Article, Arts & Culture
New(to)Town offers physical theatre training for all
We sat down to talk with the brilliant minds behind the . Their goal? To provide accessible, experimental workshops (Training Jams) and to cross-pollinate amongst communities in and out of Vancouver. A few of its founders â Anjela Magpantay, Davey Calderon, and Avyen von Waldenburg â told us about the work they do in the community, how they came to be, and where they plan to go.
How was New(to)Town Collective born?
New(to)Town Collective really started before we knew we were New(to)Town Collective. We were a bunch of theatre students who were either close to graduating, or had graduated, and wanted to create an environment for ourselves where we could keep jamming on ideas that weâve learned from SFU and other instructors. We were always gathering in coffee shops until 2am and one day we were like, âLetâs just go into the studio and do the thing that we were trained to do and actually do it on our feet.â
Why the name âNew(to)Town Collectiveâ?
For research on Donut Holes in Orbit by Prince Gomolvilas, one of our early projects, we would walk through Chinatown and we went to New Town Bakery and we were joking âwhat about New Town Bakery?â and I said âWhat about New to Town?â Putting the (to) between âNewâ and âTownâ brought about the idea that the show was about how people that felt very outside of the current society always feel new to town. And once we did create the collective, all four of us, (there was also a fifth member call Eddy Van Wyk), when all five of us first started we still loved the name because it meant that it was a culminating of people from different walks of life. A lot of people felt like theyâre not part of a community living in Vancouver.
What does New(to)Town Collective do?
We hold a series of workshops, usually four because thereâs four of us, so that there is room for us to co-facilitate, but also have a break. Itâs drop-in style, so you donât have to attend every week, you can just come in. Itâs like going to the gym, really. If Avyenâs teaching clowning, for example, you know that heâs teaching clowning because itâs on the website. Weâve done a lot of work in social media to tell potential participants that this is going to be the workshop this week. So you come in, do clowning and then after three hours we finish and next week is totally something different or can be, if we wanted it to be, a continuation of the workshop previous.
What do your workshops or âTraining Jamsâ look like?
Essentially, Training Jams are performance laboratories. Thereâs a space, all four of us are there. People come in. We have what we call a check-in, where each person says something about themselves, something that might be affecting them that day, what have you. Then, the lead facilitator, usually two people or one of us, will start the exercises. We go through the exercise that weâve learned and adapt it to the group. If in the middle of those exercises, we see individuals or groups of people doing something spontaneous in the moment, we will react and adjust accordingly. If it feels like the energy of the group is going there, and if it feels like itâs useful to the idea, weâll go in that direction.
We donât do scenes or monologues, but weâve had workshops called âProgressive Performanceâ which is kind of something different from Training Jams. Itâs to develop something that youâre working on like a monologue, a poem, a script, or any curiosity you might have. We have training jams, we also have Progressive Performance and we also have pop-up training jams. They happen in partnership with festivals. Weâve had a partnership with Vines Festival that happens in August and weâve recently had a partnership with Diwali in BC last fall.
What makes your style of training unique?
Weâre pulling on the things that are already there for the individual who does come in and is willing to play. The whole concept of acting training for us is a lot of undoing of the extra things that we put on ourselves from society. Weâre just assisting by giving them a kind reminder of like âhey, you actually have this, and what about this, and your elbows doing something, why donât you extend that because it feels like your body wants to go somewhere.â Thatâs how we work as a collective. Our role in the artistic community is quite unique because our main focus is training and no other theatre company really does that. They focus on producing shows. Weâre focused on providing space for artists to cross-pollinate and to stay warm.
Who can attend a Training Jam?
We can provide Training Jams for anyone and everyone. Itâs a space of no pressure; social masks off. Weâve seen a transition from students who were curious and just wanted to stay warm to folks from the non-artistic community who were curious about what we do and that are curious about physical expression. Weâve had people from different walks of life attend because they want to experience something new without having to drop a couple hundred dollars. Itâs interesting because it has attracted a lot of people that are new to town. Weâve had some really interesting participants â an animator, a social worker and even some retirees. If youâre alive, youâre a performer (laughter).
How much does it cost to attend a Training Jam?
Its all by donation. One of the things that was a problem for us as young emerging artists is that training is expensive. Dancers are able to come to dance class, they stay warm, and thatâs how they get employed. But for actors theyâre just like, âYeah, youâre done school. Go and get a job.â One of the most humbling things about this performance training is that you know you donât have everything even though youâve finished school, youâve finished a workshop, youâve paid for an instructor, but youâre not necessarily finished your work. Part of our mandate is to help the artists who are struggling to keep training. All the funding we get comes from donations. Sometimes we produce work for festivals. All of the donations go towards ASL interpreters, application fees, space rentals.
You mentioned that some of your donations go towards ASL interpreters. How do you incorporate accessibility into your work?
Weâve had folks from the Deaf community attend our workshops and thatâs largely influenced how we change the structure of the workshop. It was a huge learning process because we advertise our training as accessible as much as possible. We do our very best with the resources that we have and we have worked with an ASL interpreters before. Working with an ASL interpreter is very different from just preparing a workshop. Usually we just sit down and talk about the workshop we want to facilitate and thatâs it. But with an ASL interpreter there comes a lot of thought and exact timing. The biggest thing for us is that we really try to make a safe space of presence. It doesnât matter what your skill level is, it doesnât matter what your body is in the space.We just ask you to try and be present with us in the space. We try to encourage that type of energy and time with each other even if itâs only three hours.
Whatâs in the future for New(to)Town Collective?
Touring beyond (Metro Vancouver) would be super cool. Internationally. Weâre all emerging professionals and weâve met people from all over the world who are interested in the work we do and donât have anything like it where they are from. Weâre really excited to keep connecting with different communities here in Vancouver.
Donât miss New(to)Townâs next Training Jam series with on February 25th, 5-8pm and March 4th, 5-8pm. Then one led by us on March 11th, 5-8pm. This round of Training Jams are at the Playwrights Theatre Centre (739 Gore Ave)!