‘All over the world, we don’t move a lot anymore’

Published May 7, 2023
Hannah Gaff, the American movement teacher, trains her students at Arts Council.—White Star
Hannah Gaff, the American movement teacher, trains her students at Arts Council.—White Star

KARACHI: One of the studios at the Arts Council of Pakistan, Karachi, is abuzz with activity. A dozen or so acting students are avidly listening to, and following instructions of, an American movement teacher Hannah Gaff — given with a great deal of artistic flair in English translated to them into Urdu by one of their fellow pupils.

“Give each other a high-five,” she exclaims, and a few minutes later, “Look into each other’s eyes and don’t say anything.” The young boys and girls stand still in pairs, looking at one another quietly, some with a fair degree of shyness, others concentrating hard.

The teacher takes a 10-minute break, a gap enough for Dawn to catch up with her. An amiable person that she is, she answers all the questions with the kind of eagerness that only artists show.

Hannah Gaff hopes to give her students physical tools to tell stories using their bodies

“I’m a physical theatre artist from the US, based mostly in San Francisco. I do a lot of international work. I have a theatre company called Uplift Physical Theatre. We make acrobatic theatre,” she says.

On the collaboration for which she is in Karachi, Ms Gaff said, “I had contacts with the Arts Council of Pakistan, Karachi. I’m a Fulbright specialist, so we were matched up. They wanted a specialist to teach physical theatre.”

This is her first time in Pakistan, though she does a lot of work internationally, so how has her experience been so far? “I haven’t seen a lot Pakistan yet but I have spent a lot of time here [Arts Council] and everyone’s been so kind and welcoming. I’m very impressed with the range of classes and events they have.”

Answering a question about the key things that she wants to impart to the students, Ms Gaff said, “They already have three years of acting training. The part that I’m hoping to bring is to give them physical tools to find characters and tell stories using their bodies. We’ll be doing theatre, physical clowning, acrobatic theatre, images etc… different ways.”

The students at the end of the training session will show some of the work that they will have learnt.

When asked, since her focus is on movement, whether South Asians have a different body type, the theatre practitioner said, “I don’t think so. People have bodies everywhere and they’re all the same. Somehow we’re uniquely different. I think all over the world we don’t move a lot anymore. We’ve stopped moving… We spend less of our time being physical or outside and more time on our computers and devices. I think we’re more challenged than we used to be.”

Published in Dawn, May 7th, 2023

Opinion

Editorial

Time to deliver
Updated 11 Nov, 2024

Time to deliver

Pakistan must display a serious commitment to climate change adaptation and mitigation at home.
Smaller government
11 Nov, 2024

Smaller government

THE IMF bailout programme has put the government under pressure to curtail its spending, especially current...
Unsafe inheritance
11 Nov, 2024

Unsafe inheritance

DESPITE regulations, the troubling practice of robbing women of their rightful inheritance — the culprits are ...
Quetta bombing
Updated 10 Nov, 2024

Quetta bombing

THERE appears to be no end to the stream of violent incidents occurring in Balochistan, indicating a clear failure ...
Burdened courts
10 Nov, 2024

Burdened courts

ACCORDING to recent reports, the new chief justice has set about implementing a recently adopted plan for clearing...
Playing in Pakistan
10 Nov, 2024

Playing in Pakistan

MOHSIN Naqvi, Pakistan’s cricket chief, has shown a brave face. Now he has to be unrelenting and put the onus on...