Skip to main content
English and Drama

Professor Lois Weaver, BA (Radford University, Virginia USA)

Lois

Professor of Contemporary Performance

Email: l.weaver@qmul.ac.uk
Website: http://www.split-britches.com/lois/

Profile

Promotional image for Last Gasp, taken by Christa Holka (19 June 2019)I am a performance artist, writer, director, and activist. My research interests include live art, solo performance, feminist and lesbian theatre, ageing, performance and human rights and the relationships between performance and public engagement.

I co-founded Spiderwoman TheatreSplit Britches Company, and the WOW Theatre in New York, and was also the Artistic Director of Gay Sweatshop Theatre and the AiR Supply Collective in London. 

Through my experiments with performance as a means of public engagement, I have developed a number of methods and strategies including the Long Table, Porch Sitting, Care Café, Public Studios, the Library of Performing Rights, the FeMUSEm, and my performance persona Tammy WhyNot. I was a partner in Staging Human Rights, a People's Palace Project that uses performance practice to explore human rights in women’s prisons in Brazil and the UK, and Director for PSi#12: Performing Rights, an international conference and festival on performance and human rights held at Queen Mary in 2006.

I continue to curate inclusive public debate at conferences and institutions internationally through the use of these initiatives. More information can be found on my website, Public Address Systems.

Together with my long-time collaborator Peggy Shaw, I create and tour Split Britches’ productions. Prior to Covid-19, our latest performance Last Gasp was set to premiere at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York City April 2020, and at the Barbican in London June 2020. Set against a back drop of climate catastrophe and political heartbreak, Last Gasp is a call and response to the precarities of aging and of our age. Last Gasp is two separate but interdependent solo performances, woven together through the timeless pairing of Echo and Narcissus. Last Gasp is funded by the New York State Council on the Arts and the NYC Women’s Fund for Media, Music and Theatre by the City of New York Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment in association with The New York Foundation for the Arts. Research residencies for development of Last Gasp were completed with the Guthrie Theatre, Metal Culture, Attenborough Centre for the Creative Arts, the Barbican, and Artec at University 8 Paris.

Lois Weaver Split Britches UXOOther recent performances include Retro(pe)rspective, and Unexploded Ordnances (UXO). Retro(per)spective is a medley of 40 years of Split Britches’ performances that made the politics of gender and sexuality and the humor of human relations accessible to all ages and persuasions. The performance uses excerpts from Split Britches performance history to dovetail and challenge current public discourses. UXO uses unexploded ordnances as a metaphor for unexplored potential in elders, and public performance as a platform for public conversation in a fraught political landscape. UXO premiered at La Mama (NYC) and enjoyed a tour throughout the UK including a showcase at the Barbican. UXO continues to tour throughout the UK and internationally.

I co-wrote and directed Peggy Shaw’s Ruff, an exploration of Shaw’s experience of surviving a stroke. Commissioned by PS122 (NYC) and Out North (Alaska), Ruff unpacks Shaw’s ageing, lesbian body, exploring issues of memory, personal response to extreme circumstance and the place of the imagination in the neuroscience of memory loss and structural damage. Ruff visually and verbally translates Shaw’s internal experience of illness and ageing into an external assemblage of her multifaceted, creatively capable, ageing brain. In the development of Ruff, we began experimenting with Green Screening technology in collaboration with the Department of Computer Science at QMUL, and discovered it was a therapeutic, rehabilitative technique for people recovering from strokes. Through a collective performance workshop format and Chroma-key technologies the project encourages Stroke Survivors to use embodied enactment of fantasy worlds as a tool for therapeutic rehabilitation and well-being in front of an audience to produce a shared experience.

I have explored ageing and stage fright in Performing in Agony (2009), a solo performance based on Miroslav Krleza’s Behind the Mask, created through an international collaboration with Croatian academic, Dr. Lada C Feldman, and British director and QMUL Lecturer in Performance, Julia BardsleyI developed Getting On, a back stage tour, a workshop guide for dealing with elders on issues of ‘agefright’ created in collaboration with Leslie Hill and Helen Paris at Stanford University.

My latest solo performance What Tammy Needs to Know About Getting Old and Having Sex, marked the practical exploration of my current research on ageing. This is a practice-based project that collaborates with older adults through interviews, performance workshops and public presentations in order to research the effects of ageing upon people’s desire for, and ability to, obtain sexual pleasure and intimacy. So far, the project has conducted workshops with community groups in London, Croatia, Poland and New York and utilised my persona, Tammy WhyNot, to facilitate engagement and to encourage performance as means of dissemination. Tammy took part in a series of performances, workshops and public interventions as part of the Institute of Sexology, a Wellcome Trust initiative (2015) and has established her own YouTube channel for people over 55.

I have been a Hunt Scammon Distinguished Artist at William and Mary College, a Penny Stamps Distinguished Lecturer as part of her Martin Luther King, Jr.-Cesar Chavez -Rosa Parks Visiting Professorship at the University of Michigan and visiting artist at universities including Harvard, Wellesley, UCLA and Universities of Texas and Tasmania.  I have performed and lectured extensively throughout the US and UK as well as China, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, Canada and Argentina. In 2014, I was made a Guggenheim Fellow and a major publication dedicated of my work and life, co-authored with Jen Harvie and in conjunction with Intellect Live and the Live Art Development Agency, was published in 2015.

I was a 2016-2019 Wellcome Trust Engaging Science Fellow. As a company, Split Britches won the Innovative Theatre Awards (USA) Lifetime Artistic Achievement Award in 2017, and I was awarded the WOW Women in Creative Industries ‘Fighting the Good Fight’ award in 2018. In 2019 I was awarded an International Chair at Artec Paris 8 University at the National Institute for the History of Art, Paris, and the Queen Mary Centre for Public Engagement Hawking Award for Developed Understanding of Public Engagement.

Website: www.split-britches.com

Twitter Handles: @Split_Britches ; @whynottammy

 

Image captions from top:

Promotional image for Last Gasp, taken by Christa Holka (19 June 2019)

Unexploded Ordnances (UXO) at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club, NY NY; photo taken by Theo Cote (5 January 2018)

Back to top