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Deaf
West Theatre - by Tyrone Giordano
It's easy to be captivated by the soulful words of Huck in the musical,
Big River: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. But the reason these
days might be different from what you'd think.
The Big River of recent Broadway success is an adaptation of the
1985 Broadway musical hit that won seven Tony Awards, including Best Musical.
In this revival, the hook pulling us in is that Americašs most famous
boy hero spins his tale in American Sign Language (ASL). The biggest hook,
however, is that everyone else in the show is doing it too. The story
of the adventures of a boy and a runaway slave has an added layer of deafness
on top of the issue of racism. The result is the perfect story about acceptance
of the humanity in all of us despite our differences, or what we're told
about those differences.
Theater has been used for both education and entertainment and has often
been celebrated as a superior vehicle by which to transmit culture. Deaf
West Theatre has been doing a lot of that transmitting in recent years,
winning more than eighty awards for portraying deaf culture onstage.
Founder Ed Waterstreet, who is deaf himself, calls Deaf West Theatre
"the realization of a dream." Since childhood, when he would
go to shows with his hearing family, he had dreamed of a theater that
would be fully accessible to him and other individuals who are deaf. As
the current artistic director of Deaf West Theatre, the only theater company
in the U.S. led by a deaf individual, Waterstreet has made it into the
premier theater culture with a company of, by and for the deaf.
Deaf West's mission is total access to theater-bringing classic and contemporary
theater works to deaf audiences by incorporating ASL, and heightening
or enhancing the theatrical experience for hearing audiences through this
same device. For the auditory pleasure of hearing audience members, voice
and music are also there in a synthesis of sign and sound. The benefit
for deaf audiences is that they can enjoy plays with sign incorporated
into the production by signing actors, as opposed to splitting focus between
the central action onstage and an interpreter off to the side.
This synthesis of sign and sound was not always the way Deaf West did
theater. It used to be much quieter onstage...for the ears.
About 20 years ago, Ed Waterstreet arrived in Los Angeles with his wife,
Linda Bove, of Sesame Street fame, who has played "Linda the Librarian"
since 1971. Fresh after filming the Hallmark television movie Love is
Never Silent, in which he starred with Tony Award-winning Phyllis Frelich,
he and Bove were surprised to find such a big need for cultural accessibility
for the thousands of individuals who are deaf and hard of hearing residing
in the area. Professional artistic opportunities were few, and arts accessibility
for the deaf was not a priority.
Prior to arriving in Los Angeles, Waterstreet had been touring with
the National Theatre for the Deaf (NTD) for 15 years, and while he was
thankful for the employment as an actor, he found the whole experience
somehow lacking. NTD's approach to deaf theater at that time was more
concerned with the idea that English was to be the dominant language and
enhanced through "beautiful signing," a philosophy with which
Waterstreet heartily disagreed. He wanted something more raw, more true
to ASL and deafness, where ASL could have as much range between sheer
ugliness and poetic beauty as the spoken word had onstage. He wanted true
artistic expression of sign unrestrained by the dictates of the spoken
word, and for the benefit of deaf, not hearing audiences.
In 1991, he set out to realize his vision and create a work where ASL
would be the only spoken medium, "starting with only one desk, one
chair, one typewriter in a shared office space [at the Fountain Theater],"
as the Deaf West website states. Waterstreet began filling the cultural
void of Los Angeles by staging what he calls "true deaf theater"
with the play The Gin Game, and Deaf West Theatre was born. Waterstreet's
brand of theater shifted focus away from any issues surrounding deafness,
unlike Children of a Lesser God, where the two leads struggle with
the conflicts of their respective cultures. Waterstreet believed that
The Gin Game was the perfect story that could be pulled off without
an auditory element and using only deaf actors, a story where the deafness
of the characters was purely incidental. "I do not want to create
theater that is about deaf issues, but rather that exposes conflicts between
the deaf and hearing worlds," Waterstreet said of his criteria in
selecting material. While the production of The Gin Game was successful,
Waterstreet noticed the overwhelming majority of the theatergoers were
hearing.
Eventually, Deaf West was able to obtain a sub-99-seat theater in North
Hollywood, California, and with the help of a $12,000 donation by GTE,
Waterstreet was able to implement an infrared sound system. This allowed
hearing patrons to listen in on the action through their headsets, with
the sign-to-voice interpreters planted in the sound booth speaking into
a microphone. He tried this approach with the play Shirley Valentine
with considerable success, and the box office numbers flourished. Waterstreet's
dream was compromised a little when his 'silents' became 'talkies,' so
he made up for that concession by making the voice completely subordinate
to the rhythm of ASL, and without question, the ASL translation was as
rich as possible. Hearing patrons would sometimes have to endure rapid-fire
or meandering speech as it modified itself to fit the rhythm of the ASL
onstage.
Waterstreet sought out material that allowed for both a subtle and direct
layer of deaf/hearing conflict. Along came One Flew Over the Cuckoo's
Nest with a deaf Murphy and cohorts. A hearing Nurse Ratched and fellow
professionals spoke and signed onstage, and this technique got such an
enthusiastic response that Waterstreet could not ignore it. Waterstreet
began making a policy of implementing speech alongside sign onstage, and
"they came in droves," he recalls with pleasant surprise. From
this point forward, variations of this technique of intermingling deaf
and hearing characters, sign and the spoken word onstage, creating a third
language, have been employed by Deaf West in all its productions.
Other articles in the Joely Fisher Issue include: Traumatic Brain
Injury, Employment, ConnecTV, Dream Foundation, Stephen Grace, and more!
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