Skip to player
Skip to main content
Skip to footer
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
Like
Comments
Bookmark
Share
Add to Playlist
Report
How the arts can help combat anxiety...
SussexWorld
Follow
24/09/2024
Chichester Festival Theatre chairman Mark Foster
Category
😹
Fun
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
Good afternoon, my name is Phil Hewitt, Group Arts Editor at Sussex Newspapers. Always lovely
00:06
to speak to Mark Foster, Chairman of Church's Festival Theatre. Mark, you were saying a
00:11
fascinating thing just now. The fact is that we are in a very anxious, slightly broken
00:16
society in so many ways, and really that puts the focus on the arts, doesn't it? Because
00:20
in a way, the arts have never been needed more, because in your view, the arts can provide
00:26
so many answers as we try to reformulate a social cohesion.
00:34
Exactly, Phil. Well, I think there's just an absolutely enormous opportunity for us to
00:40
take advantage of things like live theatre, live music, other aspects of the arts,
00:48
to truly engage those people who are maybe feeling a bit lost, maybe don't have the social
00:53
networks they want, are not able to engage with the ideas that they want to engage with.
00:59
And we've seen through our work at Chichester, the power of things like our youth theatre,
01:06
more than 900 young people engaging in theatre on a regular basis. We've seen the impact that has
01:12
on their happiness and their well-being. Indeed, a survey we did last year, 93% of them said that
01:19
they had emerged from that experience more confident, with more friends, and just happier.
01:25
And I think that if you take that idea, and you take also the work that we do with adults
01:30
at the theatre, and with other groups from all parts of society around where we work, we can see
01:36
that people are, by engaging in the theatre in different ways, they are dealing with some of
01:43
the issues they're dealing with. Absolutely. And the point, at the risk of stating the opposite,
01:47
is that you can't get this kind of happiness, this kind of engagement, simply by staring at
01:52
Facebook or staring at a screen, can you? It's a proper live engagement, which is
01:57
qualitatively something else, isn't it? Absolutely. And indeed, there is some research now that says
02:03
that, you know, interacting with either live music or live performance touches a different part of
02:08
the brain than simply looking at something on a screen or listening to something that's pre-recorded.
02:14
And it's that ability to then truly, I think, engage an audience, both an individual audience
02:20
and perhaps also, importantly, collectively, because you have a collective experience as an
02:25
audience, as well as an individual experience. I think that's something that can cut through.
02:30
And we've seen with school groups, other groups that are coming to see the theatre, people who've
02:35
seen our fabulous Oliver recently, have really found that people who've never experienced theatre
02:42
being totally engrossed over a two, three hour period in a thing that's rich with ideas, that's
02:49
so different than most of the experiences people are getting on social media at the moment.
02:54
And you were talking particularly with Oliver, youngsters who perhaps have struggled with
02:59
concentration, struggled a little bit in class, sat absolutely rapt for the duration of Oliver.
03:06
Absolutely. And it's because the storytelling is so vibrant, they're seeing different aspects,
03:15
the movement, the engagement, they see skills, and they suddenly realise they'll not look at this
03:20
through a screen. This is real. It's in front of me. It's live. It has the jeopardy of being live
03:26
in front of me. And I think that also just, again, engages people in a different way. And I think that
03:31
it does spark different synapses in the brain. And I think that's an opportunity for people to
03:37
also to lose themselves a bit more, like you lose yourself in a good book. Losing yourself in great
03:42
theatre is, I think, a great way for people also to maybe let go of some of the things that are
03:47
worrying them. Effectively, you're dragging people away from the rather fake unreal world of the
03:55
screen into the real world, aren't you? Absolutely. And it's an irony that, of course, you know,
04:01
the world of theatre was at one level a pretend world, but it is actually more real, in many
04:06
respects, than many other things. It's talking about ideas that often people are not necessarily
04:11
hearing, if they're in the kind of the echo chamber of the people who talk about the same
04:15
things they talk about all the time. And I think that's another area that we have an opportunity
04:19
to do is stretch people, maybe show the other side of an argument, maybe bring people together.
04:24
Because again, as we look at a society that has so many divisions in it, I think the chance that
04:29
we have the arts bring people together around ideas is another big opportunity, which again,
04:35
should increase happiness and maybe make us all make it all a better place.
04:39
And absolutely, if anybody isn't thinking of investing in the arts,
04:42
then they're not just investing in art for our sake. It's those wider ramifications, isn't it?
04:48
Absolutely. And I think there's an opportunity, frankly, for a broader case to be made,
04:52
whether to government, to philanthropists, to anybody in society that says that, you know,
04:57
putting money into the arts is a genuine investment, not simply in the art itself,
05:02
which is important. And we have a great leadership role in the UK. We love how
05:06
fantastic Chichester is as a theatre, but also the fact that these other impacts that can be had
05:12
are very real, could be more lasting. And if we start to seek around for levers to make
05:18
society happier, make the UK and England grow again, all the things we're trying to do,
05:24
maybe we need to look at the role that arts can play as a catalyst for that,
05:28
as part of a series of interventions that need to be taken forward.
05:31
Absolutely. And if you want the proof, just think of the buzz that you walk away with
05:35
after seeing something like Oliver, that stays with you, doesn't it?
05:39
It does indeed. I think of some of the stories we got of some of the groups of teenagers and
05:45
their buses going back to their school, you know, all singing, Consider Yourself,
05:49
at the top of their voices on the bus all the way home. That's the kind of thing that,
05:54
you know, it's just so different, so different than so many other kinds of ways that we try to
05:59
break through and cut through and engage with young people.
06:05
Brilliant. Well, lovely to speak to you, Mark. Thank you very much indeed.
06:09
Always a pleasure, Bill. Great.
Recommended
5:35
|
Up next
Overseeing a new era at Chichester Festival Theatre
SussexWorld
22/04/2024
4:39
Creating the world for Chichester's Coram Boy
SussexWorld
22/05/2024
5:17
A look back at the 2024 Chichester Festival Theatre summer
SussexWorld
19/12/2024
5:38
Launch line-up confirmed for Chichester's newest theatre
SussexWorld
12/06/2025
5:27
Sadness and excitement as Chichester Festival Theatre's Oliver! nears the end of its run
SussexWorld
30/08/2024
3:39
Chichester ten-year-old joins Oliver!'s West End transfer
SussexWorld
29/12/2024
4:39
Exciting time to join the Chichester Festival Theatre team
SussexWorld
28/11/2023
3:51
Chichester's Harold Fry: a musical "about healing and about redemption"
SussexWorld
22/05/2025
4:20
Chichester's Coram Boy - “no apology about being so vast and so epic”
SussexWorld
13/05/2024
3:08
Debut Pinter for Jack Riddiford at Chichester Festival Theatre
SussexWorld
22/06/2024
3:47
How a play comes together at Chichester Festival Theatre
SussexWorld
07/04/2024
3:29
Chichester Festival Theatre promising the “pick” of what’s out there this winter
SussexWorld
05/09/2024
5:14
Christmas and the New Year at Chichester Festival Theatre
SussexWorld
30/11/2023
3:34
"If I'm feeling happy then it's usually because I am acting!" - Chichester
SussexWorld
27/11/2024
7:58
How to keep thousands of people happy and safe in a theatre...
SussexWorld
14/03/2024
5:31
Life as a trainee producer at Chichester Festival Theatre
SussexWorld
06/09/2024
5:53
Celebrating 20 years of Chichester Festival Youth Theatre at Christmas
SussexWorld
09/12/2023
4:42
Playing Cinderella’s father in his first Chichester Festival Youth Theatre show
SussexWorld
17/12/2024
4:22
The Chichester People’s Theatre makes its debut
SussexWorld
27/06/2023
5:34
Best-ever winter bodes well for brilliant summer at Chichester Festival Theatre
SussexWorld
25/03/2024
2:57
Olivia is back for seventh show with Chichester Festival Youth Theatre
SussexWorld
29/11/2024
7:28
WATCH: New Chichester Festival Theatre artistic director on his hopes and plans - and the Ashes!
SussexWorld
06/06/2023
3:30
Harvesting body parts in a near-fi future - on the Chichester stage
SussexWorld
16/11/2024
2:54
The Government Inspector at Chichester Festival Theatre
SussexWorld
30/04/2025
6:31
Chichester Festival Youth Theatre open-air debut with Shakespeare classic
SussexWorld
28/07/2023