Question: You are an intimacy choreographer, coordinator and educator. How are those distinct from each other?
Answer: Intimacy choreography is for live performance, coordination is for film, and education is for everyone. When I am in the room as an intimacy choreographer, I’m collaborating with the actors and the director to tell the story of the moment. Intimacy coordination includes choreography, but also involves a lot more logistics management. There are often a lot more pre-production meetings for film to make sure that the director, actors, wardrobe folks, etc are on the same page so that shoot day goes smoothly. As an educator, I teach workshops for theatre and film practitioners around the world. The goal of those workshops is to make everyone in the industry better at being consent-based practitioners.
Q: When did you know this was what you wanted to do?
A: I started intimacy work in my early 20s. I was working primarily as an actor and realized that there was an opportunity to discover, and later develop, best practices for staging intimacy, nudity and sexual violence.
Q: Who’s a professor at ASU who greatly influenced you, and how?
A: Although I never had them for a class formally, conversations with Jason Davids Scott had a huge impact on my work. Lots of long chats about intersections between our research interests helped build my confidence to write about my work.
Q: Can you tell us a little bit about your book—what it’s about and who it’s for?
A: “Staging Sex: Best Practices, Tools, and Techniques for Theatrical Intimacy” is a practical, step-by-step handbook for staging intimacy, nudity and sexual violence for the theatre. It’s for anyone who works in theatre or film and is hoping to expand their toolkit, develop consent-based practices, or make their creative process a lot less weird.
Photos courtesy of Chelsea Pace.