Liselle Terret (also known as Doris La Trine[1]) is a co-programme leader and a senior lecturer at the University of East London.[2] She has more than twenty years of experience within the field as a teacher, facilitator and manager of Applied Theatre related projects within and outside of the UK working with a diverse selection of groups.[2]

Liselle Terret
Employer
Websitehttps://www.uel.ac.uk/staff/t/liselle-terret Edit this on Wikidata

Career edit

Terret has worked as a teacher, lecturer and with numerous companies such as Half Moon Young People's Theatre Company, Unicorn Theatre, Pascal Theatre, Graeae Theatre and formed Unmask Theatre with Vishni Velada Billson.[citation needed] In her theatrical performances, Terret performs as Doris La Trine.[3] Her theatrical work as Doris La Trine develops a neo-burlesque persona, and she often "shares the stage with Len – the pink custom built toilet."[4] In recent years Liselle created and directed the show Not F**kin' Sorry at the Soho Theatre. It was described as "An evening of shameless sexy punk crip cabaret. With luscious lip syncs, sweaty dances and verbatim stories, have your preconceptions rattled as we take you to the edge."[5]

Lecturing and teaching career edit

Terret's career began as a drama teacher and then moved to fulfilling a role within a special needs school. Following this she took a role at the Central School of Speech and Drama[6] leading a Performance Making Diploma for learning disabled students.[7] The diploma was a partnership with Access All Areas a company that makes urban, disruptive performance with learning disabled and autistic artists.[8] Their role at the Central School of Speech and Drama spanned eight years.[2] The Performance Making Diploma program won the 2015 The Guardian University Award for Student Diversity and Widening Participation.[9][10]

Furthering their role within the educational system she took a role at Coventry University teaching Applied Theatre as a senior lecturer[2] before taking up her current role at the University of East London. Her role at the University of East London has enabled the university to create partnerships with companies they have worked with such as the Half Moon Young People's Theatre Company.[11]

Half Moon Young People's Theatre Company edit

Terret's career at Half Moon ran from 1998 until early 2000s. While working at Half Moon she was Education Officer.[12]

Not F**kin' Sorry edit

Not F**kin Sorry was performed at the Soho Theatre in November 2019. Directed and Created By Liselle Terret Not F**kin' Sorry is a piece of "shameless sexy punk crip cabaret. With luscious lip syncs, sweaty dances and verbatim stories, have your preconceptions rattled as we take you to the edge."[5] The show in inclusive and aims to challenge the stigmas and stereotypes surrounding disability. The message behind the shows satirical nature shows the terrifying amount of Hate crime and abuse that takes place in Britain towards disabled people. Reviewer Natasha Sutton Williams says "Through an inspired Countdown satire, the show tackles disability hate and mate crime,[13] detailing three descriptions of recent victims' experiences. As the game show host, performer Emma Selwyn read out an extensive list of disabled people who have been victimised by hate and mate crime in 2019."[14] The hard hitting nature of the piece mixed with the comedic flare makes for a brilliant performance full of funny, thought provoking and transformative moments. Williams quotes "These four performers are some of the bravest, boldest, most candid and risk-taking on the contemporary London theatre scene. Due credit must also be given to director Liselle Terret and dramaturg Lou Cope for their meticulous work, curating highly emotive and genuinely provocative content from the devising process, and balancing the show’s sorrows and joys with such finesse."[14] The show was a success and showed a vast amount of representation on stage.[15] Terret's commitment for representation and inclusivity for all shines through her work on the production Not F**kin' Sorry. Lyn Gardner a writer for The Guardian says "True diversity in British theatre is scandalously overdue. It will bring huge benefits both creatively and organisationally, but I’ve long argued that until we get over a tick-box mentality in the arts nothing is going to really change, and that British theatre risks becoming increasingly irrelevant."[16] Terret's work highlights the creatives working on making Britains theatre more diverse. Her work is telling stories that need to be told and highlighting new performers to British audiences. The lack of representation in British Theatre is shocking and The stage revealed in 2018 "just 1% of graduates from major drama schools declared a physical impairment – covering mobility, sight or hearing impairments. The most up-to-date government figures, from 2016, state that 11% of people in the general population declared a mobility impairment, 3% declared a vision impairment and 3% had a hearing impairment."[17] Terret's work on this show clearly made an impact on British Theatre and it also made a huge impact for those who are under represented within it. Williams notes at the end of the review "The message of Not F**kin Sorry is crystalline, and cannot be put better than when Selwyn declares, 'We are sick of being your circus dogs. Everything you think we can’t do, we can. And we are not f**ing sorry.'"[14]

Writing edit

Terret's published written work has spanned over a decade. They have written multiple pieces for the Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance.[18] Pieces such as Theatre in Health Care, The Boy in the Dress: queering Mantle of the Expert and Move Over, There's Room Enough: Performance Making Diploma: training for learning disabled adults. These pieces were published online from 2012 to 2015. As well as this they also wrote a chapter in a book written by Sheila Preston called Applied Theatre: Facilitation Pedagogies, Practices, Resilience. Their chapter Repositioning the Learning- Disabled Performing Arts Student as Critical Facilitator[19] explores difficulties learning disabled students face within higher education.

References edit

  1. ^ "Doris La Trine performs LiPSiCK Feminist Neo-Burlesque". Doris La Trine performs LiPSiCK Feminist Neo-Burlesque. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d "Liselle Terret – University of East London (UEL)". uel.ac.uk. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  3. ^ Claire Nally; Angela Smith (2013). Naked Exhibitionism: Gendered Performance and Public Exposure. International library of cultural studies. Vol. 28. I.B.Tauris. pp. 217–129. ISBN 978-1848858534.
  4. ^ Poppy Wilde; Francien Broekhuizen (2015). "Workshop on Creative Methods: Gender, Sex and Relating, 15 October 2014". Networking Knowledge. 8 (3).
  5. ^ a b "Not F**kin' Sorry". Soho Theatre. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  6. ^ "The Royal Central School of Speech and Drama". cssd.ac.uk. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  7. ^ "Pioneers". diversefutures.org.uk. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  8. ^ "What We Do". Access All Areas. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  9. ^ Move Over, There's Room Enough: Performance Making Diploma: training for learning disabled adults, interview of Liselle Terret by Sally Mackey, Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance, vol. 20 (2015), no. 4, pp. 506-510; doi:10.1080/13569783.2015.1070663
  10. ^ Thomas, Kim (15 March 2019). "Student diversity category: award winner and runners up". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
  11. ^ "Thank you : Stages of Half Moon". stagesofhalfmoon.org.uk. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  12. ^ "Liselle Terret : Stages of Half Moon". stagesofhalfmoon.org.uk. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  13. ^ "Examples of Mate Crime | Safety Net". arcuk.org.uk. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  14. ^ a b c "Not F**kin' Sorry – Furiously Sexual and Frightening Real". Disability Arts Online. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  15. ^ "The importance of disability led theatre". Enable Magazine. 18 July 2018. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  16. ^ Gardner, Lyn (16 February 2016). "Diversity in theatre: why is disability being left out?". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  17. ^ "Disability in drama schools – study reveals extent of under-representation". The Stage. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  18. ^ "Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance: Vol 24, No 2". tandfonline.com. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  19. ^ Terret, Liselle (20 October 2016), Preston, Sheila (ed.), "Repositioning the Learning-Disabled Performing Arts Student as Critical Facilitator", Applied Theatre: Facilitation Pedagogies, Practices, Resilience, Methuen Drama, pp. 131–150, ISBN 9781472576941, retrieved 13 May 2019

External links edit