CRE-ACTORS: Training intercultural theatre-makers for a diverse Europe Erasmus Project
General information for the CRE-ACTORS: Training intercultural theatre-makers for a diverse Europe Erasmus Project
Project Title
CRE-ACTORS: Training intercultural theatre-makers for a diverse Europe
Project Key Action
This project related with these key action: Cooperation for innovation and the exchange of good practices
Project Action Type
This project related with this action type : Strategic Partnerships for vocational education and training
Project Call Year
This project’s Call Year is 2020
Project Topics
This project is related with these Project Topics: Creativity and culture; Intercultural/intergenerational education and (lifelong)learning; Migrants’ issues
Project Summary
The project CRE-ACTORS will facilitate the exchange of best VET practice between key organisations working in collectively created theatre that engages with social and cultural diversity, internationalism and minority communities. It will also provide rigorous and carefully recorded evaluation of the practices shared between the organisations, so as to offer their staff, volunteers, associated partners and the sector more broadly a robust and proven set of methodologies for work in this significant and growing area.
The project partners for CRE-ACTORS are all organisations working in VET for theatre and in theatre-making, and are aware of these as socially and culturally significant activities, with the power to affect shifts in attitudes and the cultural atmosphere. They perceive an urgent need to develop training approaches that encourage new theatre forms and dramaturgies responding to the rapidly shifting context of an increasingly diverse Europe, with the overarching strategic aim of social inclusion.
CRE-ACTORS will therefore concentrate on training to create devised theatre, in which many different, and perhaps competing voices are present. All of the partners are committed to social inclusion as an ideology: it is there in their policy statements, the way the organisations are run, their combination of theatre-making and education as the bases of their work, and the nature of the work they produce. There are three theatre companies in the partnership – Théâtre du Soleil, Border Crossings and Teatro dell’Argine – all making performances which are collectively devised by people from diverse backgrounds. The fourth partner is The Fence – a Swedish-based international network of dramaturgs, equally committed to theatrical and VET practice that operates at the intersection of cultures. The project aims to bring together their specific professional approaches to socially and culturally inclusive theatre in an exchange of good practices, so as to develop further their creative and VET work as a space of social inclusion.
The project will be build around three staff training courses, led by the three theatre-making partners. Each of these will involve 17 staff from across the partnership, and will also engage at least 10 participants from associated partners in their localities, including diverse community groups, refugee and migrant organisations. The courses will serve to train participants in the specific approach that each partner organisation has developed to collectively created, intercultural theatre. There will be a particular emphasis on the different ways in which the partners develop their work, the relationships they create with diverse communities, the methods they follow to turn intercultural dialogue into performance, the modes through which those performances are presented, and the use they make of wraparound activities with diverse communities.
The Fence will lead on the Evaluation aspects of the project. The final afternoon of each training week will be given over to a session led by this partner, which will enable participants to reflect on their learning during the week, and to apply it to the needs identified by the project in their organisations, their communities, their countries and across Europe. Through ongoing discussion and application of these methods, the project aims to establish the effectiveness of particular approaches to theatre training and theatre making in a range of intercultural contexts across Europe.
As well as the courses and evaluation, this process will lead towards tangible results that will be published online: a project blog and a Good Practice Fusion Report, in the form of an e-book. For this, each theatre-making partner will produce a written account of the training week they have led, and this will be supplemented with evaluation materials by The Fence and by participants. The three accounts, with evaluations, will be brought together with introductory, contextual and concluding essays. This key project result will be the main tool for dissemination, which will operate through online networks, social media, and European Databases like EVE, euVetsupport or EPALE, to reach staff and teachers involved in theatre and VET all over Europe.
Through this project, the partner organisations will equip theatre artists and educators across Europe with enhanced skills and competencies to work with cultural minorities and migrant communities, and to undertake cultural production and social integration work with refugees (including recent arrivals). In particular, the project will enable direct interventions with and by migrants that validate them as European citizens in their own right. The project also seeks to provide participating organisations with the means to create theatre that offers a more nuanced, truthful and humane narrative around cultural minorities, so aiding the promotion of social integration and more diverse European identities
EU Grant (Eur)
Funding of the project from EU: 95732 Eur
Project Coordinator
Border Crossings Theatre Company Limited by Guarantee & Country: IE
Project Partners
- Théâtre du Soleil
- Teatro dell’Argine Società Cooperativa Sociale
- The Fence

