TY - JOUR
T1 - Choreographing conjoinment
T2 - Side Show’s fleshly fixations and disability simulation
AU - Yates, Samuel
N1 - Funding Information:
Samuel Yates is a doctoral candidate at George Washington University. His dissertation, ‘Cripping Broadway: Neoliberal performances of disability in the American Musical’ was awarded the 2017 Helen Krich Chinoy dissertation fellowship from the American Society for Theatre Research. Other work can be found in The Matter of Disability (University of Michigan Press) and A Cultural History of Disability in the Modern Age (Bloomsbury).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Intellect Ltd Article. English language.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - This article aims to amplify disability theory’s impact in performance studies by generating a framework for understanding disability representation in musical theatre. Taking the original and revival Broadway productions of Side Show (1997, 2014) as a case study, I articulate how the musical simulates disability through a ‘choreography of conjoinment’ that relies on the exceptional ablebodiedness of the actors playing conjoined twins Daisy and Violet Hilton. Using disability as a category of analysis reveals how disabled bodies are made to be maximally productive iterations of themselves in musicals. To support this claim, I track the shift from the 1997 production’s co-construction of disability by the actors and audience, which replicates the social model of disability, to the 2014 revival’s grounding in a diagnostic realism typical of disability’s medical model. Side Show’s trajectory generates possibilities for considering the musical as an archive for disability representation and knowledge, bioethical inquiry, and artistic innovation.
AB - This article aims to amplify disability theory’s impact in performance studies by generating a framework for understanding disability representation in musical theatre. Taking the original and revival Broadway productions of Side Show (1997, 2014) as a case study, I articulate how the musical simulates disability through a ‘choreography of conjoinment’ that relies on the exceptional ablebodiedness of the actors playing conjoined twins Daisy and Violet Hilton. Using disability as a category of analysis reveals how disabled bodies are made to be maximally productive iterations of themselves in musicals. To support this claim, I track the shift from the 1997 production’s co-construction of disability by the actors and audience, which replicates the social model of disability, to the 2014 revival’s grounding in a diagnostic realism typical of disability’s medical model. Side Show’s trajectory generates possibilities for considering the musical as an archive for disability representation and knowledge, bioethical inquiry, and artistic innovation.
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U2 - 10.1386/SMT.13.1.67_1
DO - 10.1386/SMT.13.1.67_1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85147351558
SN - 1750-3159
VL - 13
SP - 67
EP - 78
JO - Studies in Musical Theatre
JF - Studies in Musical Theatre
IS - 1
ER -