Applied Theatre Research, volume 8, issue 1, pages 45-56

A grotesque act of ventriloquism: Raising and objectifying the dead on stage

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2020-07-01
scimago Q2
SJR0.130
CiteScore0.7
Impact factor0.2
ISSN20493010, 20493029
Cultural Studies
Literature and Literary Theory
Visual Arts and Performing Arts
Abstract

As a real-life figure who was extensively written about in medical journals after his death, but whose voice is entirely absent from the historical record, the character of Tarrare presents the theatre-maker with a number of ethical and artistic considerations. In documenting Tarrare’s life through puppetry and opera, Wattle and Daub engaged in both a literal and a metaphorical act of ventriloquism, wherein we put our own words into the mouths of the dead. Drawing on Levinas’s ethics of the ‘other’ and Salverson’s reflections on the ethics of documentary theatre, this article interrogates The Depraved Appetite of Tarrare the Freak as an example of documentary theatre and explores the unique opportunities and challenges presented when using puppetry to represent the historical ‘other’.

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