Birkbeck University of London Michael Ross Award 2024 / 2025 Winner: Gee Mumford

Gee Mumford is a dramaturg and theatremaker from East Devon, whose childhood participation in local theatre helped establish a lifelong love. Developing a fascination with the function of both space and audience during their actor training, their experiments have ranged from non-traditional use of traditional playing spaces to creating a site-specific piece of immersive children’s theatre on the tracks of an abandoned railway tunnel overtaken by nature.

Gee’s interest in theatre is both practical and academic, and their time on Birkbeck’s MA Dramaturgy was spent developing a strong theoretical understanding of the significance and use of scenography and space in theatre, methods of audience inclusion and immersion, and the responsibility theatre practitioners and organisations have to their audiences and local communities. The opportunity to gain insight from industry professionals through a series of workshops on the MA has added invaluable tools to their practical toolkit for future work.

Their dissertation project, In Collaboration: Exploring the Use of Site-Specific Theatre to Enable Cultural Participation in Rural Communities, for which they received the Michael Ross award, is a culmination of their long standing interests in space and audience, their personal experiences growing up in rural South West England, and the knowledge they gained while studying at Birkbeck. The project is in part presented as a guidebook for early-career practitioners, and develops a method for creating a piece of site-specific theatre in collaboration with the inhabitants of a rural community about an aspect of life or history in the chosen town or village. It includes a supporting exploration of cultural democracy and the importance of broadening both the availability and accessibility of theatre practice to people living outside densely populated areas.

Proposing site-specific theatre as an alternative route into engaging with theatre-making for people in rural communities, Gee hopes to grow this project further and begin making the work they conceptualised as the culmination of their time at Birkbeck. They are honoured and delighted to have received the recognition and support of Birkbeck and especially the Ross family, whose generosity will help them to continue building their skills and knowledge, developing practices to bring their project to life.

The Shy Manifesto at The Melbourne Fringe, 20 – 23rd October 2022

The director Gavin Roach is putting on The Shy Manifesto starring Jake Matricardi at the Victorian Pride Centre – Theatrette, Melbourne, Australia 20 – 23rd October 2022.

https://melbournefringe.com.au/event/the-shy-manifesto-by-michael-ross

Here are some publicity stills for the event.

Jake Matricardi at Callum, Directed by Gavin Roach.

Here’s a review of the February 2022 performance from the UMSU website:

https://umsu.unimelb.edu.au/news/article/7797/Review-The-Shy-Manifesto/

Written by Michael Ross and directed by Gavin Roach, the Australian premiere of The Shy Manifesto opened in Melbourne as part of Midsumma Festival. British playwright Michael Ross has enjoyed a string of accolades in the UK, including being shortlisted for the 2014 Off West End Adopt a Playwright Award.

Upon walking in to The Bluestone Church Arts Space in Footscray, I was struck by the size of the performance space. Situated in a relatively unassuming church hall, there were no elaborate sets or backdrops to give any indication as to how The Shy Manifesto would unfold. The only sign that this was indeed a play and not, say, a council meeting, were two lights on trusses at the back, throwing a warm shade of pink over the audience.

In defiance of its venue’s size, The Shy Manifesto greeted a surprisingly robust audience, and for good reason. The show is presented as a solo monologue, and Jake Matricardi delivers an utterly arresting performance. He plays Callum, a proudly shy person, who rebels against the conscriptions of a loud, extroverted society. Despite how vehemently Callum insists that other people shun him, we as the audience can’t help but find him likeable. Matricardi is a charismatic actor, armed with Ross’ beautiful turn of phrase and with an air of Hugh Grant about him, his performance makes Callum a charming character, for all his quirks and foibles.

Callum is dry-humoured, eloquent, and articulate; over the course of the hour, Matricardi didn’t stumble over a single word. Callum recounts amusing anecdotes about the times various people tried forcing him out of his skin, including his aunt Libby the “ruthless character assassin”, and his Drama teacher Ms Cherry, who tried to convince him that “all the best actors were shy people”. Callum derides these attempts, unable to believe or accept that people could be interested in having him around. The self-referential irony interwoven throughout the play enables us to clearly see the cracks in Callum’s shy sheathing.

Callum takes great pride in his social exclusion, revels in his anonymity, and gathers his self-professed shyness around him like armour. The arrival of a new kid at school, David ‘Gilby’ Gilbert, threatens shake the very foundations of Callum’s existence as a “fundamentalist shy separatist”. While his entire year level dismisses him, Gilby, to his horror, is nice to him. Why would this boy be nice to him, Callum frets. Matricardi deftly navigates the emotional range of a shy, overwhelmed teenage boy grappling with his sexuality, as we as an audience see exactly where Callum’s self-imposed shy lifestyle leads. His preoccupation with Gilby leads to a chain of events which culminates in Callum revealing more about himself than he ever wanted to.

Ross, Matricardi, and director Gavin Roach masterfully manipulate complex themes surrounding identity, coming of age, and coming out, in a perfect little gem of a production. As an audience, we can see that shyness, in Callum’s case, is not so much a choice as a defence strategy, a manifestation of his anxiety. Callum grapples with coming to terms with himself and his identity. The play culminates in a bittersweet ending, as what began as a manifesto is gradually revealed to be more of a self-imposed exile.

The Shy Manifesto shown at CPH Stage and World Pride 2021 in Copenhagen – October 13 – 31, 2020!

The Shy Manifesto Poster, HIT - Copenhagen

Michael’s very successful play The Shy Manifesto was shown at the biggest Theatre festival in Denmark, CPH Stage and World Pride 2021 in Copenhagen from the 13th to the 31st of October 2020.

The play was produced by HIT – Copenhagen and starred Daniel Neil Ash. It was directed by Jeremy M. Thomas and produced by Dina Rosenmeier.

Production photo: Benny Thaibert (instagram : bitamin.dk )
Production photo: Benny Thaibert (instagram : bitamin.dk )
Production photo: Benny Thaibert (instagram : bitamin.dk )
Production photo: Benny Thaibert (instagram : bitamin.dk )
Production photo: Benny Thaibert (instagram : bitamin.dk )
Production photo: Benny Thaibert (instagram : bitamin.dk )

The Shy Manifesto opened to great reviews and several 5 stars. Most of them in the Danish Language, however this one from CPH Post is in English from the opening night:

Photo credit Benny Thaibert (instagram : bitamin.dk )