye.

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  • Tue 14 Mar 2023 20:40

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