NOT A HERO
The Project
Not a Hero is a sprawling multiverse of content centered around the real life entertainment personality Blxck Cxsper. Its material spans genres with a planned output across social media, live-streaming platforms, theatrical performances and musical releases. It is a musical metadrama set in the liminal place between art and reality.
Artists
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Hannah “Lilac” Morrow is an independent theatre creator, who shaped narratives in the queer Montreal (tio’tia:ke) performance art milieu over the course of the 2010’s. In 2016, she co-founded the iconoclastic wrestling/theatre company EarthBound Sci Fi Wrestling, co-ran its independent venue (The Sacred Square) and in 2019 helped found it as a non-profit organization: a space to re-imagine the fabric of our reality on a political, spiritual, and even metaphysical level. Hannah is currently creating and supporting projects that promise to usher that visceral spirit into new corners of the Canadian theatre world.
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Kyng “Blxck Cxsper” Rose (they/them) is a Montreal based black trans and non binary multidisciplinary hip hop artist, known for being the founder of Trans Trenderz, the world’s first record label dedicated to trans and gender non conforming musicians. Kyng has been recently featured on the Billboard Change Agents list, meant to honour the 100 most influential people in the music industry, next to giants such as Jay Z and The Weeknd.
The Residency
Before the DDI
Coming into the residency there were a lot of ideas of content for the metaverse but the project lacked a cohesive action plan.
There was a desire to investigate accessibility of theatre throughout the week of the residency. The mainstream theatre community can be closed off and inaccessible to those without formal training or who lack connections. Through their work, Hannah and Kyng want to highlight and break down the barriers which exist between institutional theatres and those who feel inherently alienated from those environments. Their work draws a great amount of inspiration from pop culture as they believe that it is an inherently more accessible form than traditional theatre.
“We believe that often, “accessible work” translates simply to work that appeals to audiences acclimatized to consuming pop culture. Our underlying attitude is: theatre that appeals to folks who are more used to mass entertainment, is creating work suitable for the cultural climate of the 21st century. From that place, the work is usually inherently more accessible to folks who tend to feel alienated from the idea of ‘Theatre’”.
Investigations into the relationships between Trans POC as well as the relationships between Trans POC and white cis folk are baked into the core material and the team hopes to continue that work throughout the residency.