Performances
Our performances originate from a deep dialogue with the territory and its people.
“Theatre has no categories, it deals with life. That is the only starting point, and there is nothing else truly fundamental. Theatre is life.”
Peter Brook
We create our shows to give voice to the voiceless, to celebrate places and communities, and to address the most urgent and sensitive issues of our society. We want theatre to reflect our reality, to act as a bridge between different cultures, and to encourage dialogue and understanding.
SCT Centre is more than just a theatre: it’s a hub for ideas, a space for personal and collective growth, and a catalyst for social transformation.
Using the Social Community Theatre methodology, we create workshops and performances that directly involve the community and the audience, often making them the protagonists. We immerse ourselves among the people, gathering their experiences, thoughts, and emotions, transforming them into moments of authentic theatre with great social impact.
We experiment and explore different genres and formats, from narrative theatre to interactive performances, singing, and visual installations. Each show is born from a need, from a deep feeling, and responds to specific needs. Whether it is a matter of addressing social themes, enhancing stories and cultures, or promoting health and well-being, our shows aim to be an invitation to reflection, emotion, and action.
Performances
Advance two degrees is a unique experience that combines participatory theatre and board games to reflect on environmental, social, and economic sustainability in a simple and engaging way.
Inspired by the Game of the Goose, Advance two degrees invites the audience to embark on a symbolic journey from the present day to 2100: a theatrical match where today’s choices transform future life on the planet.
Created as part of the Creative Europe Green Ethics project, the initiative involved 18 organizations and 600 participants from 12 European countries – including artists, researchers, educators, and local communities. The result is an accessible and exciting game-theatre capable of transforming the complexity of sustainability into a vivid, shared experience.
The Community Soup Parade is a musical and theatrical procession that moves through the streets of a neighborhood or town, engaging citizens in a playful and participatory theatrical ritual. The format, while seemingly simple, is built on solid methodological foundations drawn from Social and Community Theatre, anthropological concepts, and careful community development work.
The central “ritual” involves a dynamic and participatory exchange: the artists, accompanied by a marching band and residents eager to join in, move along the streets, asking people looking out from windows and balconies to toss a vegetable—whatever they happen to have at home. The produce is caught mid-air using large sheets, while the band’s drumroll transforms the moment into an extraordinary collective performance.
Parade participants and those who donated vegetables are later invited to gather and share the minestrone—prepared using all the collected ingredients—during a community event. The preparation of the soup itself is an open, collective moment for the community.
The Parade also has a version dedicated to the warmer months, The Community Fruit Salad Parade, where participants are invited to donate fruit to prepare a large fruit salad to be shared during the community event.
Created through extensive research – drawing on insights and perspectives from geography, history, anthropology, sociology, and investigative journalism – the show is built on scientific data, weaving it together with pop culture, literature, and music.
On stage, cardboard boxes are transformed into storytelling opportunities, exploring authentic and “fake” food traditions, the diversity and hybridization of culinary cultures, and the contrasting global and local models of production and distribution. It addresses contemporary contradictions: the tension between collective “gastromania” and widespread food poverty, of foods saved and those forgotten, of forced conviviality and soulful banquets.
Tokyo 2002, Tivoli 2nd century BC, Nuenen 1885, Po Valley 1957… From each of the 25 boxes emerges a food, an object, or a piece of music to set a table on stage. With both irony and intensity, this table tells the story of the myriad ways humanity has sourced and shared food, while often leaving many others away from the table.
We are constantly inundated with news about the climate crisis, from newspapers and TV to social media. This constant stream of complex data and information about an imminent catastrophe leaves us feeling helpless and anxious. Paradoxically, this narrative can lead to inaction.
The challenge of CABARET ARTICO – Giochiamoci il Clima (ARTIC CABARET – Let’s play with the Climate), born within the European Green Ethics project, is to talk about the climate crisis through theatre with realism and hope. Starting from the scientific data that unequivocally document how the current climate change is caused by human action, it also narrates the possibilities of a fair and sustainable future still within reach.
As the performance highlights, our future doesn’t hinge on individual lifestyle changes alone. It requires a collective commitment, involving citizens, local and global politics. As Gaber said, “Freedom is participation”, and climate change demands a shared, political, and collective response right now. It’s not a problem for future generations, but for all of us today.
OnStage+ is a Social Community Theatre Centre (SCT Centre) – Teatro Popolare Europeo production, and stems from the OnStage+ project. It’s an artistic and educational project, presented as an interactive performance using Social and Community Theater methodology, focusing on gender equality, a range of positive masculine role models, and combating LGBTQIA+ discrimination.
The performance, developed from research, interviews, and workshops with residents and students, actively engages the audience through performative languages and various techniques designed to ignite reflection on discrimination based on sexual orientation.
The performance, combined with the subsequent health education lesson/meeting, offers information and emotions that together create a unique and special training opportunity to understand and recognize the signs of distress in young people, whether they are in middle or high school.
Theatre has always been an artistic space where even society’s darkest and deepest issues can be brought to life. At one point in the performance, it is stated that the suicide or attempted suicide of a young person is an “unspeakable thing.” While this is true, the circumstancesleading to such profound distress, suffering and hopelessness can and should be explored.
#SPES takes on this challenge by drawing on the stories, musical suggestions, and gestures gathered during extensive theatre workshops conducted with adolescents hospitalized in the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry ward of Regina Margherita Hospital, as well as with mental health professionals, pediatricians, nurses, educators, and middle and high school teachers. These three groups of people have consciously shared their experiences with mental illness and suicide through social and community theatre to contribute to the creation of this performance.
With a few exceptions, the words in the play are spoken by adults. That’s because teenagers usually don’t speak, not until they’re in the hospital, during their long and difficult therapeutic recovery paths. But this generation of teenagers, just like all the other generations, has songs and music. The play features a unique dramaturgy of music videos and spoken word, where the lyrics of the songs carry as much weight as the dialogue. The often striking or cold imagery in the videos was suggested by teenagers themselves to convey their experiences of distress.
Math Scare Boom is a performance-conference born within the Erasmus+ TIM – Theatre in Mathematics project, in which SCT Centre | TPE partnered with three European entities: University of Bergen (NO), the Polytechnic of Crete (GR), and the Asta theatre company (PT) to address the issue of math anxiety with primary and lower secondary school students. The dramaturgy, following the methodology of Social and Community Theatre, stems from interviews with young students from Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, and Greek schools. Their answers became a stimulus for the creative work of performers from the various countries involved in the project, who brought their experience with mathematics at school and in life to the process.
The protagonist of the performance is Viola, an adult who, like many, has known the fear of mathematics since she was a child, and has never abandoned it. Due to a strange misunderstanding, however, Viola, who is a physical education teacher, finds herself in the shoes of a mathematics teacher: the school principal herself imposes this role on her, communicating the decision through a loudspeaker. This circumstance leads her to recover distant memories: a classmate who was very good at mathematics, a letter to Mrs. Mathematics, exams on the multiplication tables in which there is always a number that never arrives… The memory of Ada, a sporty and fun aunt who was an unusual mathematics teacher for her, together with the guiding voice of the principal and the help of the audience, will finally allow Viola to discover that, to understand numbers and geometry, it is important to playfully explore the world from new perspectives: looking for mathematics in the real world, from the forms of a football pitch to the spiral of a seashell.
The performance was created as part of the MatemACT – Playing with mathematics project, winner of the MIUR 2021 call for proposals (now MUR and MI) for projects promoting scientific culture. It is produced by SCT Centre in collaboration with Teatro Popolare Europeo for the show’s production and Il Mutamento for the distribution of the project’s performances.
“Breaking down gender stereotypes is not only beneficial for each of us, it is vital for the future”
– Roya Mahboob, 25 years old, Afghan IT expert and influencer.
Contaci! addresses the issue of gender discrimination in the field of sciences and, at the same time, invites us to discover them. In her journey to the roots of her own fear, Viola, the only actress on stage, rediscovers the inventions of brilliant women, the curiosity for mathematical play, and the beauty of a subject that should belong to everyone. The show uses the languages of narrative and physical theatre. The dramaturgy was created by interviewing women of science and gathering materials from students.
The performance:
- Encourages young students to have confidence in themselves;
- Provides tools for reflecting on gender discrimination;
- Illustrates the biographies of great women of science of the 20th century.
OnStage is an interactive performance, a game-performance of Social and Community Theatre that addresses the theme of discrimination based on sexual orientation through an interactive and multidisciplinary approach to stimulate critical thinking and counter LGBTQIA+ discrimination.
The stage features 25 squares inspired by the traditional Game of the Goose format, 2 performers, and 3 musicians who invite the audience—divided into two teams—to roll the dice and advance on the giant squares. Each square “activates” content: historical facts, quizzes, scenes from daily life, monologues drawn from true stories, and special “Pride” squares, which bring small groups of activists and people sensitive to the issue of LGBTQIA+ discrimination onto the stage. Each square awards “salve in zucca” (points for “common sense”)—a score that allows, at the end of the performance, for an evaluation of which team has most increased its knowledge and competence on a complex, debated, and often controversial topic of contemporary society. The show is intended for Upper Secondary Schools, Third Sector Organizations, Cultural Bodies, Public and Private Institutions, and Companies.
OCA: L’arte che allena il pensiero (GOOSE: Art training thoughts) stems from a social and community theater project developed by SCT Centre | COREP in partnership with the Polo del ‘900 and Fondazione S-nodi, which won the “CivICa Call” – Culture and Civic Innovation projects and has been recognized as a best practice in the gaming and edutainment sector.
OCA is the result of a 2-year study and research program. The game’s contents were designed in collaboration with the University of Turin – Departments of Humanistic Studies, Psychology, Law, CIRSDE – and with an expert committee, groups and associations involved in its realization for a total of about 120 inhabitants: young adults, teenagers, women of different cultures, educators and social workers and university researchers participated in workshops and meetings between February 2020 and May 2021. The students of the Albertina Academy of Fine Arts of Turin designed and artistically created the squares that make up the classic game of goose and that make up the scenography of the performance.
It is an interactive performance, a game of goose that trains the critical thinking of the audience and makes them the protagonists of their own decisions and of the progress of the show.
A host, three actors, live music from the jazz trio Hot Pots, a technician, 50 squares designed by students from the Albertina Academy of Fine Arts in Turin. Game pieces, giant dice, and cards placed around the audience, who, split into two teams, follow the game’s progress, revealing the contents of each square as they go.
The audience will enjoy engaging with quizzes, interactive scenes, theatrical monologues, iconic figures, questions about civic responsibility, inspiring stories, and examples of virtuous living. This will allow them to absorb information about social topics and playfully challenge mental patterns that contribute to the development of stereotypes and biases.
Florence is 200 years old, Teresa is in her thirties and she lives the nursing profession with vocation, grit and determination, and also with irony and a lot of heart. Florence felt a calling in her time, a vocation for care that makes her give up having her own family and forces her to stand strong against her family of origin and society, choosing the practice of caring for the sick not as charity or secondary service but as a full profession of a competent and free woman.
Myth and reality meet on stage in an unusual directorial choice: Florence is a character, played by a professional actress, while Teresa plays herself, an actress on stage who is an actual nurse in real life. She embodies the voice of today and of youth, of those who, in the midst of the Covid crisis, passionately uphold the values that Florence established as the foundation of every act of care. Today, Florence Nightingale remains an inspiration for every young person who chooses to pursue a career in nursing, a guiding myth, an exemplary figure on many levels: care, profession, and gender identity.
Two lives upon the stage, two eras in conversation. Past and present chase one another, telling tales of care and its deep knowledge, of womanhood and its indelible mark, and the constant struggle to preserve its essence. Giving voice to those who daily battle for the health of all.