Logo

    lgbtqia+ theatre

    Explore " lgbtqia+ theatre" with insightful episodes like "The Queer-Trans Performance Family Tree is more of a Galaxy", "Queer Archival Praxis Roundtable With Guests David Silvernail, Janet Werther, Victoria Lafave, Jordan Ealey, and Kelli Crump", "Making Space: Consent, Collaboration, and Queer Access Intimacy", "Queer-Trans Intimacy: One Foot in the Academy and the Other in the Nightclub" and "Queer Intimacies in Too-Near Dystopian Futures" from podcasts like ""Gender Euphoria", "Gender Euphoria", "Gender Euphoria", "Gender Euphoria" and "Gender Euphoria"" and more!

    Episodes (19)

    The Queer-Trans Performance Family Tree is more of a Galaxy

    The Queer-Trans Performance Family Tree is more of a Galaxy
    Dr. H. May joins host Nicolas Shannon Savard, who introduces the Queer-Trans Performance Family Tree Project, an interactive, open-access digital exhibit visually connecting trans artists across the United States to the collectives and communities who have sustained our work. This episode explores the role of mentorship in both the research for the project and in their own work as gender nonconforming theatremakers.

    Queer Archival Praxis Roundtable With Guests David Silvernail, Janet Werther, Victoria Lafave, Jordan Ealey, and Kelli Crump

    Queer Archival Praxis Roundtable With Guests David Silvernail, Janet Werther, Victoria Lafave, Jordan Ealey, and Kelli Crump
    What role does white supremacy play in the creation of the queer theatre canon? What power and what responsibility do we—as queer theatremakers, historians, and educators—have to challenge canons and archives that define “queer” almost exclusively as white and cisgender? Artist-scholars Janet Werther, Victoria LaFave, Jordan Ealey, David Silvernail, and Kelli Crump join host Nicolas Shannon Savard to tackle these questions and to queer the archive.

    Making Space: Consent, Collaboration, and Queer Access Intimacy

    Making Space: Consent, Collaboration, and Queer Access Intimacy
    J.C. Pankratz returns to the podcast to reflect on the first full production of their play Seahorse, directed by Nicolas Shannon Savard, starring Emmett Podgorski. Nicolas, J.C., and Emmett discuss how the collaborative process, from auditions through closing night, was informed by queer community building, access intimacy, and consent-based practice. They offer behind-the-scenes perspectives and concrete examples of how tools and ideas discussed in previous episodes played out in practice.

    Queer-Trans Intimacy: One Foot in the Academy and the Other in the Nightclub

    Queer-Trans Intimacy: One Foot in the Academy and the Other in the Nightclub
    Nicolas Shannon asks Joy Brooke Fairfield and Raja Benz how their intimacy work is informed by queer theory and critical theory. Their conversation bounces between queer of color theory, decolonial theory, disability theory, and the dim glow of the night club; between past, present, and future; between the ideas they’re sure of and the ones they’re working out in real time. Bonus! It comes with dozens of recommended readings.

    Queer-Trans Intimacy Work: Cracking Gender Open

    Queer-Trans Intimacy Work: Cracking Gender Open
    In the first part of a two-part conversation on queer-trans intimacy direction and choreography, Nicolas talks with Theatrical Intimacy Education faculty members Dr. Joy Brooke Fairfield and Raja Benz about their courses Working with Trans & Non-Binary Artists and Staging Intimacy Beyond the Binary. They discuss crafting courses that are less Trans-101 and more cracking gender open, resisting patriarchal and colonialist scripts, and bringing queer culture into the rehearsal room.

    Queer Intimacies, Trans Futures, Grief, and Radical Hope in "Seahorse" With Guest J.C. Pankratz

    Queer Intimacies, Trans Futures, Grief, and Radical Hope in "Seahorse" With Guest J.C. Pankratz
    Host, Nicolas Shannon Savard interviews playwright J.C. Pankratz about their play, "Seahorse", a poetic, stream-of-consciousness one-person show about a trans man’s attempts at artificial insemination following his husband’s unexpected death. The conversation will dive into the play’s approach to the “messiness” of imagining futures you can’t yet see and its use of magical realism to invite audiences to sit inside that mess as witnesses and confidants.

    Making Space for Thriving Queer Communities Through Applied Theatre: With Guest Dr. Jesse O’Rear

    Making Space for Thriving Queer Communities Through Applied Theatre: With Guest Dr. Jesse O’Rear
    Host Nicolas Shannon Savard talks with Dr. Jesse O’Rear about applied theatre with LGBTQ students on college campuses. Jesse describes some alternatives to traditional models of bystander intervention and diversity trainings to create embodied learning opportunities for LGBTQ students to step into positions of leadership and for audience-participants to practice “kinesthetic allyship.”

    Queerness and Gender

    Queerness and Gender
    In this week’s episode of PUHA podcast, co-hosts Bíborka and Zsófi navigate their way through a discussion of what queerness means with performer, actress, and director Veronika Szabó; contemporary dancer Kemelo Sehlapelo; and dancer, choreographer, and clubber Gergő Dávid Farkas. Together, they contemplate identities, responsibility, and the way queer people exist in society.

    On Being a 'Trans Trailblazer' With Scott Turner Schofield

    On Being a 'Trans Trailblazer' With Scott Turner Schofield
    Gender Euphoria, the podcast, host Nicolas Shannon Savard sits down with actor, writer, consultant, educator Scott Turner Schofield. They trouble the TV/film industry's framing of Schofield as a singular "trans trailblazer," since as he notes, trans actors were, indeed, carving out spaces to make and support one another’s art long before we were invited into Hollywood or mainstream theatre spaces. The conversation dives into the shifts that Scott has noticed in audience response to his work over the course of the last twenty years and how those are in direct conversation with national politics.

    Trans Theatre and the Autobiographical Assumption With Dr. Jesse D. O'Rear

    Trans Theatre and the Autobiographical Assumption With Dr. Jesse D. O'Rear
    Gender Euphoria, the podcast, host Nicolas Shannon Savard sits down with artist-scholar, Dr. Jesse O’Rear. This episode features a conversation with Dr. O’Rear about his research on and experience working with autobiographical trans narratives in performance and a phenomenon he calls the “autobiographical assumption” which audiences often read onto trans artists.

    Putting on the Trans Educator Top Hat With Rebecca Kling

    Putting on the Trans Educator Top Hat With Rebecca Kling
    Gender Euphoria, the Podcast, host Nicolas Shannon Savard sits down with storyteller, educator, and advocate for transgender rights, Rebecca Kling. Their conversation addresses Rebecca’s work as a solo performer-turned-activist, the importance of consent in deciding to take on the trans educator role, and her radical and hilarious approach to the post-show talkback: the Strip Q and A.

    The Case for QTPOC Slice-of-Life Drama With Dillon Yruegas

    The Case for QTPOC Slice-of-Life Drama With Dillon Yruegas
    Gender Euphoria, the podcast, host Nicolas Shannon Savard sits down with playwright and performer, Dillon Yruegas to talk about two productions of his play The Brunch Crowd. They talk about what a slice-of-life, kitchen sink play full of trans of color characters looks like and what kind of intervention that makes in the theatrical landscape. They dive into the importance of trans joy and queer friendship and its absence on stage. Finally, Dillon reflects on how expansive approaches to casting trans and non-binary characters and how identity-based casting might open up dialogue and create space for a much wider range of faces and experiences to be seen on stage.

    Part 2: Transgender Legibility: Have We Really Reached the Transgender Tipping Point? With Joshua Bastian Cole

    Part 2: Transgender Legibility: Have We Really Reached the Transgender Tipping Point? With Joshua Bastian Cole
    Nicolas Shannon Savard and Joshua Bastian Cole continue their conversation about transgender representation. They critique Time magazine’s 2014 declaration of the “transgender tipping point” of cultural visibility and explore the ways in which Hollywood’s handling of trans narratives bleeds over into the theatre, politics, and daily life for trans and gender nonconforming people.
    Logo

    © 2024 Podcastworld. All rights reserved

    Stay up to date

    For any inquiries, please email us at hello@podcastworld.io