We could not leave Warwick without visiting the memorial chapel at Saint Mary's Church and paying our respects to those who had laid down their lives.
Women & Theatre are working in partnership with the Birmingham Hippodrome and the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers Museum (Royal Warwickshire) in the delivery of a participatory heritage project exploring the experiences of young men and boys from Birmingham during WWI.
The project will bring together a group of 14-25 year old males to research the experiences of young recruits during WWI and share them through live performances around an old drill hall site area in Thorp Street, a temporary exhibition at the RRF Museum and this digital archive. We will be updating this blog with material as the project progresses, and hope you will enjoy an insight into the process.
We are very fortunate to have received funding for this project from the Heritage Lottery Fund, The Grimmit Trust, The Cole Charitable Trust, The Roughley Trust, The Rowlands Trust and Service Birmingham. We are also grateful to Chung Ying Garden and the Gallan Group for their permission to use the old Drill Hall site.
Saturday, 30 November 2013
RRF museum visit continued....
Stephanie Bennett (curator at the RRF museum) had kindly arranged for re-enactor Paul Thomson to come along to the session. Paul inspired the boys with his "day in the life of a WWI soldier". He brought in some objects from the period for the boys to handle...
....which we think they rather enjoyed!!
At the end of the day we got the boys started on some 'drill', under the watchful eye of actor and support artist Greg Hobbs, an ex-soldier himself. We see it as a good step towards our production - what do you think?!
Visit to the Royal Regimental Fusiliers (Royal Warwicshire) musem, Warwick - November 2013
In November we visited the RRF museum (Royal Warwickshire) in Warwick to learn more about the living conditions of the soldiers fighting in the First World War. The participants were asked to develop emotion graphs which emphasize the feeling of the soldiers during the Great War and to gather data from different media (notebooks, diaries, newspapers, etc) in order to create complete biographies of soldiers.
They also got to try on some of the uniforms!
(modelled on the right by our Romanian placement student, Andrada!)
Saturday, 19 October 2013
Inspiration session continued
As well as the poem, Chocolate Soldiers All, we also looked with the boys at a couple of original 'letters home', written by soldiers going into battle, incase they should not return.
The boys were asked to create a character, a soldier recruited from Birmingham. They then wrote a 'final letter home' as that character to their loved ones, just as the soldiers did when they joined up. Have a look at the selection below that represent their response to two ‘letters home’ written by Birmingham lads and men. These are likely to become part of the final production in some way.
Friday, 18 October 2013
Inspiration Day session
We met for the first time at the Birmingham Hippodrome.
During our first meeting with the boys, we shared this artefact: the poem ''Chocolate Soldiers All'' written by Richard Louis-Bertrand Moore and published in the ''Birmingham Post'' at the end 1916.
During our first meeting with the boys, we shared this artefact: the poem ''Chocolate Soldiers All'' written by Richard Louis-Bertrand Moore and published in the ''Birmingham Post'' at the end 1916.
“Chocolate
Soldiers All”
THERE were three battalions raised in “Brum”
About two years ago,
They dres’t us in blue
And put us on view
And petted us don’t-yer-know.
They put us in billets at Sutton,
Paid 19 and 3d. a head,
Lived on the best,
Thought it a jest,
And the populace were not the least impressed,
For the wiseacres smiled and said:
“They’re only for people to look at,
“That’s what they’ve been raised for;
“They’re only chocolate soldiers,
“They’ll never go to the war”.
Then we were shifted to Wensleydale,
And, after six weeks up there,
They moved us again
Down to the Plain,
And khaki we had to wear.
We’d finished with billets for ever
And laid the blue on one side,
We went thro’ the mill
At Bayonet drill
And divisional schemes which were harder still,
And still the knowalls cried:
“They’re only the City Battalions
“So spick and span and spruce:
“Birmingham’s chocolate soldiers,
“For ornament, not use.”
Then we were shifted from Salisbury Plain,
And, after that, in due course
Bu train and ship
We took a trip
To the jolly old B.E. Force.
An’ ever since then we’ve been scrappin’
Or restin’ (that means fatigues),
And the boys shaped well
‘Mid the shot and shell
And we’re been in places that rivalled hell
And marched for many leagues:
But we often say to each other now
(It’s a joke we can’t forget):
“They said we were ‘Chocolate Soldiers,’
“But we haven’t melted yet.”
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