- Source: Thomas P. Riccio
Thomas P. Riccio (born 1955) is an American multimedia artist and academic. He received his BA from Cleveland State University in English Literature in 1978, his MFA from Boston University in 1982, and studied in the PhD program in Performance Studies at New York University from 1983 to 1984. Riccio has directed over one hundred plays at American regional theatres, off-off and off Broadway and has worked extensively in the area of indigenous and ritual performance conducting research and/or creating performances in: South Africa, Zambia, Burkina Faso, Tanzania, Kenya, Ethiopia, Europe, Russia, Siberia, Korea, India, Nepal, China, and Alaska. In 1993 the People's Republic of Sakha (central Siberia) declared him a “Cultural Hero”.
Career
In 1980 Riccio was appointed Assistant Literary Director at the American Repertory Theatre, Cambridge, MA and Research Assistant to Robert Brustein. In 1984 he was appointed Dramaturg and Resident Director of the Cleveland Play House. 1985 he served as Artistic Director of the Organic Theatre, Chicago. In 1988 Riccio was appointed as Professor of Theatre at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, and Artistic Director of Tuma Theater, an Inuit theatre group. He continued in both of these positions until 2003. From 2003 until the present he has been the Professor of Performance Studies and Aesthetic Studies at the University of Texas at Dallas. Since 2006 Riccio has worked with David Hanson at Hanson Robotics as a lead narrative engineer. He has also served as a visiting professor at the Korean National University for the Arts, California Institute of Integral Studies and the University of Dar es Salaam. He is a producing artist with Project X a Dallas-based performance collective [1]. He has created two media installations with Frank DuFour, The Invention of Memory (2010) and Not So Indifferent (2012) both at Central Trak Gallery, Dallas. In 2011 with Lori McCarty he formed Dead White Zombies, a Dallas-based experimental, post-disciplinary performance and media group that utilizes ritual and indigenous expressions. Riccio serves as Poo Pa Doo (artistic director) of the group and has written, directed, and created installations for four works since its founding. Blah Blah (2011); Flesh World (2012), (w)hole (2012), and T.N.B. (2013), Bull Game (2013), [2], Karaoke Motel (2014) [3], DP92 (2015) [4], and Holy Bone (2017) Was an artist in residence at the Watermill Arts Center (2016) [5] and is collaborating on 12 Shouts, a performance project with Sibyl Kempson for the Whitney Museum. Visiting Professor in Ethnography and Anthropology, Jisou University, Hunan, China. Principal actor, Wedding Dresses.
Notable works
2003: Published the book Reinventing Traditional Alaska Native Performance
2004: Initiated the "Story Lab" and Artistic Director
2004: Kartasi, a new media performance work
2004: "Kenya's Community Health Awareness Puppeteers" article published by PAJ, Performing Arts Journal, #76
2006: Alpha Male, a cyberpunk paranoia new media performance work
2006: There is Never a Reference Point, a performance work about a person with multiple personality disorder
2006: Inuit, a play awarded the Alexander S. Onassis Foundation Distinction Prize in Playwrighting
2007: Participated in the creation of Einstein, a lifelike conversational robot, which was on display at the Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum NYC (12/2006 to 05/2007)
2007: Published the book Performing Africa: Remixing Culture, Theatre and Tradition
2008: The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, a performance/media immersion inspired by the 1920 Expressionist film
2008: So There and Orange Oranges, two short plays for the theatre, Festival of Independent Theaters, Dallas
2009: Some People a theatre/media performance work, Out of the Loop Festival and Project X, Dallas
2009: Andgena (The First), a devised performance work, Lul Theatre and Litooma, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, also conducted workshops at Addis Ababa University.
2009: Orange Oranges play published by Sojourn Literary Journal
2009: Video Documentary Director and Editor, There is Never a Reference Point premiere Dallas Video Festival
2009-2010: Featured Performance Artist, "All the World's a Stage," Dallas Museum of Art
2010: Published Articles "Robot as Ritual Oracle and Fetish," University of Tartu (Estonia), "Performance of Body, Space and Place" chapter in Healing Collective Trauma, Springer Publishing
2010: Participated in the creation of Bina, a conversational robot for Hanson Robotics
2010: PlayLab reading of new play TNB (Typical Nigga Behavior) Great Plains Theatre Conference and Workshop Instructor
2011 Blah Blah, writer, director, installations, Dead White Zombies, Dallas. Semi-Finalist, National Playwright's Conference
2012 Flesh World writer, director, installations, Dead White Zombies, Dallas. Semi-finalist, National Playwright's Conference
2012 (w)hole writer, director, installations, Dead White Zombies, Dallas
2012 Ethiopia and Its Double article published by Theatre Forum Magazine
2012 Rhythm Reality published, a chapter In Rhythms And Steps Of Africa, Studies on Comparative Aesthetics, volume 2: Studies On Anthropology And Aesthetics Of The African Dance, editor Wiesna Mond-Kozłowska.
2012 Shadows in the Sun: Context, Process and Performance in Ethiopia, published, New Theatre Quarterly, Cambridge Univ. Press
2012 At Play With the Dead White Zombies, an interview published in Arts and Culture, Dallas, December 2012-January 2013.
2013 Collective (Re)Creation as Site of Reclamation, Reaffirmation, and Redefinition, chapter in Collective Creation in Contemporary Performance, Palgrave
2013 Lecture Series at Tribruvan University, Nepal. Performance workshop with Mandala Theatre, Kathmandu. Article, Kathmandu Post.
2013 Performance Workshops, Pondicherry University, India. Research in Theru Koothu, Tamil folk performance.
2013 T.N.B. a site-specific performance immersion, writer-director
2013 The Weirdest Theatre Mind in Dallas, published in Dallas Observer, August 2013
2014 100 Dallas Creatives: Offbeat Intellect Thomas Riccio article published in The Dallas Observer, September, 2014
2014 Artist Residency, Halka Center, Istanbul, Turkey [6]
2014 "Dead White Zombies, Dallas Texas" published in Theatre Forum, International Journal [7]
2015 Lecture Series at Jishou University, China, research in Miao traditional performance [8], named visiting professor in Anthropology and Ethnography
2016 "Narrative of Place" chapter published in Audience Revolutions, TCG Press, Caridad Svich, editor
2016 Watermill Center, NY, Artist-in-Residence, February–March
2016 Huan Nuo Yuan, a video documentary of a Miao ritual, shown at Dallas Video Festival, EthnograFilm Festival (Paris), Beijing Film Festival, International Film Festival of Ethnographic Films, Sophia, Bulgaria, and Martinique Film Festival.
2017 Holy Bone, a site specific immersion performance, writer-director, Dead White Zombies
2017 Thomas Riccio Dead White Zombies an podcast interview, by Brett Cowell, Total Life Complete Fall 2017
2017 Dead White Zombies Theatre Like You Never Seen It feature article published in D Magazine, February 2017
2018 Africa Agency and the Anthropocene article published in Anthenaeum Review
2019 Nuoyuan Exorcism and Transformation in Miao Ritual Drama article published in TDR, The Drama Review, MIT Press Summer 2019
References
External links
Thomas Riccio homepage
Dead White Zombies homepage
Thomas Riccio biography at UT Dallas