Tuesday, 5 August 2014

Green Tea & Zen Baka



"Green Tea and Zen Baka is simple and slow, and proves a delightful, pleasing contrast to the frenzy of the Fringe."

Eric Karoulla, The Skinny
5 August 2014

"The human connection is surprisingly touching, and the entire experience blissfully calm."

Kelly Apter, The Scotsman
5 August 2014

"Traditional Japanese Butoh gentle movement beautifully blends with meditation in this memorably tranquil work, the surprise finale quietly satisfying."  

Brian Cooper, The Stage
10 August 2014
  

Tuesday, 1 April 2014

Foole's Day



adrift... 
upon a deep blue sea
in the hyphen between
super-natural
and
extra-ordinary
we are in limbo


Zen Baka

The genesis of Zen Baka (fool)
began with a zen mime performance called : 11 Os...
about a calligraphy artist who makes eleven attempts
to draw a perfect circle.
This work was first performed at a zen meditation centre in Edinburgh
and was later featured in the Tanabata Japanese Festival at the Scottish Museum.

Also about this time I was doing zen mime, funambula,
on the streets during the Edinburgh Festival.

Both pieces went down well with audiences,
who tended to like, or perhaps wonder at, the extremely simplicity
and minimalism of their content and style.

So a collection of works have been created in this zen-like vein :

awkward travel

aqua - objet d'art

the stone jazz daydream

take it easy

arboreal

skuba

All of these works are now encompassed under the title :

Zen Baka.


Monday, 31 March 2014

Dance Base Festival



Zen Baka

At the EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE, 2014

After a performance of daydream at Dance Base in Edinburgh,
Know The Score, curated by Charlotte Jarvis,
 I mentioned to the Artistic Director Morag Deyes
that I was travelling to Kyoto, Japan in the autumn of 2014
with a view to performing some of these pieces there.

They invited me to be part of the Dance Base Festival in August.

 Green Tea & Zen Baka
Ease into your Festival day in the garden with a refreshing cup of green tea
and a mesmerising zen-inspired performance
by minimalist performer David W W Johnstone.
This visual haiku draws on ideas from Japanese Butoh, 
the Zen Buddhist sages and John Cage...
with a gentle hint of mime and humour thrown in.
A quietly understated insight into the daydreaming mind
of a zen fool.

1 - 24 August, 2014 (Not Mondays: 4, 11, 18)
Edinburgh Festival Fringe
10.15 - 10.45 a.m. daily
Free, but ticketed.
Dance Base, Grassmarket, Edinburgh


Monday, 18 November 2013

zen baka




David appears as his mime-fool alter-ego, Limbo,
in new solo works in a series of short pieces
 under the title of

zen baka

created for his upcoming visit to Japan.

New works in the collection :

awkward travel : awaiting a lover's arrival
daydream : memories, hopes, alternate universes
stone : meditation & contemplation on a smooth white fact
take it easy : falling leaves learn survival skills
O : a zen calligraphy master draws a perfect circle
skuba : anagram 'a busk' in musical silence

-- a state of shibumi is understood.

*           *           *

KNOW THE SCORE
 Dance Base Performance Platform
Curator : Morag Deyes,  Co-Curator : Charlotte Jarvis

Saturday, 23 November at 8 p.m.
(Bar opens 7 p.m.)

Dance Base, Grassmarket, Edinburgh
0131 225 5525

Thursday, 13 June 2013

Qx : A Quixotic Rhapsody


                                  
'LAZZI actor, director, writer David WW Johnstone plugs us into the terminals of madness with an absolutely riveting performance in his revisitation of Cervantes' classic.' 
- Chrys Salt, Convener of the Dumfries and Galloway Festival, June 2013.

Performance on the Edinburgh ragged fringe will be at The Scottish Poetry Library, Sunday 4 August - 3 pm.

Friday, 14 September 2012

In the works...




Qx : a Quixotic Rapture !   "The Hero is he who exalts Good... beyond Reality !"

"The Great Achievement, Sancho, is to lose one's Reason for no reason.  For if you go truly mad for a good reason... then, you feel nothing.  Find strength in your weakness."

"I do not have to Win at this.  I only have to Be it."


Don Quixote

Tuesday, 4 September 2012

Lovely preview feature in the Chronicle:


Man Booker Prizewinning author Ben Okri’s novella The Comic Destiny has been adapted for Hammersmith’s Riverside Studios. He tells Robert Cumber how it explores the nature of storytelling, and why there’s nothing better than a good walk to get the creative juices flowing.


WHEN Ben Okri first set eyes on David Johnstone, at a book signing in Edinburgh, he knew he was the man to direct his surreal fable The Comic Destiny.
The founder of experimental theatre company Lazzi was last in a long queue of fans but the Man Booker Prize-winning author of The Famished Road claims he instantly realised there was something different about him.
“I looked at him and got a good feeling. I asked him to call me and that began a conversation, including a long walk in Hyde Park,” explains the Nigerian-born author, who lives in Little Venice.
“I like his spirit. He seemed to be someone open to surprise and without a fixed view of what theatre should be. There was just something unusual about him.”

Three years later, Johnstone’s adaptation of the novella, from Okri’s short story collection Tales of Freedom, has just finished a successful run at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe ahead of Tuesday’s opening at the Riverside Studios.

Okri describes the story, of a young couple and an asylum escapee among other ‘afflicted’ characters, in their search for the same mysterious room, as one of the hardest he has ever had to write. He always thought it would make a good play but admits it was never going to be easy to adapt, which is why he had to find the right person for the job.

“It was a forbidding task and David was intimidated by it at first because it’s not an easy text to pry open,” he says.

“It’s written very simply but it took me many, many years to write and people who have read it tend to find it difficult to grasp what’s going on.
“Every piece of writing is a very intense process, but The Comic Destiny was one of the most fraught and long-lasting processes.
“It was hard to let go (of the finished work).”
Once Okri had chosen Johnstone, he was happy to leave him to his own devices and is delighted with the result, which he describes as a ‘meeting between two visions’.
“It’s extraordinarily rich, strange, mysterious and full of energy. What you get is a different play every night, influenced by everything from the theatre of the absurd to Laurel and Hardy,” he says.
Like most of Okri’s work, The Comic Destiny explores the roots of inspiration and creativity.
He describes writing as being ‘woven’ into his life but admits the process of ‘releasing the possibility of an idea’ is far from easy.
While many authors claim physical work helps get the creative juices flowing, and the acclaimed Japanese author Haruki Marukami swears by running, Okri takes a more relaxed approach.
“Long walks are a big part of the writing process for me. I couldn’'t think while running – that’s for athletes – but walking is just the right pace to allow thoughts to bubble to the surface,” he says.
The Comic Destiny is at Hammersmith’s Riverside Studios from Tuesday to Sunday, September 9. Tickets, priced £15 to £17, are available at www.riversidestudios.co.uk or from the box office on 020 8237 1111

link to article online