To gar you ken and know me clear
I shall you show examples sere

Prior modern productions of medieval plays have often come off as flat, messy, dry, preachy.

But the people of medieval York must have had good reason to want to do these plays over and over from year to year! We believe the problem is not in the medieval texts, but in the modern habits (including misconceptions about medieval performance) that playmakers keep bringing to them, which sap them of their beauty, their fun, their life.

So we are collaboratively developing a set of specific creative practices that resist, peel back, or counterbalance modern theatrical habits. Below is the current list of the creative commitments that will serve as the guide for us all in finding this sweet spot — click on each commitment below to expand it into deeper and more specific thinking, all of which we’re positioning in public view.

We’re not going to choose between making our revival of the York Plays accurate and making them entertaining and compelling. We’re here to find that sweet spot where historically rigorous production choices are the most entertaining and compelling choices, where what is most exciting to watch and to do is what is most accurate (that’s actually the primary research question our academic organizers are here to work through). Each of the ideas below is based in new or ongoing research into medieval plays, records, and practice, many of them inspired by Mary Overlie’s Six Viewpoints Theory and Practice (we’ve already started testing out some of these ideas in practice — starting in New York, in October 2023’s Six Viewpoints Immersion). We’ve left the research references out for space, but contact us if you’d like to learn more.

HOW WE PLAY MEDIEVAL PLAYs

Ours is a collective of dozens of leaders, including academics and artists, re-enactors and historians, professional theatre experts and experimental anarchists, religious and secular. Our aesthetic will be gorgeously variegated as a result. But the “ten commitments” below summarize the common ground that is emerging from our collaborative push-and-pull: basic ideas of medieval performance that we’ll play through and play with in York 2025 —
these are currently in active development among our participants, and so are ever-changing.
Clicking on each item will expand it into much deeper and more specific hashing and thinking — the expansions are mainly there for participants’ reference, but curious spectators are welcome to take a look!