ABSTRACT
In this study I aim to use my body as a tool to derive themes for use in
performance making and to underpin this in theory. I focus on aspects of
Tadashi Suzuki (1986) actor training (referred to as Suzuki training), free
writing and the body. I use black feminism, cognitive neuroscience and body
theory to account for my lived body, which I then use in performance. Practice
and theory informed each other in a cyclical manner in accordance with
Practice as Research as a methodology. Therefore, elements that emerged
from my practice determined the theory included in the study, as practice was
considered a way of knowing. I work to establish a relationship between race,
subjugation and some of the multiple implications thereof on the body in the
urban context: I draw on limited notions of culture and the body to interrogate
how these can materialise in performance. The study also addresses aspects
of the performing body to support why I derive value in Suzuki (1986) training
as one psychophysical actor training tool. I theoretically discuss this technique
as developing expressive abilities in young performers. The primary purpose
of this research is to create work that is rooted in the tradition of devising. My
research moves between the physical body and the body in performance in a
South African context as I worked to conceptually account for the body in both
instances. Although limited, this research includes theories that account for
the performing body engaged in somatic foot-based practices where these
interact with my practice. I further discuss the devising process I undertook
with a cast, as a performance maker, my findings and reflection on this
process.