SAVE HAYMAN THEATRE!
Fri, 19 May 2006, 12:36 pmangelicus6 posts in thread
SAVE HAYMAN THEATRE!
Fri, 19 May 2006, 12:36 pmIf you are unaware The Hayman Theatre at Curtin University has been closed. It has been closed on the grounds that it is a "fire hazard." After having a fire and safety audit done on the Theatre space, conducted by an independent company hired by the University, Hayman was deemed a risk to it's potential audience. To make the space safe, a $1.1 million sprinkler system must be installed. By current legal standards this is unnecessary. There is no theatre in W.A. aside from the brand-spankin-new Northbridge Arts Centre- that has this gardening implement! This seems like a childish response to the situation, ie, "If they don't have it why should We?" however this is not what the fight is actually about. It is not about a university that doesn't want to fork out an unnecessary amount of money. It is about a University that has no space to hold the students it has enrolled.
Curtin is one of the biggest International Universities in W.A. This has all resulted as a massive Administration cock-up! Essentially this university -being a business focussed, money hungry institution- has enrolled way too many international, and business students than it can hold. Therefore those departments that do not house hoards of international students, loses out. Not only has the Humanities Department lost the Hayman Theatre, it has also lost areas of visual Arts. When will we recognise the Arts and its importance in our society.
Curtin is the only University in Australia that offers a non-audition based entry into its Performing Arts course. It has the highest percentage of any performace course into NIDA- National Institute of Dramatic Art. If you look closer to home, in the Arts Circle of Perth, what is showing currently, "Falling Petals" for example houses at least two ex-Hayman students: Adam Mitchell - director and Bryn Coldrick- who stars in the show. In destroying this course, the university does not only succeed in destroying many students studies, it also affects the wider art community.Courses such as this are the bed from which actors are offered a taste of the industry- with such a wide range of choices. Offering not only Performance Studies, but scriptwriting, directing, technical theatre and the sorts also.
This is a problem. I am concerned. If you are concerned, voice it. The Vice Chancellor of Curtin University doesn’t particularly want to hear from people like myself, but she needs to. Email her at this address vc@curtin.edu.au
If you have any ideas on how to help please contact me via email under the subject "UP IN SMOKE"
Cheers Angelique Or post reply on here!
angelicusjorayus@hotmail.com
Serious or not...
Tue, 23 May 2006, 10:58 amUm, you might want to read elsewhere on this site about copyright.
Both are serious issues.
There are people at AH who get paid (me included) to write this stuff, and technically if you published anything I wrote (as I still retain my copyright of the article, though it is written for AH) then I could sue you for the breach.
This exactly why playwrights are reluctant to hand over their scripts to directors and producers, and rightly so.
Let's not muddle the discussion on the Hayman Theatre with a complex addition of copyright issues, but note that as an employee at AH I was merely making you and others aware of the copyright of that article.
As a courtesy to the writers at AH and other publications, please contact the publication first just to let them know that you would like to republish their item; they may say no, they may be very happy to oblige. As writers, our words are our work - and you have just stolen someone's work.
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