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I saw today that ACE has cut Yellow Earth’s funding completely. I cannot say I am surprised by this. It was painfully obvious to me (but not the Yellow Earth board it seems) that ACE was cutting the company adrift when there was no ACE representative at the company’s recent round of interviews for the vacant artistic director’s position where I was an unsurprisingly (given the company’s track record of appointing from within and my own outspokenness) unsuccessful applicant.
Indeed I deliberately didn’t complain about the farcical fait accompli nature of the recruitment process as I was reluctant to present myself as a ready made blame figure when the axe inevitably fell. I also felt, though I felt then and feel now that the circumstances behind her appointment were (through no fault of her own) extremely dubious, that Kumiko Mendl, as a decent and intelligent person, deserved a chance as artistic director. In the extremely unlikely occurrence of myself being offered the job I would have liked a clear opportunity to run the company without carping from the sidelines so I wished to afford her that courtesy.
So the UK now has no funded theatre company that represents the interests of East Asian people who are very much the “forgotten ethnic minority” as far as the media are concerned in this country. We are ignored, patronised and marginalised beyond belief whilst the entertainment industry at large smugly congratulates itself on the amount of black and brown faces on stage and television nowadays. The fact we have lost the only remaining publicly subsidised theatre company creating work by and for people of East Asian descent is indeed a cause for protest.
Yellow Earth, unfortunately though, is a difficult cause to fight. Founded by five friends and passed around between people who met its original artistic director’s approval, the company has, more or less since its inception, operated in a strange and insular bubble of its own making. Their work has attracted little genuine widespread interest and it’s difficult to make a case that it was having any kind of creative dialogue with its audience or indeed who its audience were, beyond people who enjoy an evening of “minority interest” theatre.
The company maintains on its website that “Yellow Earth's current production of Why the Lion Danced was a sell out national tour playing to delighted audiences ranging in age from 4 years to 84 years”. This would be fine were they funded to be a children’s theatre company but they weren’t. The fact they frequently returned, at key points throughout their history, to dressing up in exotic costumes to tour children’s plays is only further evidence of their rather desperate and dated approach to what it means to be East Asian in Britain today.
The website also trumpets the fact that the company’s work has “ranged from a bilingual version of King Lear for the RSC's Complete Works Festival which toured China and the UK to Running the Silk Road by Paul Sirett, which played at the Barbican in London and toured nationally with a mixed cast of British actors and actors from The Beijing Opera School”. It seems to me that both of these were examples of a director attempting to bathe in the reflected glory of mainland Chinese talent as opposed to any serious attempt to make theatre that furthered our cause as a sector. I should know. I was in one of those productions.
The company’s focus (in both of these productions and throughout their history as a whole) on traditional eastern “movement skills” was also curious in that it surely panders to, rather than contradicts, stereotypical preconceptions of the kind of work East Asian people can do. Their outreach programme is advertised in a fashion more befitting of a gay contact ad than a bold calling for serious, aspiring and ambitious young actors. Whilst it pains me to be so critical I’m afraid that, all too often, Yellow Earth were part of the problem rather than the solution.
My point is this. Responsibility for Yellow Earth’s failure and eventual demise must surely rest squarely at the Arts Council’s doorstep. Yes, Yellow Earth have been insular and amateurish. Yes, the Yellow Earth board have displayed shocking arrogance, defensiveness and outright incompetence. But the Arts Council chose to fund them whilst at the same time severing Mu-lan’s funding, a company who at that point had just played two sell out seasons at the King’s Head and Battersea Arts Centre before transferring off Broadway and whose repertoire had consisted of hard hitting, controversial subject matter that featured a young gay Chinese man adrift in a landscape of racial isolation driven to murder, Japanese war survivors struggling to make sense of their past, a Chinese take away family in Essex attempting to maintain their unity in the face of outside change and an abrasive and emotionally volatile city trader striving to navigate an intense love affair with a recovering alcoholic artist. Nary a dragon god or fortune cookie proverb in sight.
I believe this happened because the Arts Council were far happier funding a non challenging organisation who would tour twee exotica to obscure venues. It is my contention that Yellow Earth were fundamentally mismanaged from the start. The Arts Council took no responsibility for this and seemed to make no attempt whatsoever to steer the company onto the right lines. And now we have no theatre company and as performers and writers will have to live off the scraps the mainstream, mainly Caucasian, establishment will toss us when and if they see fit.
An appalling state of affairs. East Asian people are effectively being told that a career in the theatre is not for them. Who, at the Arts Council, will take responsibility for this? What steps will the Arts Council take to remedy this dire situation? Surely the time has come for a fundamental shift in ACE’s attitude towards the East Asian community.
Daniel York.
Elected Member, Equity Minority Ethnic Members Committee.
Actor, Writer, Director. |