- 5/7/22
- Lyttleton upstairs
- Lisa Jonas (finance), Juliet Gilkes Romero (writer-in-residece) Ola Animashawun (dramaturg, associate and diversity strategy) and Sara Bakhaty (deputy director of marketing and sales)
Wanting to work in the theatre sector means working with
rejection, whether you’re wanting to act, write, direct, market, programme or
sell ice-cream at intervals. All places are desirable as people are fighting to
protect the arts in the current socio-economic crisis. This rejection is hard
to take when you want to learn in the industry more than anything, and your
previous academic qualifications make you feel ready to take on the roles you
apply for. But you're not ready; you need to have experience for entry-level positions that give you
more experience for entry-level positions. It's a tricky paradox to navigate. The
free work, volunteering and interning needed is a huge privilege that so many cannot
access. Most of the time, it feels like nothing is enough.
Attending this panel at the National was a great opportunity, but having just faced rejection in a
marketing job at a local theatre I know well, I felt intimidated. It hasn’t
been easy, but coming out of uni with an aspiration for the arts on stage has
meant funnelling incessant rejection and rife intimidation into a drive to fulfil
these aspirations. I’m currently volunteering and shadowing in the marketing department I
was rejected by, and it has made me ferociously determined to prove myself: my capability
and my love for the sector. I left ‘free'; work, got on the train to Kings
Cross, ready to be inspired from those in the jobs people like myself dream
about.
I think for all theatre lovers, the National is a brutalist
site of sanctuary on the bustling, skateboarding Southbank. Entering the cool,
beige atrium will always stir a pang of awe- it’s where you want to be- even if
it isn’t. I am immensely passionate about the power of regional theatre in the
north, but it’s refreshing to dip your toe in the spring banks of the capital.
The panel honed in the importance of finding your narrative in
the industry- curating your discipline. Working in regional, northern theatre
means I know the impact of understanding the nuances of your community: they
are your audience so you need to be able to assess the impact you’re having. It
was reassuring to hear this from top dramaturgs and marketing seniors, not just
my own mantras.
I was the one of the very few northern accents sounding out
around the room which unfortunately, in ‘London situations’, triggers a feeling
of inferiority. I sat at the back, armed with notebook and pen, awaiting the
speakers’ arrival on stage. I’m not sure if I’m right on this, but Londoners my
age, in this industry, are born with an air of confidence and a feeling of
deserving to be wherever the best is, as they're used to being around it. I find this hard to relate to. Their arms
shot up in the air without hesitation; they stood up and asked obvious questions as if they were
philosophical watersheds: ‘How do you get
an entry level position?’ ‘Apply.’
I sat quiet, thinking up a marketing
question that would benefit the team in Doncaster, but I wasn’t picked after plucking up courage. I'm learning my lesson- act like Londoner, think northern.
The evening was inspiring and it was a
timely blessing to be reminded that even the writer of At the Gates of Gaza (Juliet)
has been rejected for positions: many positions. The advice from the coveted
professionals was not watered down. They instructed us, the future of The
National, apparently, to get tight with our finances as things were only set to
get harder; we were told the importance of having second jobs that cradle your
creativity. Rejection, inferiority, part-time work and lack of money seem the criteria for this
career, so I’m already kind of qualified in some ways.
Amongst spiel of MAs and winding career trajectories, the best
advice I took from the panel was simply to
not beat myself up if I’m not doing what I want all the time. It’s about
keeping faith and belief in what you want to do when no one else wants you to
do it. And to be responsible; if told you don’t have relevant experience, ask
who has the experience that you need. If that person doesn’t exist, be them and
make them.
I know I’m taking knocks at the moment, and every person
graduating in such uncertain times is too. It’s hard to stay focused, as the rejection
is distracting, but events like this are helpful stabilizers and make you feel
on track to being confident, and feeling like you deserve your place somewhere
in the sector. I’m already grateful for where I am; I work with wonderful
people in a wonderful box office and this inspires me more than empty
networking can. We were told to look for
love in what you do, and who you do it with- I think that, in times as bleak as
these, that is what drives your fight.
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ReplyDeleteAct like Londoner, think Northern. Like it!!!
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