UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — “Prince Hamlet,” which opens the Center for the Performing Arts' 2022-23 season, is a bilingual and modern framing of the spectacular downfall of a man. The Why Not Theatre production features Deaf actor Dawn Jani Birley in a self-interpreting role and fully integrated as the story’s American Sign Language narrator.
“Prince Hamlet” Director Ravi Jain said Birley accepted the challenge of translating the effusive nature of Shakespeare — from English to the more efficient ASL, “then into ASL with a flourish.”
The result is a dynamic performance and — thanks to Birley — a highly visual interpretation of the Prince of Denmark’s tragedy.
‘Isn’t something that needs to be fixed’
Most people in the hearing community may not be familiar with Deaf culture, with communicative aspects such as reliance on eye contact, touch, communication efficiency, physical proximity and knocking on surfaces.
Sommar Chilton, associate teaching professor in Penn State’s College of Health and Human Development, is passionate about sharing her insight into Deaf culture and how an organization can better serve Deaf and hard-of hearing people. At her presentations, she addresses the differences between Deaf and deaf/hard of hearing, etiquette, and intricacies of sign language and its relationship with facial expression and body language.
“Deaf culture is held by a group of people who were born Deaf, whose first language is ASL, who go to Deaf schools and hang with Deaf peers,” Chilton said at a recent meeting with the Center for the Performing Arts staff. She said “lowercase d” deaf, or hard-of-hearing people, generally are medically deaf due to accident or age and mostly rely on hearing-assist devices.
“Probably in our experiences growing up, we looked at deafness as a negative, as something that’s undesirable, as something that needs to be fixed,” Chilton said. “Just because (someone) can’t hear doesn’t mean (they) can’t take it in and enjoy it and process that in a different way through my eyes, looking at the idea that sign language is equal to spoken language.”
She cited the benefits of “Deaf gain” that have become mainstream with hearing users, including closed captioning, text messaging and digital transcription services. But she said a big issue is that the hearing community often puts the onus of communicating and understanding on the Deaf person.
“Being Deaf isn’t something that needs to be fixed,” Chilton said. “They can be just as successful as any hearing person is out there with their language with the opportunities that can be provided to them.”
‘More ways to see and hear people’
Jain, a former professional clown with Cirque de Soleil, said his personal experience with cultural adversity and stereotyping inspired him to organize Why Not Theatre. He said he was frustrated at being typecast into roles based on his cultural background. Why couldn’t — why shouldn’t — he be cast in certain roles?
“The importance isn’t the story, but how the story is being told,” he said via a recent video chat. The Toronto company tackles modern issues with the belief that “there are more ways to see and hear people, that will help us see more in people who we may have written off."