My Journey as a Cultural Specialist
I feel the best way to explain what a Cultural Sensitivity Specilists is to share how I became interested in becoming one. I started as an Intimacy Professional for both stage and screen. I've been training since 2018 as one and began working at one in 2021. With the work I do there I realize part of how I analyze a script is looking at the world of the play (or film), and the culture in which the characters live in. How does this impact their relationships to the intimacy. Another part of what I do involved the Actors.
I don't ever ask straight forward questions about their identities or their lived experiences. They're not of my business. What I do ask about is their boundaries. I remind them they are allowed to have seperate, aka professional boundaries for this specific project. They are not obligated or expected to share or bring anything personal with them in the space. However, I know there's no way to shake them. They go with us everywhere. They in some way influence our professional boundaries, values, and choices.
What drew me to the work as a Cultural Sensitivy Specialist is it opens up for being a supportive person in the room when intimacy is not a part of the production. Intimacy Professionals, also known as Intimacy Directors, Choreographers, and Coordinators are specifically trained and brought in for moments that involve sexually related choreography.
About Cultural Sensitivity Specialists
As a Cultural Sensitivy Specilist I have a broader scope. I, and others who are trained for this position each bring with us a variety of backgrounds, knowledge, and specilities to support Actors who may be working on productions with loaded topics.
We are not there to police people or control the production. We are there to focus on supporting the Actors, but also the production team. We ar there to help take the pressure of the power dynamics that weigh heavily in the space between Actor and Director.
Directors have a lot of power and responsibility on their shoulders. Even if they are well versed and supportive of their entire team. Directors have a lot of moving parts happening at the same time and may not always have time or the abilities to add on something like this which is crucial for the Actors to have. Plus, we work in a business that is temporary.
Everyone in this industry works from job-to-job. Actors have for a very long time now been molded into this idea that to be a 'good Actor' means you can be a 'working Actor.' In order to acheive being a 'good Actor' means you are not a problem to work with. This can push many Actors to compromise on their boundaries and values in order to please the powers that be so they can contiue to work in this industry.
Bringing in a Cultural Sensitivity Specilist takes this pressure off of the Actors. It allows them a person on the production team that is there to advocate, listen, and support them. The CSS is also there to suppor the Director's vision. We can help navigate conversations, offer deloaded language, alterntive ideas that suppor their visiona and their boundaries. A CSS also offers derolling practices for the entire team so that they can do the work, but be able to return to their own lives.
We are not their to make the work perfect. We are there to make the work better and sustainable. We are their to suppor the art and the production. We are not Human Resourses (HR). When problems begin to move outside of the artistry of the production, then we may advise they be taken to HR to handle them.
Right now this, like Intimacy is a new and growing field. It's finding it's way. It can cover a great deal of topics. That's why it's important when considering hiring a Cultural Sensitivity Specialist you know what your production will need and if this person has the tools to support it.
Let's make art better, not harder.
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Credit to Tavia Rivee Jefferson and Ann C. James for the beginning of Cultural Coordinators and Cultural Sensitivity Specialists in theatre.