Sydney Zarlengo in “The Curious Incident of the Dog within the Night-Time.” (Photo by Shannon Fornes; lighting by Rori Haft)
“The world is full of obvious things which nobody by any chance ever observes.”
― Mark Haddon, The Curious Incident of the Dog within the Night-Time
Sydney Zarlengo introduces themself with many descriptors: “‘I’m a queer, autistic, disabled, non-binary actor-educator-composer.” The 21-year-old theatre-and-psychology main speaks with poise, authenticity, and a ardour for creating accessible theatre. This pressure of nature is presently directing and enjoying the lead function of Christopher of their faculty thesis manufacturing of The Curious Incident of the Dog within the Night-Time, which can be the primary time this oft-produced play is being staged with a completely all-neurodivergent solid and crew. (It runs April 21-23 at Mount Holyoke’s Rooke Theatre, and the backstage course of has been diligently documented since final fall on Instagram.)
Neurodivergent is a time period coined by activist Kassiane Asasumasu, outlined as “having a brain that functions in ways that diverge significantly from the dominant societal standards of ‘normal.’ For instance, having developmental, intellectual, psychiatric, or learning disabilities.” While this time period is usually culturally restricted to these with autistic spectrum dysfunction and/or attention-deficit/hyperactivity dysfunction, Kassiane is adamant about together with a wider vary of circumstances beneath the neurodivergent umbrella, together with dyscalculia, dyslexia, dyspraxia, obsessive-compulsive dysfunction (OCD), Tourette syndrome, and extra.
For Sydney, this manufacturing of Curious Incident feels prefer it has been a lifetime within the making, although the framework for this particular idea started to emerge 4 years in the past. The character of Christopher just isn’t described as autistic within the authentic 2003 e book by Mark Haddon or within the common stage adaptation by Simon Stephens, which debuted in London in 2012, then got here to Broadway in 2014. Still, the character and narrative developed right into a touchstone for members of each the incapacity and autistic communities.
“The amount of people I know who read that for a summer reading book and then realized they were autistic is, like, half the autistic people I know, including myself,” mentioned Sydney. When they learn the e book at camp, they recalled realizing, “This is me on a page. Why am I on a page? What is happening?”
When Sydney noticed the play’s nationwide tour, they reveled within the probability to see a personality they recognized with so profoundly, although that pleasure was overshadowed by the week-long migraine they acquired because of the design selections in director Marianne Elliott’s staging, which Sydney known as “the most inaccessible production I have ever seen.”
For Zarlengo, the present’s unpredictable loud sounds, strobe lights, and different manufacturing parts, ostensibly designed to evoke for neurotypical audiences the expertise of being inside an autistic mind, solely detracted from the narrative and contributed to an surroundings of sensory overwhelm, which is largely incompatible for a lot of neurodivergent potential viewers members. In brief, the present was alienating the exact viewers it was making an attempt on some stage to signify.
There was one other difficulty with the unique staging, as many famous that Christopher was solid in London, New York, and on tour solely with neurotypical actors. One of the oldsters sounding the alarm about this was Mickey Rowe, who in 2017 grew to become the primary overtly autistic actor to play Christopher.
“Sydney is the next generation of autistic and disabled theatremaker,” enthused Rowe, who has turn out to be a mentor for Sydney and who has chronicled his personal private experiences within the e book Fearlessly Different. “Their production is exactly what the world needs now. I hope that the commercial theatre takes note, and should Broadway or the National Theatre ever choose to revive Curious Incident, I hope they would consider interviewing openly autistic directors.”
Added Rowe, “Disability inclusion is not ‘charity work’. Disabled folks are professional, badass, sexy, and have agency, as Sydney demonstrates with their production. People with disabilities are some of the best creative problem solvers in the whole world. Because we have to be! Disabled people have to be creative problem solvers every single day to navigate a world that wasn’t built for us.”
A second viewing of Curious Incident, in a manufacturing that largely repeated the unique manufacturing’s design selections, acquired Sydney’s wheels turning, and a good friend inspired them to create their very own, extra accessible manufacturing. Sydney used their lived expertise as a theatre scholar to critique and enhance upon conventional theatre classroom, audition, and rehearsal strategies, and likewise let the rising subject of accessible arts training, paired with their experiences as an educator, information their selections as a director.
Sydney talked about that many autistic people come into performing courses to search out that the talents being taught are ones that they’ve already taught themselves to outlive the unwritten guidelines of socialization rising up. This is known as masking, i.e., hiding instinctual habits to look extra neurotypical. The framework for Sydney’s manufacturing thus grew to become honoring the wealth of data, the other ways of being and transferring, and the lived experiences of individuals within the room. Sydney has prioritized holding the intentionality of accessibility all through the method. An instance: a bag of stim toys is supplied at first of rehearsals (stimming refers to self-stimulating habits, a standard trait of neurodivergent people). In the publicity for the piece, a visible story is supplied to minimize anxiousness for ticket holders, displaying them photos and descriptions of what to anticipate as an viewers member.
The manufacturing put out a name for actors in final October, saying that auditions have been “open to anybody from any background in the Pioneer Valley area who identifies as neurodivergent and would like to be a part of this groundbreaking project,” with a be aware including that they have been defining neurodivergence broadly, to incorporate anxiousness, melancholy, PTSD, and different psychological sicknesses.
Sydney discovered that folks resonated extra with the “all-neurodivergent” language than with the present’s title itself. The greatest motivator was desirous to be part of this historic manufacturing.
To counter the inaccessibility of the unique staging, Sydney’s design selections “include limited light and projection movement to be more sensitive to people with photosensitivity/processing disorders, blocking the actors to sit whenever they’re not actively needed to be standing, and holding a deliberate awareness to sensory sensitivities in costume design, making sure pieces are not scratchy or uncomfortable so that all cast can do their best work without distraction.”
As that final lodging makes clear, a whole lot of what makes this Curious Incident particular isn’t simply the accessibility for the viewers however for its solid and group. Members of that group spoke in regards to the profound pleasure of being in a collaborative, accessible rehearsal room the place their complete selves have been welcome.
“This experience has been such an uplifting experience,” mentioned Talia Pott, who performs Voice 3 and others. “I have had both positive and negative theatre experiences in the past, but this is the first one where I really felt I could truly be myself. Knowing that I can show up to rehearsal after a bad day and I will be unequivocally loved, supported, and comforted. This cast is becoming a family, and I truly appreciate everyone for being their authentic, beautiful selves.”
“I love this production because everyone is so nice and we all get along really well and help each other learn,” added Eben, who performs Ed. “We’re figuring out how the show looks as a cast, and it really feels like we all are contributing in various ways to make the show what it needs to be. We have such kinship with each other, and I feel really supported in this environment in a way I haven’t experienced before.”
Added R.A.S. Familant, who performs Voice 1 and others, “In my previous experiences, theatre communities have been exclusionary cliques where people with disabilities like mine are not welcome except as tokens who aren’t taken seriously. We aren’t treated as a part of the group; we’re treated as a pet or a gimmick.” Or nonetheless worse, Familant mentioned, “as a liability. People fear they will be accused of discrimination if they don’t include me, but allowing me into a space often reveals just how inaccessible it is—something others would rather ignore than acknowledge. Canes are treated as only acceptable onstage when they’re part of a costume, and not as a mobility aid that the actor actually relies upon. Instead of considering all the ways a cane could be incorporated into choreography, in movement auditions people take one look at my mobility aid and automatically write me out. Theatre is an exclusionary community that often puts on disabilities and other marginalized identities as costumes.”
Enthused co-director Grace MacIntyre, “I don’t think it’s far-fetched to say this show has changed my life,” including that her “favorite moments with the cast are when they contribute their ideas to the scene…Just because we are all neurodivergent doesn’t mean we all immediately click in terms of personality and communication. Like any group of people, we have moments of confusion and mistakes. But we work hard to make those moments far and few between, because we know very well what it’s like to be misunderstood and misrepresented.”
Producing the present has not been with out its challenges: Physical limitations of the efficiency venue and administrative roadblocks to providing a totally accessible manufacturing have supplied alternatives for additional inventive problem-solving. Sydney can be clear that casting would ideally have been extra inclusive, representing a extra various vary of lived expertise within the performers.
“The type of neurodivergent that is going to be palatable to pass through an interview for college is a very minute section of that (population),” they conceded. “Our cast is mostly white, mostly late diagnosed, and mostly low-support needs. That’s just how our cast ended up—our representation of neurodiversity is a very small subsection of neurodiversity. We’re trying to be like, ‘Hi, we’re very privileged, but we’re doing something to prove a point to you, and hopefully you guys can pick this up and run with it.’”
In phrases of what they need audiences to take means from this Curious Incident, Sydney hopes they really feel it on two ranges.
“I want them to go, ‘Wow, that was an amazing show, oh my gosh, that was amazing’—not in the sense of, ‘Oh my gosh, disabled people can do things and make art,’ but in the sense of “Wow, that was amazing…Also, all of them were disabled? That’s frying my brain!’ Not in an inspiration porn way—in a good, brain-frying kind of way.”
Sydney and their group hope that others will expertise the eagerness challenge and be motivated to include a few of the practices into their very own theatrical work.
“What I’m doing is a big deal, but it really shouldn’t be,” Sydney mentioned emphatically.
Sydney Zarlengo’s staging of The Curious Incident of the Dog within the Night-Time runs April 21-23 on the Rooke Theatre at Mount Holyoke College.
Ok. Woodzick (they/them) is a theatre artist and journalist presently residing in Northern Wisconsin on Anishinabek land. They maintain an MFA in modern efficiency from Naropa University, and their writing has appeared in Theatre Topics and HowlRound. They are the founding father of The Non-Binary Monologues Project and produce and host the rebooted Theatrical Mustang podcast, distributed month-to-month by American Theatre. More at www.woodzick.com.