Professor Nicholas Ridout, BA (Cambridge), PhD (London)

Professor of Theatre
Email: n.p.ridout@qmul.ac.uk
Profile
I grew up in a provincial town in the south-west of England, where I developed interests in both theatre and communism.
I studied English at Cambridge University and then spent a decade in London, working various jobs in order to pay the rent while making experimental theatre and performance. I made an accidental return to higher education in 1997, when I started teaching at what was then called Wimbledon School of Art. While working there I also started a PhD at Birkbeck, which I completed in 2003, shortly after taking up a full time position at Queen Mary.
My research and teaching today carry forward some of these earlier interests: in theatre, obviously; in communism and Marxist thought and practice; in experimental performance and in the relations among theatre, visual art and literature. I have also developed new interests which now inform both my teaching and research. These include histories of colonialism and of the so-called supernatural.
Professional Activities
- Principal Investigator, Performance, Possession & Automation, a research project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, 2022 - 25. www.possessionautomation.co.uk
- Co-editor, with Patrick Anderson, of the book series, Performance Works, at Northwestern University Press. https://nupress.northwestern.edu/content/performance-works
- Editor of Theatre Survey, 2016-18.
- Long-Term Fellow, International Research Centre, 'Interweaving Performance Cultures', Freie Universität Berlin, 2017-18.
- Fletcher Jones Foundation Long-Term Fellow, Huntington Library, San Marino, CA., 2016-17.
- Visiting Professor, Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies, Brown University, Providence, USA, 2010-11 and 2013.
Teaching
I teach across undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in the Department of Drama.
With undergraduate students I tend to focus on courses which engage with the histories of experimental theatre, the relationships among theatre, performance and radical politics, as well as courses that explore emotion and the supernatural. With postgraduate students my main focus has been on theoretical questions about theatre and performance,
I have a particular interest in encouraging students at all levels to experiment with how they write and finding alternatives to conventional approaches to academic essays.
Current and recent modules include:
- Theatre and the Supernatural
- Feeling It: Emotion and Sensation in the Theatre
- MA Theatre and Performance Theory
- Beyond Acting
- Theatre, Experiment, Revolution
Research
Research Interests:
My main areas of current research, all of which are underpinned by my commitment to a historical materialist study of theatre as a social and economic activity, include:
- histories and theories of possession and automation in work, acting and performance
- theatre, spectatorship and bourgeois subjectivity
- experimental theatre and performance, mainly European
- opera, especially in relation to 19th century industrial capitalism, fossil fuels and European colonialism
Supervision
I have supervised around 20 PhD projects on a range of topics. Recent projects have included:
- Martin Young, 'Theatre in the Time of Capitalism', 2020.
- Faisal Hamadah, 'Replaying the Social and the Political: Oil, Modernity and Theatre in Kuwait', 2020.
- Eleanor Massie, ‘Amateurs and Professionals: The Circum-Atlantic Genealogy of Performer Identity’, 2017.
- Caoimhe Mader McGuinness, “Challenging Liberal Conceptions of the Theatrical Sphere in London, 2009-2015’, co-supervised with Catherine Silverstone, 2017.
- Kirstin Smith, 'Risky Enterprise: Stunts and value in public life of late nineteenth-century New York', 2017.
- Emma Bennett, 'Just Joking: Speech, Performance and Ethics', 2017.
- Francesco Scasciamacchia, ‘Radical or Critical?: Theatrical Politics in Contemporary Visual Art Practices’, 2016.
Public Engagement
I have worked recently on collaborative research projects and events, including, recently:
Managing the Radical, a research project with public discussions, at the Live Art Development Agency (2018-19), with Lois Keidan, Amitabh Rai, Gini Simpson, Cecilia Wee and Orlagh Woods. https://www.thisisliveart.co.uk/projects/restock-rethink-reflect-five-on-managing-the-radical/
The Things They Do, a one-day experimental symposium at the Barbican Centre (2016), co-curated with Joe Kelleher and Orlagh Woods.
Performance and Politics in the 1970s, a day of talks, screenings and conversation at the Whitechapel Gallery, in partnership with the Live Art Development Agency (2015), co-curated with Dominic Johnson.
https://www.whitechapelgallery.org/events/performance-politics-2/
Performance
From time to time I make or contribute to performances, and to the curation of performance events. In 2009 I worked with the director Tim Hopkins, adapting the libretto of Mozart’s Die Entführung aus dem Serail for a production at Opera North. In 2013, with my colleague Lois Weaver, I co-curated the inaugural Peopling the Palace festival at Queen Mary, and co-created and performed a new experimental theatre piece The State Department Presents (with Lindsay Goss) in Providence (USA). I continue to work with Lindsay Goss, most recently on a new theatre piece entitled quite the best news in some considerable time (2015), revived in 2016 as quite the best news in some considerable time (rinse and repeat version).