ASYLUM brings innovative production SURFACING to VAULT Festival 2023

New technology investigates mental health and neurodiversity in ASYLUM’s thrilling production SURFACING.

The show will come to The Vaults’ Studio space for VAULT Festival 2023 between 14 – 19 February.

Applying new technology to visualise the journey of a young therapist with a repressed past, the production offers a beautiful and thrilling blend of theatre and immersive technology with motion sensors, responsive video design, and dialogue portraying the several realities we navigate through.

When highly rational and grounded Luc is thrown off kilter by her new patient Owen, she embarks upon a spiralling journey of intrusive thoughts, haunting characters and terrifying possibilities.

Following Luc’s attempts to stabilise her battling realities, SURFACING conveys a poignant narrative of struggling to reach the surface when plummeted into a new and vivid world.

Luc is played by Rosie Gray (Old Bridge, The Bush Theatre, Papatango; Anyone’s Guess How We Got Here, Royal Exchange/UK tour; Julius Caesar, Bristol Old Vic) while Owen is played by Daniel Rainford (When Darkness Falls, UK tour; Once Upon A Time In Nazi Occupied Tunisia, Almeida Theatre; Private Peaceful, Nottingham Playhouse and UK tour).

Written by Papatango Prize winner Tom Powell and informed by thought-provoking first-hand accounts and research from Improving Access to Psychological Therapy (IAPT) experts, SURFACING provides a critical insight into the physical and emotional battles combated behind the scenes in therapy.

Directed by Royal Theatrical Support Trust’s Sir Peter Hall Award winner Stephen Bailey, this production champions under-represented topics and artists, with the team and cast including a diverse range of disabled and neurodivergent creatives, standing in line with ASYLUM Art’s mission to represent neurodivergence and disability within the arts.

Powell and Bailey are joined on the creative team by Ben Glover (video design & captioning) and David Denyer (sound design & composer) with original design concept by TK Hay.

For more information and tickets, visit vaultfestival.com

Writer Tom Powell said: “In SURFACING we wanted to show severe mental health crises as they’re rarely seen – not tragic-as-default but vivid, thrilling, surprising, and certainly not something that gets ‘fixed’. This piece is a labour of love, four years in the making, working with an incredibly talented group of artists and some amazing technology. I’ve never worked so closely and so collaboratively this early on in the process. This project is a testament to the team – and the thought of bringing it to stage kept me going through the long and lonely winter lockdowns.”

Director Stephen Bailey added: “As a neurodivergent person, I wanted to make a show that doesn’t treat mental health & neurodifference as a failing, that acknowledges the harm of social stigma, and that protests the fast-declining state of public mental health care. I’m proud to do so on SURFACING with incorporated access and (reflecting ASYLUM’s mission) multiple D/deaf, disabled & neurodivergent team members.”

About the author: Josh Darvill

Josh is Stageberry's editor with over five years of experience writing about theatre in the West End and across the UK. Prior to following his passion for musicals, he worked for more than a decade as a TV journalist.

 

Follow us