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	<title>Literary event &#8211; Quays Life</title>
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		<title>FaxFiction at Refract:19 Review</title>
		<link>https://quayslife.com/reviews/faxfiction/</link>
					<comments>https://quayslife.com/reviews/faxfiction/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Moses Kabunga]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 28 Jul 2019 13:23:58 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Theatre]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FaxFiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Literary event]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spoken word]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Waterside Arts]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://quayslife.com/?p=5272</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Growing up in the 1980’s I remember the arrival and subsequent demise of much of the ‘must have’ technology that tantalised us all back then. So, I hotly anticipated FaxFiction, a performance of new short stories by six writers, incorporating now defunct technology.&#160;&#160; I remember when personal cassette players (The Walkman) had no rewind button. [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://quayslife.com/reviews/faxfiction/">FaxFiction at Refract:19 Review</a> appeared first on <a href="https://quayslife.com">Quays Life</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p>Growing up in the 1980’s I
remember the arrival and subsequent demise of much of the ‘must have’ technology
that tantalised us all back then. So, I hotly anticipated FaxFiction, a
performance of new short stories by six writers, incorporating now defunct
technology.&nbsp;&nbsp; </p>



<p>I remember when personal cassette
players (The Walkman) had no rewind button. Rewinding a favourite song meant
employing a pencil and spinning the cassette. Our family was on the losing side
of the battle between Betamax and VHS; and most significantly I remember
wishing my parents would upgrade our balloon shaped dial-driven home phone with
the slick angular stream-lined ‘button press’ ones we saw on US TV. </p>



<div class="wp-block-image"><figure class="aligncenter"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" width="1024" height="768" src="https://quayslife.com/storage/2019/07/ff-image-1024x768.jpeg" alt="FaxFiction" class="wp-image-5273"/><figcaption>FaxFiction</figcaption></figure></div>



<p>FaxFiction, developed by
Manchester-based writer David Gaffney for the Refract:19 festival, is the first
‘live literature’ happening in the festival’s three-year history. It is
performed upstairs in The Chambers at Waterside Arts in what feels like a
school assembly hall. The initial four writers are seated as we find our seats.
Next to them are side tables littered with analogue radios, projectors and an
answer machine. The event starts with the audio of finely-clipped, English
accents extolling the virtues of sound, while this plays out, reverb is added
and a turn-table is used slow proceedings down. Samples of, classical then jazz
music are phased-in – as we wonder where this is going. </p>



<p>Then the musical introduction ends and the stories begin. Some writers choose to stand whilst others remain seated to read their stories. The first section starts off slowly: Sarah-Clare Conlon, David Gaffney and Valerie O’Riordan regale us with snippets into their worlds of shipping forecasts; moving home and Head Office store recalibration. Sarah-Clare Conlon employs an analogue radio and regularly vents her disappointment at not being warned ‘about the gannets’. David Gaffney injects a light sprinkle of humour to his tale as he discusses the possibilities of parallel universes, while using the overhead projector to post pixilated prompts overhead.  Valerie O’Riordan relies on an answer machine, aged and barely functioning, to trace Barry’s life – all I remember about this story is the swearing, which garnered some laughter from the audience.</p>





<p><br>After the interval the pace of the remaining stories ramps up. Artefact by Nicholas Royle is recognisable as it’s the image used to promote FaxFiction. Nicholas provides us with a further six stories accompanied by, in his words, ‘vaguely related video’ (picture a TV and video combo 14” and silver) – Nicholas’ honesty is refreshing. With each vignette we watch painfully as he presses eject, covers the cassette and inserts a new one. Maybe this is the point. In the old days we didn’t ‘stream’ our films. Making copies and showing films was a manual, noisy and timely affair. </p>



<p>Stand-outs of the evening are
Rosie Garland and Fat Roland. Both stand commandingly as they perform. Rosie
wears a waist-coat and plays a man. We watch as ‘he’ (as he believes) falls in
love at a party. He knows it’s love because the object of his affection has ‘made’
him &#8211; a mix tape. As we watch his love develop into euphoria, Rosie holds
placards showing Belinda Carlisle lyrics as music plays in background. The
cassette and the tape deck capturing the moments in our youth when love meant
so much more. </p>





<p>Fat Roland’s performance feels like
a mix between Johnny Vegas and Charlie Brooker’s Bandersnatch. His comedic
delivery is so infectious it musters laughter with a simple look. His story
centres on a ‘coder’ being offered the chance to become a computer game
designer – an unpaid opportunity that ‘will be excellent exposure’. The ark of
the story has several routes and the audience decide the direction – thereby
keeping us on our toes. </p>



<p>These final two stories lift the evening but overall, as someone who has strong memories of these changes, I feel the evening misses a real chance to transport us back to an age where the analogue device was king and truly centre stage.&nbsp;</p>



<span style="font-size: 300%; color: yellow;">★</span> <span style="font-size: 300%; color: yellow;">★</span> <span style="font-size: 300%; color: yellow;">★</span> 



<p><strong>FaxFiction was at <a rel="noreferrer noopener" aria-label="Waterside Arts (opens in a new tab)" href="https://watersidearts.org/" target="_blank">Waterside Arts</a> on 27 July 2019 as part of Refract:19.&nbsp;</strong></p>



<p><a href="https://quayslife.com/people/minute-taker-aka-ben-mcgarvey-talks-wolf-hours/"><strong>Read our interview with alternative singer-songwriter, Minute Taker aka Ben McGarvey.</strong></a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://quayslife.com/reviews/faxfiction/">FaxFiction at Refract:19 Review</a> appeared first on <a href="https://quayslife.com">Quays Life</a>.</p>
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