'I, Malvolio' is a very, very funny show, a clown show, but there is Beckettian darkness in the character. Some real darkness, some right close to the edge of despair moments.
— Tim Crouch
It's important to find characters that share sympathy with a young audience, not just in the story but their role in the world.
Keeping young people away from Shakespeare is like removing a link to their humanness.
As actors, we do our best to keep things light and to encourage in the audience an openness to the changing atoms in the room.
Anything one can do to provoke and inspire an interest in the works of Shakespeare in a young audience is fair game. Anything.
It's important for me, politically, to see that theater isn't just about the powerful.
Uncertainty is a very good thing: it's the beginning of an investigation, and the investigation should never end.
Art is a subjective thing, and it should be a subjective thing. And the difficulty of subjectivity is that it becomes hugely problematized when you start applying large sums of money to art objects. That's where it all starts to get a bit sticky.
'Malvolio' is the one show of mine that will not die. I've performed it more than 200 times all over the place.
In many respects, theater is still grappling with problems of reality and representation that the visual art movement realized were unimportant many years ago.
In 'Malvolio,' the audience laugh at me, and I use that laughter to crack open the question as to why they are laughing.
Each of my Shakespeare pieces is different to the other, but each espouses a set of philosophies common to all my theatre work.
Theatre critics have no special access to the truth. And there should be no objective truth to art.
I'm excited about the idea of an act of theatre triggering a parallel creative act of writing.
To have a sense of contemporary ownership of Shakespeare is the most important thing to his work.
Children and teenagers don't easily relate to stories about kings and dukes, and to tell only stories about kings and dukes is to ignore the regular people.
I'm on a mission to make people aware that I'm not a solo artist. I'm sometimes challenged by the branding of Tim Crouch.
There is a satire that exists in 'My Arm,' but there is also an honoring of some of the stronger ideas that I've raided from visual art.
I'm attracted to the underrated characters.
It's quite rare for a group of people to come together for a live event that isn't loud music. A live event that enables thinking to take place, to take place collectively. It's unique to theatre. It's a quality I never want to see diminished.
A child knows when they are on the receiving end of a didactic exercise, or when they are sitting in the shadow of something else.
'The Author' is subtly unflinching in its satirical attack on certain practices in the creation of art and the mediation of violence.
Unease is not an emotion I get often in the theatre, and I like it.
A mental shutdown can happen when a young person is put in front of a Shakespeare play. My pieces are designed to release young audiences into the story and then creep up with the real Shakespeare, almost by stealth.
'The Author' is a play about responsibility, how active we are as spectators and how responsible we are for what we choose to look at.
I don't want real life necessarily to be seen only as a context to heighten the deepness my work.
Theatre can be so patronising. So often, it's just proselytising for the theatre.
I am particularly interested in creating a relationship between ideas of reception in conceptual art and theater.