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School of English and Drama

Dr Maggie Inchley, BA Hons (Cambridge), MA PhD (London), PGCE

Maggie

Reader in Contemporary Theatre and Performance | Director of Schools Engagement (Drama)

Email: m.inchley@qmul.ac.uk

Profile

When I was 18, I left the Lincolnshire villages in which I grew up and went to school, in order to go to university to study for a degree in English Literature. I’ve always loved language, stories, poetry and philosophy.

After working abroad in Japan and Mexico, a career in school teaching, and professional experience in directing and dramaturgy, I was drawn back to Higher Education. MA evening classes and a PhD at Birkbeck as a mature student helped me develop my interests in the sounds and powers of voices, as well as in cultural audibility and activism. As an academic and practice researcher, I’ve been able to explore lived experience of voice and listening in participatory and intergenerational contexts, and reflect on how vocal performance can resist and resonate differently.

For me Drama is both a commitment to and pleasure in the subject’s pedagogical and creative powers. It’s a way to speak and sing of and back to the world. It is an embodied way to be and think together.

Undergraduate Teaching

Amongst other modules, I have taught on:

  • DRA268: Voice, Gender, Performance
  • DRA361: Drama and Education
  • DRA120: Interventions
  • DRA350: Verbatim, Testimonial and Tribunal

Postgraduate Teaching

I have taught on:

  • DRA7003: Cultural Industries

Research

Research Interests:

  • New writing and contemporary performance practices
  • Voice, accent and dialect
  • Verbatim and testimonial performance
  • Singing and affect in performance
  • Performance with young people

Recent and Ongoing Research

My research investigates the articulation of identity in contemporary writing and performance. I often focus specifically on the voice, attending to how writers and their processes script voices, how vocal performance is created and delivered, and how audiences hear, listen and respond to voices. In articles in the journal Contemporary Theatre Review and Theatre Research International I have explored the cultural audibility of young people, the ways in which theatre has mediated the identity of women who have killed children, and the performance of testimony of violence against women in globalised contexts. I have also published on voice and language in the work of black British playwrights Kwame Kwei-Armah, debbie tucker green and Roy Williams. My monograph, Voice and New Writing, 1997-2007, uses the idea of voicescapes to understand the ways that voices articulated identity in theatre and politics during the New Labour government.

Recently I have been exploring themes such as the gendered aspects of vocal performance, singing and sexuality, and choral performance.

In practice, I am also exploring how socially engaged performance can provide opportunities for culturally marginalised voices to be heard. My AHRC funded collaborative project, The Verbatim Formula (TVF), with People’s Palace Projects, uses techniques of verbatim theatre to gather testimonies from children and adults with experience of the social care system, aiming to create spaces for dialogue and change. TVF has led to a series of residential workshops for care-experienced young people at QMUL and three other London universities. Its research is participatory, and action-oriented, working with young people as co-researchers. See more about TVF in the Public Engagement section of this profile.

Research Consultation:

  • ‘Young People’s Identity’, for Partnership for Young London and University of Huddersfield, October 2020.
  • ‘Student Engagement Consultation’, Office for Students, August 2019.
  • Become Charity, Consultation of Educational Needs of Looked-After Children, 2018
  • Greater London Authority Peer Outreach Team Enquiry into Children's Rights, Westminster, 2017 and 2018

Conference Papers:

  • ‘The Verbatim Formula: Participatory Research with Care-Experienced Young People’, Talking Theatre for Young Audiences, International Conference, University of Galway, 2020
  • Ariana Grande, Ariana Grande: ‘You’ll Believe God is a Woman’, IFTR, Shanghai 2019
  • IFTR Conference Paper: ‘Transvocalism in Jo Clifford’s Swan Song, Eve: Opening My Queer Ears’, July 2018
  • TAPRA Conference Paper: ‘Interspecies Worlding in The Shape of Water’, September 2018.
  • ‘The Verbatim Formula: Making Places in Higher Education’, Participatory Action Research Connecting Communities Conference, University of Greenwich, 2017.
  • ‘Gender, Performance and Political Authority’, Invited Speaker Politics and Drama Interdisciplinary Symposium, University of Surrey, 2017.
  • ‘Woman Hearing in Manwatching’, Women in Comedy Symposium, University of Salford, 2017.
  • ‘Framing Transsexual Lives in Tinsel Town’, TAPRA, University of Salford, 2017.
  • ‘Dickie Beau’s “Playback”: Mediation as an Identifying (and Erasing)(and/ or Androgynous) Practice’, Voice and Identity Symposium, University of Winchester, 2017.
  • ‘Scotland’s Siren: “The Most Dangerous Woman in Politics”?’, Politicians & Other Performers, Birkbeck College University of London, 2017.
  • Verbatim Practice as Research in Applied Theatre with Looked After Young People and the Care Sector: An ‘Aesthetics of Care’ Through Aural Attention, Performing Care Symposium, Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, 2016.
  • ‘The Verbatim Formula: Performance Based Research with Looked After Young People’, Youth Matters: Participatory Arts as a Creative Space for Young People’s Social Explorations Conference, University of Greenwich, 2016.
  • ‘The Verbatim Formula: Building Dialogue in the Twenty-first Century UK Care System’, Theatre and Attachment Conference, QMUL and Wellcome Trust, 2016.
  • ‘Revisiting Feminisms and debbie tucker green’, IFTR, University of Stockholm, 2016.
  • ‘Representing Margaret: Voicing Britannia’, Parliamentary Rhetoric Conference, QMUL 2016.
  • ‘“Calm Down Dear”: His-terical Voices in the House of Commons’, IFTR Hyderabad 2015.‘Theatre of Advocacy: “Asking for It” and the Audibility of Women in Nirbhaya,“the Fearless” and of Malala, the “Heroine”’, CDE, Barcelona, 2015.
  • 'The Verbatim Formula: caring for care leavers in the neoliberal university', Research in Drama and Education, 24:3 (2019), 413-419, DOI: 10.1080/13569783.2019.1604128
  • The Verbatim Formula, 'It's Child's Play: The Performance that Lets Young People in Care Share Their Stories,' Guardian,
    http://goo.gl/n4BH96 http://www.theverbatimformula.org.uk/
  • The Verbatim Formula Making Places Guide: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1iyns9bN5rkib_v6lNpVMG9YsdkK7dQPy/view
  • 'Touring Testimonies', Lateral, 5.2 (2016), http://csalateral.org/wp/issue/5-2/touring-testimonies-rebalancing-public-realm-human-rights-inchley/

 

Publications

Selected Publications

‘This is My Life’: Managing Breath in Kirsty Young and Cumbernauld Theatre’s LipSync (2019) and the COVID-19 Pandemic, Performance Research 26.7 (2022). (Open Access).

‘“Mr. Blue Sky” (1977) in the West End: Becoming Musical in Our Ladies of Perpetual Succour (2015)’, Contemporary Theatre Review, 32 (2022), 162-176.

'“It’s Alive”: Towards a Monsterized Theatre with Beatbox Academy’s Frankenstein: How to Make a Monster (2018 - )’, Contemporary Theatre Review, 31 (2021), 307-322.

'sticking in the throat/ keyword bitch: aesthetic discharge in debbie tucker green’s stoning mary and hang', in debbie tucker green: critical perspectives (Palgrave, 2020)

‘The Verbatim Formula - Caring for Care leavers in the Neo-liberal University’, in Research in Drama Education (RiDE), 24.3 (2019)

‘Verbatim Practice as Research with Care-experienced Young People: An “Aesthetics of Care” Through Aural Attention’, in Performing Care: New Perspectives on Socially Engaged Performance, edited by James Thompson and Amanda Stuart-Fisher (forthcoming, 2019)

Amending Speech (Hansard, House of Lords, 2018)

Dennis Kelly’s DNA: GCSE Student Guide (Bloomsbury, 2017)

'Touring Testimonies', Lateral, 5.2 (2016)http://csalateral.org/wp/issue/5-2/touring-testimonies-rebalancing-public-realm-human-rights-inchley/

Voice and New Writing: Articulating the Demos (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015)

‘Theatre as Advocacy: “Asking for It” and the Audibility of Women’ in Nirbhaya, “the Fearless One”’, Theatre Research International, 40 (2015), 272-287.

‘Hearing the Unhearable: the Representation of Women Who Kill Children’, Contemporary Theatre Review, 23 (2013), 192-205.

‘Hearing Young Voices on the London Stage: `Shit Bein' Seventeen Int it? Never Take Us Serious',Contemporary Theatre Review, 22 (2012), 327-343.

‘David Greig and the Return of the Native Voice’, in Transnational Identities in David Greig’s Plays, edited by Anja Müller and Clare Wallace (Prague: Litteraria Pragensia, 2011).

See also my Queen Mary Research Publications profile.

Supervision

I am currently supervising doctoral work on:

  • the theatre of Caryl Churchill
  • the assessment of Drama in the school curriculum
  • intergenerational performance histories of Fevered Sleep (LAHP CDA).
  • Intersensorial dramaturgies and gender

Public Engagement

In my work at Queen Mary I work with different groups of people as a teacher, researcher, practitioner and collaborator. 

Young People and the Care System

Since 2015, I’ve been leading The Verbatim Formula, a participatory research project that works with care-experienced young people. It uses verbatim theatre techniques, listening and dialogue to work with young people, care leavers, social workers, and universities. This has involved holding arts workshops for young people at university and in arts venues, and a ‘Portable Testimony Service’ that aims to help adults listen to young people better. We have performed at a range of contexts including the Department for Education, the Office for Students, and City Hall.

Read more about The Verbatim Formula on its dedicated website: http://www.theverbatimformula.org.uk/

Schools, Teachers and Youth Theatres

I am a great believer in Drama as a form of discovering the world, and as a research method in itself. During my time at Queen Mary it has been a great pleasure to give talks and workshops in schools and youth theatres on doing Drama at university. I also share my work on verbatim theatre and new writing in masterclasses on Verbatim Theatre and Dennis Kelly’s DNA, which is on the English Literature GCSE syllabus.

I am currently working with QMUL PhD student and artists Vanessa MacAulay on a schools writing workshop which updates George C. Wolfe’s The Colored Museum (1986), and thinks about cultural identity in a Black Lives Matters world.

Amongst others, I’ve visited Queens School Bushey, Wanstead High SchoolBow School, Sir John Cass and City and Islington College.

Working with Arts Venues, Artists and Theatre Companies

My teaching and research has led me to collaborate with a wide range of artists and arts organisations in a variety of ways, from co-convening modules, to holding joint events, and in arranging placements for students at Queen Mary. These collaborations have included Battersea Arts Centre, People’s Palace Projects, Phakama, Moving Pieces, Dash Arts, Magic Me, Fuel, Camden People’s Theatre and Duckie.

In the lockdown of 2020 I co-led a workshop for students in lockdown in campus with feminist artist Cassie Thornton on our workshop un-Clocking.

I work closely with Half Moon theatre on QMUL’s Drama and Education module for final year undergraduate students.

 

Performance

In addition to my academic work I am also a practitioner, working as a director and dramaturg. I am co-Artistic Director of the Comedians Theatre Company, which has been producing work with the major Edinburgh Fringe venues since 2005. In 2014, I developed four comic dramas under the title Making the Best of It with BBC Radio Four. My on going collaboration with the Pleasance Islington, Itch: A Scratch Event has led to the development and production of new theatre and comedy, including the Fringe First winning Somewhere Beneath it All a Small Fire Burns Still by Dave Florez, and Cul-de-Sac by Matthew Osborn, which was also performed at Theatre 503. Another current piece, Here Today explores my interest in voices, which are mixed, distorted and echoed immersively through the exterior performance space.

Selected Directing, Production and Dramaturgy

Delerium Scenes, a series of short films for training of clinical and care home staff, West Yorkshire and Harrogate NHS, using participatory script-writing techniques, 2019.

Audio Chat Back and Portable Testimonies with care-experienced young people, Battersea Arts Centre, Department for Education, Office for Students and City Hall, 2018-9.

Bloody Mary, at Backyard Comedy Club, 2017.

 The Verbatim Formula: Performances of the TVF Living Archive at Inside Out Festival, Being Human Festival at the Wellcome Trust, and QMUL Professional Services Conference, 2015-7.

Teabags in the Fridge, Dementia Sufferers Short Films (development and director), Arc Research and NHS England Choices. These short films aimed at carers of dementia sufferers are being used for training in hospital trusts, councils and care homes across North East England, 2015.

Making the Best of It (Literary Development), BBC Radio Four, 2014.

Here Today, Morpheme Theatre, Camden People’s Theatre, British Film Institute. This is a layered and textured multimedia exploration of memory and identity through recurring comic one-liners, sound and projection, 2013.

Itch: A Scratch Event (Convenor, Dramaturg and Director), The Pleasance, London. This is an on going new writing and performance project.

Cul-de-Sac, by Matthew Osborn, Theatre 503, December 2012. The Pleasance, Fringe Sell-Out Show Award. 2011.

Somewhere Beneath it All a Small Fire Burns Still by Dave Florez (Literary Development), Gilded Balloon, Scotsman Fringe First Award, 2010.

The School for Scandal, by R.B.Sheridan, (Adaptor and Associate Director), The Pleasance, Edinburgh, 2009.

Gagarin Way, by Gregory Burke, The Stand, Edinburgh, 2009.

Little Angels – (Dramaturg and Director), a new play by Hannah Davies, York Theatre Royal, 2008-9.

A (Disabled Transsexual) Love Story Told to a Ticket Inspector at Alton Towers, DaDa International Festival of Disabled Arts, Liverpool, 2008.

Stork Bite and Proper Lunch, a new play by Aviva Jane Carlin – Hackney Empire Studio, 2007.

Jeremy Lion for Your Entertainment, a new devised comedy by Justin Edwards, Menier Chocolate Factory, 2006.

True West, by Sam Shepard, The Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh, 2006.

The Zoo Story (Director/Producer) by Edward Albee – Gilded Balloon, Winner of Acting Excellence Award, The Stage, 2005.

 

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