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Theater vérité: How ‘The Jungle’ re-creates a refugee encampment

During performances of “The Jungle” at St. Ann’s Warehouse in New York, theatergoers are inches from the action – and are sometimes handed freshly made food.

“The Jungle” isn’t dinner theater, though. Nor is it connected to the novel by Upton Sinclair about Chicago’s stockyards. Instead it’s a heavyweight drama about the migrant camp in Calais, France – called “the Jungle” – which was demolished by authorities in 2016.

Why We Wrote This

What role do the arts play in debates about immigration? With “The Jungle,” a pair of playwrights immerse people in the migrant camp experience, aiming to prompt more discussion and understanding.

The play, back in the U.S. starting Feb. 18, attempts to re-create the experience of living in that camp by placing ticket holders right in the middle of it. Sometimes it’s harrowing: Early on, fake tear gas billows through the flaps of the set’s tent. But it is also heartwarming and hopeful. By putting the audience in such close proximity to the characters, “The Jungle” aims to bring more understanding to the migrant experience.  

“What I love about this play is that we don’t try to solve the problem,” says Ben Turner, who plays an Afghan refugee turned restaurant proprietor. “We’re not trying to wrap everything up in a bow. It’s messy. … The characters are contradictory. They love, they hate, they unite. They have preconceived ideas and judgments towards each other. But then they come together in the best way.”

For the next month, when ticket holders enter St. Ann’s Warehouse in New York, they won’t see a conventional stage with rows, arcs, or circles of chairs. Just a vast tent. 

It’s the setting for “The Jungle,” an immersive theater production. The tent is a makeshift restaurant inside a refugee camp. There’s dirt underfoot. Long tables with benches for seating and ketchup at every place setting await audience members. Ushers guide them to their places via the set’s kitchen area, which includes a dusting of flour that is more than just a prop. 

“Some lucky people get some freshly made naan,” says Naomi Webb, executive director of Good Chance Theatre, the British company that created the show, opening Feb. 18. “It depends on where you sit.”

Why We Wrote This

What role do the arts play in debates about immigration? With “The Jungle,” a pair of playwrights immerse people in the migrant camp experience, aiming to prompt more discussion and understanding.

“The Jungle” isn’t dinner theater, though. Nor is it connected to the novel by Upton Sinclair about Chicago’s stockyards. Instead it’s a heavyweight drama about the migrant camp in Calais, France – called “the Jungle” by some – which was demolished by authorities in 2016. The play attempts to re-create the experience of living in the refugee camp. Sometimes it’s harrowing: Early on, fake tear gas billows through the flaps of the tent. But it is also heartwarming and hopeful. By putting the audience in such close proximity to the characters, whose stories play out on runway-style stages surrounded by the restaurant tables, “The Jungle” aims to bring more understanding to the migrant experience.  

“Since the Jungle got dismantled, there’s been hardly any kind of media attention to what’s happening in Calais,” says Elena Ewence, a volunteer with Project Play, a nonprofit that gives displaced children in the area, and nearby Dunkirk, spaces and opportunities for recreation. “So the fact that [“The Jungle”] is being shown is really important because a lot of people aren’t aware of what’s going on. … It’s really easy to forget these are real human beings.”

Teddy Wolff/File

A performance of the “The Jungle” at St. Ann’s Warehouse in 2018 shows how the acting and audience are integrated.

“The Jungle” tells the intersecting stories of several individuals who aspire to cross the channel to Britain, about 30 miles from the port of Calais. Whether by boat or tunnel, it’s a risky journey. So thousands of people set up tents and shacks in the rapidly expanding camp. Soon after an Afghan man named Salar (Ben Turner) creates his restaurant, he hosts a sort of town-hall meeting in the tent. Representatives for various enclaves – including Eritreans, Kurds, Sudanese, and Syrians – discuss how to quell violent clashes between refugees. The situation is complicated by the arrival of well-meaning, but often naive, aid workers from Britain. 

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