End Meeting For All is a Forced Entertainment production commissioned by the framework of International Production Houses. Co-production: HAU Hebbel am Ufer (Berlin), Künstlerhaus Mousonturm (Frankfurt a.M.), PACT Zollverein (Essen). Supported within the framework of the Alliance of International Production Houses by the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media and supported by Hessisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst within the framework of the intergenerational audience development initiative ALL IN – FÜR PUBLIKUM JEDEN ALTERS.

- 28.04.2020, 9 p.m.Episode 1
- 05.05.2020, 9 p.m.Episode 2
- 12.05.2020, 9 p.m.Episode 3
Created in April during the Corona virus lockdown, Forced Entertainment’s “End Meeting For All” is a fragmentary online work in three short episodes, each taking the form of a Zoom meeting. With members of the group calling in from their separate home bases in Sheffield, London and Berlin, the familiar grid of screens is soon beset by technical difficulties and awash with creative misunderstandings. There are fake tears and bad wigs, missed connections, smeared make up and glimpses from the window as well as an unsteady stream of interruptions by cats, noises in the corridor and ghosts. Sometimes poignant and often ridiculous, troubled and strangely hallucinatory, “End Meeting For All” summons a world in which the lockdown appears to have been going on for a very very very long time – a meeting that never quite happens and which soon becomes a chaos of costumes and confusion, mismatched intentions and electronic errors.
Language: English
Streaming on youtube, all videos available till the end of June
Please notice: During the coronavirus pandemic Forced Entertainment is committed to creating new work for digital distribution to continue to connect with people and to respond to the times we are living in. Their goal is to make their online programme free and accessible for all, and they need your support to achieve that. If you enjoy and value their work please help by making a donation here.
Cast & Credits
Conceived & Created by: Forced Entertainment
Performers: Robin Arthur, Tim Etchells, Richard Lowdon, Claire Marshall, Cathy Naden, Terry O’Connor.
Directed by: Tim Etchells
Zoom advice and screen recording: Jason Crouch
Post-Production video: Hugo Glendinning
Post-production sound: John Avery
With thanks for music in episode two:
J. S. Bach “Sarabande from b minor partita no.2 for violin solo”
Violin – Aisha Orazbayeva
Alasdair Roberts – “Slowly Growing Old”, from the album Farewell Sorrow


Biography
Forced Entertainment
www.forcedentertainment.com
Als impulsgebende Vorreiter des europäischen Experimentaltheaters realisieren Forced Entertainment seit 1984 Arbeiten in den Bereichen Theater, Performance, Installation, digitale Medien und Film. Tim Etchells ist künstlerischer Leiter der Kompanie und zudem als Autor und Bildender Künstler aktiv. Im März 2016 erhielt Forced Entertainment als erste Kompanie den International Ibsen Award, einen der weltweit renommiertesten Theaterpreise. Ihre Produktion “Real Magic” wurde zum Theatertreffen 2017 der Berliner Festspiele eingeladen. 2018 produzierten Forced Entertainment zusammen mit Künstlerhaus Mousonturm und Schauspiel Frankfurt im Bockenheimer Depot ihre gefeierte Uraufführung von “Out Of Order”. Viele der neueren Arbeiten des Kollektivs entstehen in Koproduktion mit den Partner*innen des Bündnisses für internationale Produktionshäuser. So auch ihre Performance “End Meeting For All”, die ausschließlich im Live Stream zu sehen ist und die wir gemeinsam mit PACT Zollverein und HAU Hebbel am Ufer produzieren und zeitgleich im Internet zeigen.
More Information
Falling Into Place
A note on “End Meeting for All”
This project – in the form of three short improvised video pieces, linked or connected as chapters – had its informal beginnings in the early days of the lockdown in the UK. In early March we had abandoned physical rehearsals in Sheffield for a new theatre work, “Under Bright Light”, which was due to open in Germany on 23rd April. Instead of working, everyone was home alone dealing, in different circumstances, with the unfolding reality and stresses of the pandemic. In the weeks that followed, like everyone else, we met up online, discussing the situation, health and fears for the future, our now-cancelled-or-postponed plans, the survival of the company, doom from the newspaper, frustrations with the UK government. Although we weren’t working on anything creative, and had no particular impulse to do so at that point, I realised we were slowly starting to understand the Zoom grid as a kind of stage – a space we shared but in which we were nonetheless both connected and disconnected. As theatre makers who’ve long had an interest in collage as a methodology, something chimed with this, and with the way that the grid of screens brought together different partially connected realities in different cities, the screen a kind of membrane or imperfect portal between worlds.
Preparations for “End Meeting For All” began with the kinds of improvisation (fooling around) that characterise work in Forced Entertainment’s studio – experiments without clear goal, in which the ‘situation’ at hand and materials of different kinds are tested, manipulated, undermined, their problems or limits embraced and subverted. We were drawn to content that came directly from the context – from the experience and introspection of lockdown, concerns about health and family, the very particular problems of communicating online and the collision of theatrical ambitions with crowded and cluttered domestic situations.
We’re no strangers to working online; meetings with some people present only remotely have long been part of the mix and we did our first live stream – of the durational performance Speak Bitterness – back in 2008. Since then, thanks to presentations of “24-Hour Quizoola!”, “And on the Thousandth Night”, “12am: Awake & Looking Down” and “Complete Works: Tabletop Shakespeare” via internet, it’s often felt that particular works have made their rightful place in that kind of broadcast, where the improvised onscreen action can be paralleled by exchange from audience on Twitter, Facebook and other platforms.
This new work we’re presenting now – “End Meeting For All” – is a strange hybrid object though; recorded live in a single take, each episode is streamed as a recording – a fixed trace of past time. The work itself has gone from conception to rehearsal / preparation and recording in a rapid process that’s been (like human interaction for so many people at the moment) entirely remote. In working quickly, we’ve developed a rough and ready approach that embraces the jagged edges inherent in the medium, relishing the mistakes, technical limits, unruly energies and chaotic possibilities of our six-screen Zoom grid, learning on our feet to compose and make comical and poetic moves inside a dramaturgy that weaves between the different screens.
The end result – cross-cutting people in different locations, contradictory impulses played out over one another – comes in three episodes that share a mediated theatricality whilst proposing their own quite distinct flavours and atmospheres. There are dysfunctional conversations, private rituals and dressing up games, melodramas alongside everyday banter, poignancy wrapped in absurdity, irreverence masking fear, intimacy held in tension by distance. It’s a work that’s arisen from the fraught context we’re all in, marked by our finding ways to support each other and our wider communities, made in the frame of our sheltering from the horror, meanwhile devouring news, counting and waiting out the days, while our government stumbles around. It’s a fragment of ‘now’ falling into place via improvisation, a notebook sketch in three parts, non-scenes for an impossible theatre, a kind of echo-location, a reaching for something.
We hope you enjoy the work.
Stay safe. Hold politicians to account. Support those who are vulnerable.
Tim Etchells, for Forced Entertainment, April, 2020.