When: Friday, February 19, 2010. All day
Where: Conway Hall, Red Lion Square, London
Event Link
“Caring is sharing”, people! I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again. My truly awesome day at The Story event is courtesy Aditya Pawar who, sitting in the Netherlands, read this blog last week and sent over the link to the event. As luck would have it (and destiny, and karma and all that universal energy), I grabbed the last ticket to the day’s event which was described on the website as such:
“The Story will be a celebration of everything that is wonderful, inspiring and awesome about stories, in whatever medium possible. We’re hoping to have stories that are written, spoken, played, described, enacted, whispered, projected, orchestrated, performed, printed – whatever form stories come in, we hope to have them here
[...] There have never been so many stories, never so many ways to tell them. The Story will be a celebration of just a small sample of them.”
HOW could I not HAVE to go?
***
Given Matt Locke’s descriptions of his hopes and dreams for this event, I knew right away this was not going to be a conference. Or a seminar. Or a roomful of academicians (althought the distinct lack of participants in my age group became a distinct concern about 4 minutes into the morning). The event was about stories. So I expected to hear some stories told, some dissected, some performed and some evaluated. I was eager to hear Tim Etchells talk, and also Sydney Padua. I was curious about some of the speakers and entirely clueless about the rest. At 10am the day was just beginning and amidst some lous cheering, hooting and clapping, I knew it was going to be a fun day if nothing else.

Excerpt from the event newspaper
The day started with sci-fi writer Cory Doctorow reading aloud an excerpt from his The Story So Far…and beyond. His intriguing piece of fiction was followed by Dr Aleks Krotoski taking us through a slide-show of her behind-the-scenes story of BBC 2′s documentary The Virtual Revolution. I know that we were talking about the worldwideweb but at some point I lost the point of the presentation and instead was overcome with envy at the places this lady travelled to make the four-part series. Her story of a story was interesting though. A documentary of a documentary if you will.
Next up was Jon Spooner of Unlimited Theatre. I like the way he described what he does as “telling stories of science” and he definitely inspired the geek in me with his brilliant and witty performance that explained the co-relationship between neutrinos and coincidence. I didn’t even realise when he left “presentation-giving” mode and entered into “performance” mode but he had us all in giggles and chuckles at the end of it.

Jon Spooner on neutrino impact
Up next was the man I’d been waiting to hear: Tim Etchells of Forced Entertainment. Now I’ve been seeing a lot of Forced Entertainment’s work in lectures and they’re quite highly regarded in theatre circles for pushing the boundaries of text vis-a-vis performance and staging. Tim Etchells himself is a well known writer and as I’m discovering, has some intriguing ideas about the theatricality and theatre itself. I thought we’d hear something on the subject from him, but since the ground rule for the day was “no theory”, I shouldn’t have been surprised when he read out 3 short stories instead. His toneless voice just read and read and read, matching his story perfectly. If it hadn’t been for his voice, I don’t think I’d have been able to pay attention to his messy narratives of highway diners, Hollywood celebrities and urban decay, but I just floated away into his dystopic fantasies.
Post the black-coffee induced caffeine-kick break, Sydney Padua came on stage to talk about how she puts together her hugely popular online comic called Lovelace and Babbage. She defied the “no-theory” motto for the day, but I’m still a fan of her work. Check out the comic online. You’ll know why I wanted to hear her speak.

Sydney Padua
Just before lunch we had a presentation from Annette Mees and Tasoos Stevens about A Small Town Anywhere. They’re a part of a group called Coney and I’m definitely interested in knowing more about this project. Sounds like a fantastic piece of community created theatre which they call “adventure-making”.
Still buzzing from their presentation, I headed out for a quick wrap and chocolate croissant lunch in Red Lion Square. It was so coooold in the park that I jumped from bench to bench looking for maximum sunlight. Brrrrr! Back to the warmth of Conway Hall!

Lunch Doodle
Chocolate.
Did someone mention “chocolate”? The afternoon session opened with chocolate, m&m packets, creme eggs and apples being thrown into the audience and everyone was scrambling for the goodies. Wicked way to get everyone to sit up straight and be awake, I think. No one dozed off after the sugar-rush that followed.
Did someone say we were at a “conference”?
Alexis Kennedy was up next to talk about Fail Better Games’ Echo Bazaar – a wildly popular Twitter- based browser game set in Fallen London from a hundred years ago. I have never played it, but apparenly many of the audience members have and everyone nodded appreciately as his presentation explained casual narrative structures and interspersed bits of wisdom ( “People like stories where bad things happen to them”) with super serious advice (“Make up cool sounding names for stuff”). Tim Wright followed with a reading of a gag he played on his friend had us in spilts as we followed his devious trail through Harrison Fraud. Excellent, wicked stuff this!
Sam Connif of Livity inspired us all with his story of Jody McIntyre a south London youngster with cerebral palsy who has, despite the challenges, travelled the world, fought for peace and now lives in Palestine writing, blogging, bringing awareness and dreaming of being an MC. Jody is one inspiring dude. Read his blog here Life on Wheels here.
The last two speakers involved performances by Stuart Nolan and David Hepworth. While Stuart talked about the depth of character and how it is influenced by the choices one makes, David’s performance was a good old fashioned, wholesome, juicy bit of storytelling. His coming of age story about legacies, fathers, sons and sartorial pursuits was such a good finish to the day!
I left Conway Hall that evening with a warm fuzzy feeling that only a well told story can give. I don’t know where I’ll be next year and if The Story will indeed become an annual event, but I’m looking forward to more such storytelling, storyhearing, storyperforming adventures in London. This city just get better and better every day!