Theatre production involves physical risk, power dynamics, creative vulnerability, and significant resource use. Professional and student theatre makers have a responsibility to maintain safe, ethical, inclusive and sustainable working environments. These are not peripheral concerns — in VCE Theatre Studies they are examinable knowledge and expected practice.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Safe, ethical, inclusive and sustainable practices are not bureaucratic checklists. They are the foundation of a working environment where everyone can contribute their best work. A production that harms its team members in the making has failed — regardless of its artistic quality.
EXAM TIP: If asked about safe practices in a production context, give specific examples relevant to the scenario. Name the practice and explain why it was necessary: “Before staging the physical confrontation scene, the director conducted a risk assessment and choreographed the fight sequence, ensuring no performer was placed in genuine physical danger.”
Ethics in theatre production includes:
- Accurate attribution — acknowledging sources, inspirations, and others’ creative contributions
- Intellectual property — obtaining permission to use copyrighted scripts, music, images, or texts
- Representation — avoiding stereotyping or harmful portrayals of cultural, gender, or identity groups
- Power dynamics — maintaining appropriate professional relationships within the production team
- Informed consent — ensuring all team members understand and agree to what is being asked of them
- Cultural sensitivity — seeking guidance when working with material from cultures other than your own
An inclusive production environment ensures that all team members can participate fully:
| Inclusion Area | Practice |
|---|---|
| Disability access | Rehearsal spaces accessible; performance accessible to disabled audience members |
| Cultural inclusion | Rehearsal schedules accommodate religious obligations |
| Gender inclusion | Non-binary and gender-diverse cast/crew respected in all communications |
| Neurodiversity | Clear written communication alongside verbal; structured schedules |
| Casting | Non-traditional casting considered; avoiding typecasting by race or physicality |
COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes treat inclusion as “letting everyone participate.” True inclusion is active — it requires identifying barriers and removing them. Ask not just “can everyone participate?” but “what might prevent participation and how do we change that?”
Where possible, theatre production should minimise its environmental impact:
- Set construction — use recycled, repurposed or sustainably sourced materials
- Costume — source secondhand, hire, or repurpose rather than buying new
- Lighting — use LED technology to reduce energy consumption
- Props — borrow, hire, or repurpose rather than purchasing new items
- Waste — establish recycling and composting systems in the production space
- Documentation — use digital platforms where possible to reduce paper waste
APPLICATION: For your production documentation, include a sustainability audit: what choices did you make to reduce environmental impact? Even small choices demonstrate awareness of sustainability as a production value.
REMEMBER: In VCAA assessments, “where possible” acknowledges that some sustainable options may not be available to all schools. Document what you considered, what was feasible, and why certain approaches were or were not adopted.