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John Constable (writer)

John Hamilton Constable (born 22 July 1952) is an English playwright, poet, performer and activist, author of The Southwark Mysteries. He is also known as John Crow, the urban shaman of Cross Bones.

Life edit

Constable was born in Much Wenlock, Shropshire in 1952. He was educated at Oswestry School (1963–69)[1] and Queens' College, Cambridge (1970–73). In the mid-1970s, he performed at David Medalla's Artists For Democracy. From 1977-79, he lived in Japan and travelled widely in the Far East, and from 1980–82, toured Europe with the street theatre group Sheer Madness, playing Hamlet in the devised show Shakespeare’s Greatest Hits.[2] From 1984, following the production of Black Mas by Foco Novo he returned to live in London. His plays included The Fit Up, Tulip Futures, Iceman and The False Hairpiece. He also wrote children's plays, radio dramas, and dramatisations of Gormenghast and The Mosquito Coast for the David Glass Ensemble.[3]

In 1986 he moved to The Borough, in Southwark, then a poor and much maligned part of south London. The area had a profound influence on his work, which draws freely on its 2,000 year history and the far-reaching changes that saw it reinvented as prime real estate in the heart of London. In Sicily in 1994 he met his companion Katharine Nicholls, a craftworker and community outreach worker. In their activism and esoteric work at Crossbones and with outsiders, she also became known as Katy Kaos. One of the poems in The Southwark Mysteries is entitled kateEkaos.[4] She stage-managed his solo shows and site-specific events, co-produced the epic productions of The Southwark Mysteries and created the original “Hand-Maid” limited edition of The Book of The Goose.

In 1995 he wrote and performed a solo show I Was An Alien Sex God. This inaugurated a new phase of experimental writing which produced his best-known work, The Southwark Mysteries. These began in 1996 as a cycle of mystical poems revealed to his shamanistic alter-ego, John Crow, by “The Goose”, who claimed to have been buried in the unconsecrated Cross Bones Graveyard. The Winchester Geese were medieval sex workers in the Bankside brothels licensed by the Bishop of Winchester under Ordinances dating back to 1161. The Southwark Mysteries grew from a poem cycle to a contemporary mystery play, first performed in Shakespeare's Globe and Southwark Cathedral on 23 April 2000.

From 2004 to 2012 he was artistic director of the community arts group Southwark Mysteries, conducting guided walks, workshops and site-specific performances inspired by the work. The Halloween of Cross Bones, conducted annually from 1998 to 2010, ended with a candle-lit procession to the gates of Crossbones, the outcasts' burial ground. He led a long campaign to protect the burial ground and to establish a garden of remembrance on the site. A new production of The Southwark Mysteries was staged in Southwark Cathedral in 2010.[5]

In November 2010 John Constable was awarded an Honorary Fellowship of London South Bank University for services to the arts and community: “… for his vision and imagination, for his deep commitment to our local area, for his work in reclaiming lost histories and, above all, for his belief in the transformative power of writing and drama...[6] At Southwark's Civic Award Ceremony in May 2011, he received The Liberty of the Old Metropolitan Borough of Southwark.[7] In recognition of his work at Crossbones, and for the human rights of sex workers and other outsiders, Constable was named Campaigner of the Year at the 2011 Erotic Awards.[8] His Sha-Manic Plays, Gormenghast, The Southwark Mysteries and Secret Bankside – Walks In The Outlaw Borough are published by Oberon Books. In 2014 Thin Man Press published Spark In The Dark, his first collection of poetry[9]

In 2020 he moved to Glastonbury, drawing on his first year living in the town for his book 'Grail' (2022).

Plays edit

John Constable's first play, Black Mas, was inspired by a visit to the Trinidad Carnival in 1982. It explores the adventures of two white British musicians visiting Trinidad for fresh inspiration and getting out of their depth under the heady influence of Carnival. The Guardian's Robin Thornber wrote: "It's a powerful piece that works on many levels, using the exotic trappings of its setting to cast its spell, but probing incessantly into the murky depths of racial and sexual mythology."[10] The play, directed by Roland Rees for Foco Novo, opened at the New End Theatre, Hampstead followed by a UK tour. Other early work includes The Fit Up (Nuffield Theatre Southampton) and The Complete Casanova (Proteus-Horshoe Theatre, Croydon Warehouse). He was commissioned by RADA to write Hot Fondue, a contemporary play loosely based on Schnitzler's La Ronde, directed by Roland Rees14.[11]

In the 1990s, having worked with physical theatre director David Glass on the devised show Bozo's Dead, he was commissioned to write the stage adaptation of Gormenghast for the David Glass Ensemble. His 1994 play Tulip Futures concerned Tulip mania, the seventeenth century speculation on tulips which nearly bankrupt the Dutch economy. Tulip Futures was nominated for the Peggy Ramsay Award.

Iceman is a black comedy about the war on drugs: an undercover policeman gets so deep into his cover, he winds up busting himself. It was short-listed for the Verity Bargate Award and produced by Brute Farce at the White Bear Theatre, Kennington.

In 1995, Constable wrote and performed I Was an Alien Sex God, directed by Di Sherlock. The show opened in London at Battersea Arts Centre, followed by a popular and critically acclaimed run on the Edinburgh Fringe. Ian Shuttleworth's review began by quoting its most memorable line: '... "Let's get this straight, Commissioner - you're saying that if David Bowie and I have sex, it'll destroy the universe?" John Constable fully exploits his passing resemblance to the Thin White Duke in his mind-blowingly weird one-man show which takes in acid trips, mind-body transference, quantum physics, Berlin gay clubs and the end of the world as we know it.'[12]

Constable's subsequent work seems intent on dissolving the lines between art and life.[original research?] In the introduction to Sha-Manic Plays, he acknowledged John Crow as a literary persona appearing in his work in various guises. In his next work, John Crow took on a life of his own. According to Constable, The Southwark Mysteries was "revealed by The Goose to John Crow at Crossbones... on the night of the 23rd November 1996. My shamanic double had somehow raised the Spirit of a medieval Whore, licensed by a Bishop, yet allegedly denied Christian burial."[13] In The Book of The Constable, one of the poems of The Southwark Mysteries, 'The Goose and the Crow' seem to prophesy the chain of coincidences that lead Constable to write a contemporary mystery play with the support of the Very Rev'd Colin Slee, Dean of Southwark Cathedral, and the actor Mark Rylance, then artistic director of Shakespeare's Globe. In the play, Jesus ('The Son of Man in the street') returns to Southwark to save its lost souls, the heretic John Crow, and The Goose in the guise of Mary Magdalene. The play premièred in Shakespeare's Globe – with the climactic Harrowing of Hell scene staged in Southwark Cathedral – on Easter Sunday, 23 April 2000. The Dean defended the performance of this controversial work in the Cathedral. A headline in The Sunday Telegraph read: 'Dean rejects critics of Southwark's "swearing Jesus" Mystery Play'.[14]

Selected texts from The Southwark Mysteries featured in his site-specific ritual dramas - The Anatomy Class (The Old Operating Theatre), The Goose At Liberty (Southwark Playhouse), The Halloween of Cross Bones, conducted annually from 1998 to 2010, which culminated at the gates of the former burial ground.

Constable's later work similarly drew on the history and contemporary culture of his south London neighbourhood. He wrote the libretto for South of the River, the ENO community opera performed in a big top in Potters Fields.[15]

In 2013, he wrote a one-man show Spare - inspired by the life and work of the south London artist and magician Austin Osman Spare – which he performed in Treadwell's Bookshop and in the White Bear Theatre, Kennington, where Spare himself used to drink and had once exhibited his paintings.[16]

In 2022 he was commissioned to write a new Mummers Play based on Glastonbury's St George legend. The 'Glastonbury St George and The Dragon Mummers Play' was performed in Glastonbury Abbey on 3rd June as part of the town's Queens Platinum Jubilee celebrations.

Poetry edit

The first part of The Southwark Mysteries comprises a cycle of mystical poems, seven Vision Books in which The Goose initiates John Crow into her “Secret History” and “Mysteries”. These two literary personas guide the reader on a journey through 2,000 years of Southwark's history, reimagined through the eyes of outcasts and outsiders. The verses range freely, from archaic ballad form to contemporary rap..The Glossolalia asserts that these are magical texts, including “The Goose's Heresy”, an “Hermetic tradition passed down by Bankside actors and whores”.

In the lead-up to the millennium, Constable performed poetry and ritual dramas at The Warp, a series of fortnightly 24-hour parties in the caverns under London Bridge.[17] In the first decade of the 21st century, he appeared, often as John Crow, in theatres, clubs and festivals worldwide. He hosted The Palace of Wisdom, an all-night poetry tent at the Glastonbury Festival,[18] where he was a regular performer in the legendary underground Irish Piano Bar.

In 2014, Spark In The Dark was published by Thin Man Press.[9] This first collection of Constable's poetry ranges from satirical Burlesques to lyrical Spirit Songs. In Mrs God the poet draws on his Welsh Borders upbringing in a “burlesque” that comically subverts the image of a Divine patriarch.[19] The book also features two experimental prose-poems. Winchester Cathedral:Time Out Of Mind, written during an Arts Council residency at Winchester Cathedral, evokes the misadventures of a medieval monk troubled by visions of the future.[20] Wennefer is “a cautionary tale”, a visceral retelling of the Isis-Osiris myth set in south London club culture.[21]

Songs edit

Songs from The Southwark Mysteries with music by Richard Kilgour featured in the 2000 and 2010 stage productions. Others, with music by Niall McDevitt, were performed at The Halloween of Crossbones. Constable subsequently wrote a number of his own songs - released on goose & crow : spirit songs, featuring Nigel Hoyle and Katy Carr.[22] On the Gemini City album, Nigel of Bermondsey covered his song The Green Man Is Come.[23] His texts for Beltane, Lammas and Samhain featured on the MegaT album with music by Universal Mind Sound System. His poems Spark In the Dark and I Am The Wind featured on Hawklords' 2012 album We Are One. He also contributed lyrics for songs on Hawklords' next two albums - White Rag on Dream, and Damned on Censored.[24] In 2022 he released the album 'Ancestor Souls' by John Crow and Queen Space Baroque,[25] performing his poems and incantations with music by Queen Space Baroque

Radio, television and film edit

Constable wrote Undesirable Activities for the BBC drama series Black Silk. He adapted the John Wyndham novels The Kraken Wakes and Chocky for BBC Radio 4 - subsequently released on DVD in the BBC Classic Radio Sci-Fi series. He has been interviewed many times on the radio about his literary work and appears in many films about the work at Crossbones. In the lead-up to the 2010 production of The Southwark Mysteries he and the Dean of Southwark Cathedral were interviewed on the BBCs Songs of Praise.[26]

Children's plays and workshops edit

In 1987, for Proteus Theatre Company, Constable devised Forgotten But Not Gone for actors with learning difficulties. He was artistic director of the company during 1989. In the 1990s, he wrote many children's plays for Proteus, including adaptations of Maeterlinck's The Bluebird, Thackeray's The Rose and The Ring, Dickens' A Christmas Carol, Rumpelstiltskin and The Emperor's New Clothes.[27] As artistic director of the community arts group, Southwark Mysteries, he conducted children's workshops in schools and community centres. His popular workshops included the Our Place and Our Story programmes, which used local history and cultural identity as springboards for the participants' own devised work. His George And The Dragon workshops, first performed in schools in south London, were taken to Cumbria as part of an anti-racist programme. In 2014, he was the dramaturg for Half Moon Young People's Theatre's #LimehouseLandmark programme, featuring devised performances inspired by the history of their building in Limehouse.[28]

Walks, talks and activism edit

Since 1998, Constable has conducted guided walks around his Borough and Bankside neighbourhood. In 2007, Oberon Books published Secret Bankside – Walks In The Outlaw Borough, a collection of his walks exploring alternative histories of the area.[29] He has been commissioned every year since 2003 to create unusual themed walks for the City of London Festival.[30] He has given talks for groups as diverse as Southwark Council, The Moot With No Name, South East London Folklore Society, Radical Anthropology Group and The Salon For The City.[31]

He is the patron of REWRITE, a Southwark-based charity bringing together young people from different backgrounds to fight prejudice and injustice through the power of drama and creative writing.[32] He championed community involvement and local identity in the face of the redevelopment of The Borough and wrote a scathing report on the MIPIM Global Property Fair in Cannes.[33] A long-standing advocate of decriminilisation, he strongly criticised the “War On Drugs”,[34] and supported the Sexual Freedom Coalition (SFC)'s campaign for sexual freedom between consenting adults. He performed his poetry at the SFC's 1998 “Sex Symposium”[35] and escorted Dr Tuppy Owens to present their petition at No 10 Downing Street.

Since 1998, he has led a campaign by “Friends of Crossbones” to protect the site of the Crossbones burial ground and to establish a garden of remembrance on the site. He and Katharine Nicholls curate a shrine to “the outcast dead” at the gates in Redcross Way, to which hundreds of people have contributed mementos. He performed The Halloween of Crossbones every year from 1998 to 2010, and has led vigils at the gates on the 23rd of every month since June 2004.[36] Having raised public awareness of Crossbones' historic and cultural importance, he lobbied the site owners Transport for London (TfL) to open a public garden there. 2014 marked an important new phase in this work, when TfL granted a lease for a 'meanwhile garden' to Bankside Open Spaces Trust (BOST).[37]

Urban shamanism, magic and mysticism edit

Beginning in 1998 Constable began conducting The Halloween of Crossbones and other ritual dramas. In this capacity he himself became widely known as John Crow, the south London shaman who channels The Goose, the spirit of a medieval prostitute he encountered at Cross Bones cemetery.[38] Constable's work is inherently syncretic.

In the Glossolalia he states that shamanism is not a fixed belief-system. The Southwark Mysteries explicitly honour the poetic “Spirit” above “the letter of the law”, art over religion, “Liberty” as a spiritual state in which contrary energies find creative expression. His essay Transgressive Shamanism[39] considers how the West has appropriated the practices of indigenous shamans, especially relating to the use of psychoactive sacraments. It charts the transgressive use of such substances by artists, suggesting alternative “lines of transmission” in art. His Shamanic Playhouse workshops explore other ways of effecting altered mind-states. He speaks of “repatterning reality” and of the associations of the number 23 with “revelation and transformation”.[40]

Interviewed about his 2013 play, Spare, Constable expresses a sense of kinship with the south London artist and magician Austin Osman Spare and his intuitive approach to magic.[41]

The 2014 poetry book 'Spark In The Dark' is prefaced by Blake's epigram: “Without Contraries is no progression” - and this idea is implicit in many of the poems. The last part of the book, Spirit Songs, draws freely on British traditions like the Queen of the May at Beltane.[42] By contrast, the final poem Queen of the Moon ('Queen of the vision revealed in the vine / And the leaves of the Shining Tree...') evokes the Brazilian Santo Daime tradition.

In 2022 he published a new book 'Grail', interweaving history and legends with poetic "spells and invocations" and vignettes of contemporary Glastonbury life.[43]

List of works edit

Plays edit

  • Black Mas 1984 Foco Novo tour, New End Theatre Hampstead and Albany Theatre Deptford
  • The Fit Up 1988 Nuffield Theatre Southampton
  • The Complete Casanova 1991 Proteus-Horseshoe Theatre Company, Croydon Warehouse
  • Hot Fondue 1992 RADA
  • Tulip Futures 1994 Soho Theatre Company
  • Dead Man's Handle 1994 Soho Theatre Company
  • Iceman 1997 Brute Farce, White Bear Kennington
  • The False Hairpiece 1997 Proteus Theatre Company, Southwark Playhouse
  • The Goose At Liberty 2000 Southwark Playhouse
  • The Southwark Mysteries 2000, 2010 Shakespeare's Globe and Southwark Cathedral
  • The Glastonbury St George and The Dragon Mummers Play 2022 Glastonbury Abbey

Solo shows edit

  • I Was An Alien Sex God 1995 Edinburgh Festival, BAC and Grahamstown Festival (SA)
  • Raingods Become Me 2002 BAC
  • Spare 2013 Treadwells and White Bear Theatre, Kennington

Stage adaptations edit

  • A Christmas Carol 1986 Proteus Theatre Company
  • The Bluebird 1988 Proteus Theatre Company
  • The Rose and The Ring 1990 Proteus Theatre Company
  • Rumpelstiltskin 1991 Proteus Theatre Company
  • The Emperor's New Clothes 1992 Proteus Theatre Company
  • Gormenghast 1992 David Glass Ensemble
  • The Mosquito Coast 1994 David Glass Ensemble

Devised work edit

  • Forgotten But Not Gone 1987 Proteus Theatre Company
  • Bozo's Dead 1991 David Glass Ensemble
  • South of the River 2002 libretto for English National Opera community opera

Books edit

  • Sha-Manic Plays (Black Mas, Dead Man's Handle, Iceman,The False Hairpiece) 1997 Oberon Books
  • The Southwark Mysteries 1999 Oberon Books
  • Gormenghast 2006 Oberon Books
  • Secret Bankside – Walks In The Outcast Borough 2007 Oberon Books
  • Spark In The Dark 2014 Thin Man Press
  • Grail 2022 Blue Cedar

References edit

  1. ^ "Oswestry School John Constable OO 1963-1969 Digs Into The History of Southwark". 13547286.test.prositehosting.co.uk. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  2. ^ "Sheer Madness - Sheer Madness added a new photo — with..." Facebook. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  3. ^ "John Constable". United Agents. 23 April 2000. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  4. ^ [Constable, John. 1999. The Southwark Mysteries London: Oberon Books pp. 92, 288]
  5. ^ [Constable. rev. ed. 2011. The Southwark Mysteries London: Oberon Books pg. 9]
  6. ^ "John Constable | London South Bank University". Lsbu.ac.uk. 8 August 2013. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  7. ^ . Southwark.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 11 July 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  8. ^ "Erotic Awards Charity Ball: Night of the Senses | Nightlife in London". Timeout.com. 11 October 2012. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  9. ^ a b "Spark In The Dark". Thin Man Press. 20 October 2015. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  10. ^ [Thornber, Robin. 1984. The Guardian]
  11. ^ "Plays directed by Roland Rees – Unfinished Histories". Unfinishedhistories.com. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  12. ^ "I Was an Alien Sex God". The Independent. 19 August 1995. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  13. ^ [Constable, John. 1999. The Southwark Mysteries London: Oberon Books pg.9]
  14. ^ "Southwark Mysteries – Crossbones". Southwarkmysteries.co.uk. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  15. ^ "South of the River - a "no soap" opera about Southwark [10 June 2002]". London-se1.co.uk. 10 June 2002. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  16. ^ "Spare | It". Internationaltimes.it. 17 October 2013. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  17. ^ "Avant Garden | Cosmic Trigger". Cosmictriggerplay.com. 23 November 1996. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  18. ^ "Southwark Mysteries – Crossbones". Southwarkmysteries.co.uk. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  19. ^ "Mrs God". YouTube. 9 July 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  20. ^ "archiTEXTS - The Texts - John Constable". Art-architecture.co.uk. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  21. ^ "Seth's Oration". YouTube. 9 July 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  22. ^ "John Crow". ReverbNation. 12 September 2018. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  23. ^ http://www.nigelofbermondsey.com/nigelofbermondsey_wp/the-green-man/ [dead link]
  24. ^ Hawklords (2008)
  25. ^ https://johncrowandqueenspacebaroque.bandcamp.com/album/ancestor-souls
  26. ^ "John Constable praise sings The Southwark Mysteries". YouTube. 14 March 2010. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  27. ^ http://www.proteustheatre.com/?page=archive [dead link]
  28. ^ "Welcome to Half Moon Theatre - Children's Theatre Shows in London".
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
  30. ^ "What's on – Cinema | Barbican".
  31. ^ "Salon Number 3: London Bone".
  32. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 February 2015. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
  33. ^ "Mipim My Mipim". 12 March 2014.
  34. ^ [Ellison, Michael. 23 August 1995. The Guardian. “Spaced-out Oddity”.]
  35. ^ [15 August 1998. Freedom. “Sexual Freedom Parade”.]
  36. ^ [Lipson, Faye. Cross Bones. Fortean Times. December 2014. pg. 38]
  37. ^ [Evening Standard. 11 December 2014. ]
  38. ^ "Cross Bones Graveyard | Samhain vigil".
  39. ^ "Transgressive Shamanism | IT".
  40. ^ [Constable. 1999. pg. 278]
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 21 December 2014. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
  42. ^ "John Constable reads his poem, the Queen of the May - YouTube". YouTube.
  43. ^ https://www.somersetcountygazette.co.uk/news/20035649.john-constable-release-book-glastonburys-myths-beliefs/

john, constable, writer, john, hamilton, constable, born, july, 1952, english, playwright, poet, performer, activist, author, southwark, mysteries, also, known, john, crow, urban, shaman, cross, bones, contents, life, plays, poetry, songs, radio, television, f. John Hamilton Constable born 22 July 1952 is an English playwright poet performer and activist author of The Southwark Mysteries He is also known as John Crow the urban shaman of Cross Bones Contents 1 Life 2 Plays 3 Poetry 4 Songs 5 Radio television and film 6 Children s plays and workshops 7 Walks talks and activism 8 Urban shamanism magic and mysticism 9 List of works 9 1 Plays 9 2 Solo shows 9 3 Stage adaptations 9 4 Devised work 9 5 Books 10 ReferencesLife editConstable was born in Much Wenlock Shropshire in 1952 He was educated at Oswestry School 1963 69 1 and Queens College Cambridge 1970 73 In the mid 1970s he performed at David Medalla s Artists For Democracy From 1977 79 he lived in Japan and travelled widely in the Far East and from 1980 82 toured Europe with the street theatre group Sheer Madness playing Hamlet in the devised show Shakespeare s Greatest Hits 2 From 1984 following the production of Black Mas by Foco Novo he returned to live in London His plays included The Fit Up Tulip Futures Iceman and The False Hairpiece He also wrote children s plays radio dramas and dramatisations of Gormenghast and The Mosquito Coast for the David Glass Ensemble 3 In 1986 he moved to The Borough in Southwark then a poor and much maligned part of south London The area had a profound influence on his work which draws freely on its 2 000 year history and the far reaching changes that saw it reinvented as prime real estate in the heart of London In Sicily in 1994 he met his companion Katharine Nicholls a craftworker and community outreach worker In their activism and esoteric work at Crossbones and with outsiders she also became known as Katy Kaos One of the poems in The Southwark Mysteries is entitled kateEkaos 4 She stage managed his solo shows and site specific events co produced the epic productions of The Southwark Mysteries and created the original Hand Maid limited edition of The Book of The Goose In 1995 he wrote and performed a solo show I Was An Alien Sex God This inaugurated a new phase of experimental writing which produced his best known work The Southwark Mysteries These began in 1996 as a cycle of mystical poems revealed to his shamanistic alter ego John Crow by The Goose who claimed to have been buried in the unconsecrated Cross Bones Graveyard The Winchester Geese were medieval sex workers in the Bankside brothels licensed by the Bishop of Winchester under Ordinances dating back to 1161 The Southwark Mysteries grew from a poem cycle to a contemporary mystery play first performed in Shakespeare s Globe and Southwark Cathedral on 23 April 2000 From 2004 to 2012 he was artistic director of the community arts group Southwark Mysteries conducting guided walks workshops and site specific performances inspired by the work The Halloween of Cross Bones conducted annually from 1998 to 2010 ended with a candle lit procession to the gates of Crossbones the outcasts burial ground He led a long campaign to protect the burial ground and to establish a garden of remembrance on the site A new production of The Southwark Mysteries was staged in Southwark Cathedral in 2010 5 In November 2010 John Constable was awarded an Honorary Fellowship of London South Bank University for services to the arts and community for his vision and imagination for his deep commitment to our local area for his work in reclaiming lost histories and above all for his belief in the transformative power of writing and drama 6 At Southwark s Civic Award Ceremony in May 2011 he received The Liberty of the Old Metropolitan Borough of Southwark 7 In recognition of his work at Crossbones and for the human rights of sex workers and other outsiders Constable was named Campaigner of the Year at the 2011 Erotic Awards 8 His Sha Manic Plays Gormenghast The Southwark Mysteries and Secret Bankside Walks In The Outlaw Borough are published by Oberon Books In 2014 Thin Man Press published Spark In The Dark his first collection of poetry 9 In 2020 he moved to Glastonbury drawing on his first year living in the town for his book Grail 2022 Plays editJohn Constable s first play Black Mas was inspired by a visit to the Trinidad Carnival in 1982 It explores the adventures of two white British musicians visiting Trinidad for fresh inspiration and getting out of their depth under the heady influence of Carnival The Guardian s Robin Thornber wrote It s a powerful piece that works on many levels using the exotic trappings of its setting to cast its spell but probing incessantly into the murky depths of racial and sexual mythology 10 The play directed by Roland Rees for Foco Novo opened at the New End Theatre Hampstead followed by a UK tour Other early work includes The Fit Up Nuffield Theatre Southampton and The Complete Casanova Proteus Horshoe Theatre Croydon Warehouse He was commissioned by RADA to write Hot Fondue a contemporary play loosely based on Schnitzler s La Ronde directed by Roland Rees14 11 In the 1990s having worked with physical theatre director David Glass on the devised show Bozo s Dead he was commissioned to write the stage adaptation of Gormenghast for the David Glass Ensemble His 1994 play Tulip Futures concerned Tulip mania the seventeenth century speculation on tulips which nearly bankrupt the Dutch economy Tulip Futures was nominated for the Peggy Ramsay Award Iceman is a black comedy about the war on drugs an undercover policeman gets so deep into his cover he winds up busting himself It was short listed for the Verity Bargate Award and produced by Brute Farce at the White Bear Theatre Kennington In 1995 Constable wrote and performed I Was an Alien Sex God directed by Di Sherlock The show opened in London at Battersea Arts Centre followed by a popular and critically acclaimed run on the Edinburgh Fringe Ian Shuttleworth s review began by quoting its most memorable line Let s get this straight Commissioner you re saying that if David Bowie and I have sex it ll destroy the universe John Constable fully exploits his passing resemblance to the Thin White Duke in his mind blowingly weird one man show which takes in acid trips mind body transference quantum physics Berlin gay clubs and the end of the world as we know it 12 Constable s subsequent work seems intent on dissolving the lines between art and life original research In the introduction to Sha Manic Plays he acknowledged John Crow as a literary persona appearing in his work in various guises In his next work John Crow took on a life of his own According to Constable The Southwark Mysteries was revealed by The Goose to John Crow at Crossbones on the night of the 23rd November 1996 My shamanic double had somehow raised the Spirit of a medieval Whore licensed by a Bishop yet allegedly denied Christian burial 13 In The Book of The Constable one of the poems of The Southwark Mysteries The Goose and the Crow seem to prophesy the chain of coincidences that lead Constable to write a contemporary mystery play with the support of the Very Rev d Colin Slee Dean of Southwark Cathedral and the actor Mark Rylance then artistic director of Shakespeare s Globe In the play Jesus The Son of Man in the street returns to Southwark to save its lost souls the heretic John Crow and The Goose in the guise of Mary Magdalene The play premiered in Shakespeare s Globe with the climactic Harrowing of Hell scene staged in Southwark Cathedral on Easter Sunday 23 April 2000 The Dean defended the performance of this controversial work in the Cathedral A headline in The Sunday Telegraph read Dean rejects critics of Southwark s swearing Jesus Mystery Play 14 Selected texts from The Southwark Mysteries featured in his site specific ritual dramas The Anatomy Class The Old Operating Theatre The Goose At Liberty Southwark Playhouse The Halloween of Cross Bones conducted annually from 1998 to 2010 which culminated at the gates of the former burial ground Constable s later work similarly drew on the history and contemporary culture of his south London neighbourhood He wrote the libretto for South of the River the ENO community opera performed in a big top in Potters Fields 15 In 2013 he wrote a one man show Spare inspired by the life and work of the south London artist and magician Austin Osman Spare which he performed in Treadwell s Bookshop and in the White Bear Theatre Kennington where Spare himself used to drink and had once exhibited his paintings 16 In 2022 he was commissioned to write a new Mummers Play based on Glastonbury s St George legend The Glastonbury St George and The Dragon Mummers Play was performed in Glastonbury Abbey on 3rd June as part of the town s Queens Platinum Jubilee celebrations Poetry editThe first part of The Southwark Mysteries comprises a cycle of mystical poems seven Vision Books in which The Goose initiates John Crow into her Secret History and Mysteries These two literary personas guide the reader on a journey through 2 000 years of Southwark s history reimagined through the eyes of outcasts and outsiders The verses range freely from archaic ballad form to contemporary rap The Glossolalia asserts that these are magical texts including The Goose s Heresy an Hermetic tradition passed down by Bankside actors and whores In the lead up to the millennium Constable performed poetry and ritual dramas at The Warp a series of fortnightly 24 hour parties in the caverns under London Bridge 17 In the first decade of the 21st century he appeared often as John Crow in theatres clubs and festivals worldwide He hosted The Palace of Wisdom an all night poetry tent at the Glastonbury Festival 18 where he was a regular performer in the legendary underground Irish Piano Bar In 2014 Spark In The Dark was published by Thin Man Press 9 This first collection of Constable s poetry ranges from satirical Burlesques to lyrical Spirit Songs In Mrs God the poet draws on his Welsh Borders upbringing in a burlesque that comically subverts the image of a Divine patriarch 19 The book also features two experimental prose poems Winchester Cathedral Time Out Of Mind written during an Arts Council residency at Winchester Cathedral evokes the misadventures of a medieval monk troubled by visions of the future 20 Wennefer is a cautionary tale a visceral retelling of the Isis Osiris myth set in south London club culture 21 Songs editSongs from The Southwark Mysteries with music by Richard Kilgour featured in the 2000 and 2010 stage productions Others with music by Niall McDevitt were performed at The Halloween of Crossbones Constable subsequently wrote a number of his own songs released on goose amp crow spirit songs featuring Nigel Hoyle and Katy Carr 22 On the Gemini City album Nigel of Bermondsey covered his song The Green Man Is Come 23 His texts for Beltane Lammas and Samhain featured on the MegaT album with music by Universal Mind Sound System His poems Spark In the Dark and I Am The Wind featured on Hawklords 2012 album We Are One He also contributed lyrics for songs on Hawklords next two albums White Rag on Dream and Damned on Censored 24 In 2022 he released the album Ancestor Souls by John Crow and Queen Space Baroque 25 performing his poems and incantations with music by Queen Space BaroqueRadio television and film editConstable wrote Undesirable Activities for the BBC drama series Black Silk He adapted the John Wyndham novels The Kraken Wakes and Chocky for BBC Radio 4 subsequently released on DVD in the BBC Classic Radio Sci Fi series He has been interviewed many times on the radio about his literary work and appears in many films about the work at Crossbones In the lead up to the 2010 production of The Southwark Mysteries he and the Dean of Southwark Cathedral were interviewed on the BBCs Songs of Praise 26 Children s plays and workshops editIn 1987 for Proteus Theatre Company Constable devised Forgotten But Not Gone for actors with learning difficulties He was artistic director of the company during 1989 In the 1990s he wrote many children s plays for Proteus including adaptations of Maeterlinck s The Bluebird Thackeray s The Rose and The Ring Dickens A Christmas Carol Rumpelstiltskin and The Emperor s New Clothes 27 As artistic director of the community arts group Southwark Mysteries he conducted children s workshops in schools and community centres His popular workshops included the Our Place and Our Story programmes which used local history and cultural identity as springboards for the participants own devised work His George And The Dragon workshops first performed in schools in south London were taken to Cumbria as part of an anti racist programme In 2014 he was the dramaturg for Half Moon Young People s Theatre s LimehouseLandmark programme featuring devised performances inspired by the history of their building in Limehouse 28 Walks talks and activism editSince 1998 Constable has conducted guided walks around his Borough and Bankside neighbourhood In 2007 Oberon Books published Secret Bankside Walks In The Outlaw Borough a collection of his walks exploring alternative histories of the area 29 He has been commissioned every year since 2003 to create unusual themed walks for the City of London Festival 30 He has given talks for groups as diverse as Southwark Council The Moot With No Name South East London Folklore Society Radical Anthropology Group and The Salon For The City 31 He is the patron of REWRITE a Southwark based charity bringing together young people from different backgrounds to fight prejudice and injustice through the power of drama and creative writing 32 He championed community involvement and local identity in the face of the redevelopment of The Borough and wrote a scathing report on the MIPIM Global Property Fair in Cannes 33 A long standing advocate of decriminilisation he strongly criticised the War On Drugs 34 and supported the Sexual Freedom Coalition SFC s campaign for sexual freedom between consenting adults He performed his poetry at the SFC s 1998 Sex Symposium 35 and escorted Dr Tuppy Owens to present their petition at No 10 Downing Street Since 1998 he has led a campaign by Friends of Crossbones to protect the site of the Crossbones burial ground and to establish a garden of remembrance on the site He and Katharine Nicholls curate a shrine to the outcast dead at the gates in Redcross Way to which hundreds of people have contributed mementos He performed The Halloween of Crossbones every year from 1998 to 2010 and has led vigils at the gates on the 23rd of every month since June 2004 36 Having raised public awareness of Crossbones historic and cultural importance he lobbied the site owners Transport for London TfL to open a public garden there 2014 marked an important new phase in this work when TfL granted a lease for a meanwhile garden to Bankside Open Spaces Trust BOST 37 Urban shamanism magic and mysticism editBeginning in 1998 Constable began conducting The Halloween of Crossbones and other ritual dramas In this capacity he himself became widely known as John Crow the south London shaman who channels The Goose the spirit of a medieval prostitute he encountered at Cross Bones cemetery 38 Constable s work is inherently syncretic In the Glossolalia he states that shamanism is not a fixed belief system The Southwark Mysteries explicitly honour the poetic Spirit above the letter of the law art over religion Liberty as a spiritual state in which contrary energies find creative expression His essay Transgressive Shamanism 39 considers how the West has appropriated the practices of indigenous shamans especially relating to the use of psychoactive sacraments It charts the transgressive use of such substances by artists suggesting alternative lines of transmission in art His Shamanic Playhouse workshops explore other ways of effecting altered mind states He speaks of repatterning reality and of the associations of the number 23 with revelation and transformation 40 Interviewed about his 2013 play Spare Constable expresses a sense of kinship with the south London artist and magician Austin Osman Spare and his intuitive approach to magic 41 The 2014 poetry book Spark In The Dark is prefaced by Blake s epigram Without Contraries is no progression and this idea is implicit in many of the poems The last part of the book Spirit Songs draws freely on British traditions like the Queen of the May at Beltane 42 By contrast the final poem Queen of the Moon Queen of the vision revealed in the vine And the leaves of the Shining Tree evokes the Brazilian Santo Daime tradition In 2022 he published a new book Grail interweaving history and legends with poetic spells and invocations and vignettes of contemporary Glastonbury life 43 List of works editPlays edit Black Mas 1984 Foco Novo tour New End Theatre Hampstead and Albany Theatre Deptford The Fit Up 1988 Nuffield Theatre Southampton The Complete Casanova 1991 Proteus Horseshoe Theatre Company Croydon Warehouse Hot Fondue 1992 RADA Tulip Futures 1994 Soho Theatre Company Dead Man s Handle 1994 Soho Theatre Company Iceman 1997 Brute Farce White Bear Kennington The False Hairpiece 1997 Proteus Theatre Company Southwark Playhouse The Goose At Liberty 2000 Southwark Playhouse The Southwark Mysteries 2000 2010 Shakespeare s Globe and Southwark Cathedral The Glastonbury St George and The Dragon Mummers Play 2022 Glastonbury AbbeySolo shows edit I Was An Alien Sex God 1995 Edinburgh Festival BAC and Grahamstown Festival SA Raingods Become Me 2002 BAC Spare 2013 Treadwells and White Bear Theatre KenningtonStage adaptations edit A Christmas Carol 1986 Proteus Theatre Company The Bluebird 1988 Proteus Theatre Company The Rose and The Ring 1990 Proteus Theatre Company Rumpelstiltskin 1991 Proteus Theatre Company The Emperor s New Clothes 1992 Proteus Theatre Company Gormenghast 1992 David Glass Ensemble The Mosquito Coast 1994 David Glass EnsembleDevised work edit Forgotten But Not Gone 1987 Proteus Theatre Company Bozo s Dead 1991 David Glass Ensemble South of the River 2002 libretto for English National Opera community operaBooks edit Sha Manic Plays Black Mas Dead Man s Handle Iceman The False Hairpiece 1997 Oberon Books The Southwark Mysteries 1999 Oberon Books Gormenghast 2006 Oberon Books Secret Bankside Walks In The Outcast Borough 2007 Oberon Books Spark In The Dark 2014 Thin Man Press Grail 2022 Blue CedarReferences edit Oswestry School John Constable OO 1963 1969 Digs Into The History of Southwark 13547286 test prositehosting co uk Retrieved 16 September 2018 Sheer Madness Sheer Madness added a new photo with Facebook Retrieved 16 September 2018 John Constable United Agents 23 April 2000 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Constable John 1999 The Southwark Mysteries London Oberon Books pp 92 288 Constable rev ed 2011 The Southwark Mysteries London Oberon Books pg 9 John Constable London South Bank University Lsbu ac uk 8 August 2013 Retrieved 16 September 2018 News Desk Southwark Council Southwark gov uk Archived from the original on 11 July 2014 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Erotic Awards Charity Ball Night of the Senses Nightlife in London Timeout com 11 October 2012 Retrieved 16 September 2018 a b Spark In The Dark Thin Man Press 20 October 2015 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Thornber Robin 1984 The Guardian Plays directed by Roland Rees Unfinished Histories Unfinishedhistories com Retrieved 16 September 2018 I Was an Alien Sex God The Independent 19 August 1995 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Constable John 1999 The Southwark Mysteries London Oberon Books pg 9 Southwark Mysteries Crossbones Southwarkmysteries co uk Retrieved 16 September 2018 South of the River a no soap opera about Southwark 10 June 2002 London se1 co uk 10 June 2002 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Spare It Internationaltimes it 17 October 2013 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Avant Garden Cosmic Trigger Cosmictriggerplay com 23 November 1996 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Southwark Mysteries Crossbones Southwarkmysteries co uk Retrieved 16 September 2018 Mrs God YouTube 9 July 2014 Retrieved 16 September 2018 archiTEXTS The Texts John Constable Art architecture co uk Retrieved 16 September 2018 Seth s Oration YouTube 9 July 2014 Retrieved 16 September 2018 John Crow ReverbNation 12 September 2018 Retrieved 16 September 2018 http www nigelofbermondsey com nigelofbermondsey wp the green man dead link Hawklords 2008 https johncrowandqueenspacebaroque bandcamp com album ancestor souls John Constable praise sings The Southwark Mysteries YouTube 14 March 2010 Retrieved 16 September 2018 http www proteustheatre com page archive dead link Welcome to Half Moon Theatre Children s Theatre Shows in London Secret bankside john constable walks outlaw borough Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 12 January 2015 What s on Cinema Barbican Salon Number 3 London Bone Staff Rewrite Archived from the original on 13 February 2015 Retrieved 13 February 2015 Mipim My Mipim 12 March 2014 Ellison Michael 23 August 1995 The Guardian Spaced out Oddity 15 August 1998 Freedom Sexual Freedom Parade Lipson Faye Cross Bones Fortean Times December 2014 pg 38 Evening Standard 11 December 2014 Cross Bones Graveyard Samhain vigil Transgressive Shamanism IT Constable 1999 pg 278 In the Chimehours English folklore and grim witchcraft with a distinctly lovecraftian flavour Oh and its a bit fruity too Archived from the original on 21 December 2014 Retrieved 12 January 2015 John Constable reads his poem the Queen of the May YouTube YouTube https www somersetcountygazette co uk news 20035649 john constable release book glastonburys myths beliefs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Constable writer amp oldid 1166090428, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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