Helen Ramoutsaki’s Wet: an appetite for the tropics project takes the Wet Tropics country, a character, a camera and a collection of poems, combining them in works of live oral-spatial literature to suit particular performance situations. Helen uses poems and narrative sections as blocks, like the ceramic tesserae of mosaics, so they can be arranged and rearranged to fit seamlessly in textual tessellations. This project started in 2013 and will be continuing over the next few years. The script for Wet: an appetite for the tropics is being developed under the JUTE Theatre’s Enter Stage Write program in Cairns with support from dramaturge Peter Matheson.
The character Ruanna has spent her time wandering from place to place but eventually finds herself in the Wet Tropics. Over time, her fascination with the rich environment grows as she translates her experiences in poems and photos. Will her relationship with the Wet Tropics environment be enough to hold her there or will another type of love relationship pull her away?
The performance scripts are being developed in two main stages. The first stage has been an ‘appetiser’, a half-hour script. A ‘main course’ script is now underway and will be a full-length theatrical production.
The poems and their image sequences are also created to stand alone or in combination without the narrative. As the project develops, Helen has been presenting the poems with images at festivals and performance events, including the 2013 Worcestershire Literary Festival in the UK (follow the link for a review by Kate Lakie).