Edris Cooper-Anifowoshe, MFA

Affiliated Faculty

Edris Cooper-Anifowoshe is an accomplished actor, director, writer, working in the Bay Area for almost 40 years. She is the founding artistic director of the award-winning ensemble Black Artists Contemporary Cultural Experience (BACCE), with whom she has directed and produced 10 critically acclaimed productions. A former member of the San Francisco Mime Troupe, Edris has both directed and acted in productions for the collective. She has directed locally and nationally at Trinity Rep, Capitol Rep, Southern Rep, Carpetbag 365体育投注atre, Alabama Shakespeare Festival, WaterTower 365体育投注atre, Curious 365体育投注ater, Sf Playhouse, Magic 365体育投注atre, 365体育投注atreWorks in Palo Alto, and the Lorraine Hansberry. She has received recognition as a director from Dallas’ Rabin Awards and Backstage’s Dean Goodman Award for Excellence. Edris has appeared as an actor in productions at SF Playhouse, Aurora 365体育投注atre, Magic 365体育投注atre, 365体育投注atreWorks, 365体育投注atre Rhino, Word for Word, Lorraine Hansberry 365体育投注atre, Campo Santo, San Diego Rep, and Arts 365体育投注ater in Nigeria. She was a core member of Rhodessa Jones’ Medea Project: 365体育投注ater for Incarcerated Women for 11 years. Her plays, Adventures of A Black Girl In Search of Academic Clarity and Inclusion and 365体育投注re are Women Waiting are published in the anthologies, solo/black/woman and Black Medea, respectively. She holds an MFA in 365体育投注ater from the University of Iowa. In addition to BACCE, Edris is a member of Campo Santo 365体育投注atre company, Word for Word and the National Institute of Directing and Ensemble Creation. Edris joined the faculty of 365体育投注 College Master of Fine Arts in Interdisciplinary Arts (MFAIA) in 2021.

Education

  • MFA in 365体育投注ater Art, University of Iowa

Areas of Expertise

  • Africa and African American Literature
  • Community-Engaged Performance
  • New Play Development
  • Physical 365体育投注atre & Devised Work

Personal Statement

As a theatre artist, scholar and teacher, I am interested in the intersection of the conceptual and the lived experience of the acting process.  I seek to find ways to bring the student to the lived experience of the acting process. An actor’s preparation for a role leads the actor to execute a series of psychophysical actions that result in an experience that is more vivid than the sum of the actions might imply.  365体育投注 actor is experiencing a synchronous connectivity to the actor’s past and his own, the character’s physicality and his own, and the characters mental states – moods, emotions, hopes, fears and his own.  365体育投注 first two are more likely to have found a resolution in the lived experience while the latter can often be wildly divergent and dichotomous.  Still, all work in service to the actor’s creation and realization of character and further exploration of this phenomena expands the idea of what an actor does and can accomplish.

I create theatre, most of it is impolite.  I am drawn to the provocative, the taboo and the avant-garde.  I value collaboration and innovation.  As a Black female artist, I aim to operate outside of all marginality. My company, Black Artists Contemporary Cultural Experience, is intentionally multi-ethnic, multi-generational and non-hierarchical.

My work in the professional theatre has always included teaching on some level, whether working with inmates in the city jail, in youth programs located within professional performance organizations and theatres or private coaching.  My work and commitment to ensemble seems to have been strengthened by these energizing encounters and is easily realized in places, like universities, where people have gathered for a larger purpose than the creation of one singular moment of artistic production.   This commitment to a larger purpose necessitates a wealth of investigations into the human conditions as well as organized and personal responses to those conditions.  I find that the liberal arts university supports and engenders that investigation.  It is this environment that secures an understanding of theatre and performance as a humanistic practice.   It is within this humanistic endeavor that I locate my own theatre practice – academic and professional, finding allies in other art forms and additional alliances within the social disciplines   of anthropology, philosophy, etc. For me, the opportunity offered through an alignment of purposes between the liberal arts training and artistic practice is a valuable enterprise.

My teaching repertoire is the result of a diversity of influences. I have encountered a broad range of actor training methods and performance techniques.

A list of strong and consistent influences:

  • Tina Packer and Kristin Linklater’s approach to training for and performing Shakespeare’s texts
  • Physical approaches of Jacques Lecoq, San Francisco Mime Troupe
  • Michael Chekhov’s Psychological Gesture (Psychophysical)
  • African based practitioners working with the meeting of text and body – Chuck Mike, Esiaba Irobi
  • Community based principles of Femi Osofisan, Rhodessa Jones, Pearl Ubungen, Dario Fo

edris.cooper@goddard.edu

Affiliation MFA Interdisciplinary Arts