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Robert Wilson and Therapy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 December 2021
Extract
As Robert Wilson's theatre is more widely publicized, he is inadvertently developing a reputation as an experimental “therapist.” Several newspaper articles have pointed to his work with brain-damaged children in Texas, his early involvement with Headstart programs and his work with the aged and terminally ill at Goldwater Memorial Hospital. Although this work was done many years ago, his reputation as a “therapist” continues to grow because of his continuing collaboration with Christopher Knowles, a brain-damaged youth, and, earlier, his work with Raymond Andrews, a deaf-mute. However, Wilson is not a therapist and does not consider himself one.
According to Webster, therapy is “a remedial treatment of bodily disorder” or “an agency (as treatment) designed or serving to bring about social adjustment.” If we accept this definition, then what Wilson has done is very different; in fact, almost the opposite.
- Type
- Theatre And Therapy
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © 1976 The Drama Review
References
The title photograph is of Robert Wilson, left, performing with Christopher Knowles, right, at Shiraz in Iran during the eighth Festival of the Arts in 1974.
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