From the BBC:
“Cardiff and Swansea hospices
inspire The Colours play about death”
People using Welsh hospices have
inspired a new play about the way we deal with death. The Colours uses
interviews with people attending Ty Olwen in Swansea and Velindre Cancer Centre
in Cardiff as its script. Recorded words are streamed into the headphones of
actors, who deliver them during the drama, which opens on Tuesday at the Soho
Theatre in London. The play's creator wants to "lift the stigma"
around terminal illness. Harriet Madeley, who has written the play, carried out
interviews with patients at the hospices. She joined ward rounds and spoke to
medical staff as well as people receiving palliative care. Ms Madeley said:
"I wanted to dispel some of the fear we feel around life-limiting
illnesses. Not to normalise it, but to access some of the people who are going
through it. "As soon as you go and
speak to people you understand it, you humanise it. And the theatre is the
medium for me to do that." The play is about five people on a Welsh beach
who use memory, fantasy and reality as they approach the end of their lives. The
actors wear headphones and listen to recorded interviews with hospice patients,
repeating their words during the dramatised events on stage. Ms Madeley, who
hopes to bring the show to Wales next year, said the resilience of the patients
she met had inspired the work. "A lot of this is about human spirit and
character. I find that you tend to get more surprising, richer, funnier and
more meaningful characters if you go with real people," she said. "It
is so important that we lift the stigma. We are all getting older, we are all
getting more long-term conditions. "Fifty
years ago people were much more often dying at home, surrounded by family members,
and dying quicker from infectious diseases."
'Finite and precious'
Two of the characters whose
stories appear in the play are Joe and his wife Jill from Swansea. Joe has
terminal cancer and attends the day centre at the Ty Olwen hospice every week. He said it was a "strange
experience" to be interviewed in order to be portrayed on stage, but said
he hoped it would help others to understand what it's like to live with a
terminal illness. Joe said another patient, who had not told anyone about his
cancer, asked him why he was being so open about the condition. "And I
said, well, you are telling people, showing people, not just how we feel but -
if they come around the corner and they get it some day - how they will feel
too. "You have got to be positive, you know. I didn't in the beginning,
I've got to be honest. I didn't feel positive whatsoever. But now, going up to
Ty Olwen and talking to other people - that helped me a lot." Ms Madeley
said she wanted audiences to be inspired by the patients' words. "I hope
people will leave the play with a stronger awareness of their own mortality,
and not in a way that frightens them. "The
play does acknowledge that life is finite and precious, and I think it would be
difficult to have a meaningful life if it didn't end," she added.
Consultant in palliative medicine
Dr Idris Baker, consultant in
palliative medicine at Ty Olwen, worked with the producer to capture the voices
of patients at the hospice. He said the
play allowed patients' voices to be heard. "For people living with an
illness it is sometimes harder for their voices to be heard. "And a lot of the people we see here are
living with a life-shortening illness and they are not going to survive as long
as they might have expected, and it is so easy for their voices to be lost and
not to be heard. "A hundred years ago, all of us would have had experience
of people in the family dying, and of people living with life-shortening
illnesses. "It's a good thing that
fewer people die young than used to, but it does mean most of us don't have
quite so much experience of that - experience of people close to us having a
serious illness, a life-shortening illness, or coming to the end of their
lives." Dr Baker said many patients were keen to share their experiences. "Keen
for themselves, so that they can leave something of what they were thinking.
But also keen to help other people in the future," he added. The Colours
is at the Soho Theatre in London until 17 August.
^ This seems like a good (maybe
good isn’t the right word here, but I don’t know what is) way to bring
awareness of hospice and the terminally ill to people who otherwise know little
to nothing about both. ^
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