Spare Tyre

Company name: Spare Tyre

Founders: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell

Established: 1979

Reason: To explore compulsive eating and women’s issues, inspired by the book Fat is a Feminist Issue by Susie Orbach

Current Status: Continues to operate – Spare Tyre

Area of Work: Women’sTIE & YPT

Policy: To devise and write their own shows collectively on the subject of women and self-image

Structure: The company was run as a collective of actresses, where each member was paid equally and held an administrative role alongside their creative role

Based: Primarily tours in and around London, with some tours to other UK cities

Funding: Occasional funding from the GLAA (Greater London Arts Association)

Performance Venues: As well as performing in fringe venues such as the Drill Hall and Oval House, they also often performed in non-theatrical spaces, including community centres, women’s centres, health centres, halls, arts centres, unions, colleges and prisons.

Audiences: Originally the company’s shows were designed for compulsive eaters, with discussions about compulsive eating and self-image held after each performance. Audiences were mixed, although the performances were targeted at women. The company sometimes performed in venues that preferred women only audiences.

Company and work process: Spare Tyre was founded in 1979 after Clair Chapwell (then Chapman) placed an ad in Time Out calling for: ‘Women interested in putting together a play based on Fat is a Feminist Issue  write to Clair’. The bestselling book by Susie Orbach, which had been published in 1978, challenged the culture of dieting and tackled the knotty issues that surrounds compulsive eating, arguing that its roots lie in the sexist social system. The response to Chapwell’s ad was, the company claims in their Songbook ‘incredible. Women of all ages, shapes and theatrical experience wrote in, audititions were held, and out of these Spare Tyre was born.’

The company’s first production, Baring the Weight, explored some of the company’s own experiences with compulsive eating and dieting, told through comedy and songs. The play examines the roots of eating disorders and questions the conventional wisdom of diets and self-worth; for example, one of the protagonists, Daphne, loses six stone and becomes ‘Miss Slim Trim 1979’, but discovers that ‘life is not the perfect paradise she hoped it would be.’ Devised by the company through improvisation and discussion, the play itself was scripted by Clair Chapwell. This creative process was to be repeated throughout the 1980s. In addition to performing to diverse audiences, from slimming clubs to women’s centres, the company also encouraged discussion of compulsive eating and body image after performances, and actively sought to help set up self-help groups among its audience members, based on the arguments expressed by Orbach in Fat is a Feminist Issue. Their second play How do I Look?, also took body image as its central subject, although it explored not just weight issues but also the pressures of women’s appearance more generally.

The number of company members in Spare Tyre rapidly decreased over the first two productions, shrinking from ten to five, as they failed to secure consistent funding, and following How do I Look? the company was further reduced to three remaining members. However, all three were committed to continuing the company, and for the next nine years, Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell toured musical plays and comedic cabarets in London and other cities the UK.

Over the following productions, the company moved away from its body image foundation and also looked at other women’s issues, including: smoking, pregnancy, contraception, being single (On the Shelf), getting older (Laugh Lines), love (Head Over Heels) and women’s relationship to money (Gone Shopping). Common to all these productions, however, was the use of comic sketches and songs that drew on the personal experiences of the company. Songs were written by Clair and Harriet, and occasionally by Katina, and were all self-accompanied on stage, or were sung a cappella in close harmony. Along with a mixture of acoustic piano, guitar and drums, the company also experimented with using food items as percussion, such as grating Ryvita together in the song ‘Hank Wangford (put my coil in)’. They invited designers and directors to work with them when devising a new show, with puppets, masks, scaffolding and ladders featuring heavily in the design.

As well as performing musical plays and cabarets, they also ran workshops for a wide range of groups, including continuing their connection to women’s groups. From 1984 they also ran theatre training programmes for young people in London, encouraging young theatre-makers to form their own companies. From the early 1990s, Spare Tyre became entirely project based, although they continued to accept commissions for songs and plays.

Personal appraisal and thoughts:

On the humour and poignancy of their work
To hear a discussion on the humour and poignancy of the company’s plays and songs, listen to this clip from an interview with Clair Chapwell, Harriet Powell and Katina Noble.

The Spare Tyre format
In the 1986 Spare Tyre Songbook, the company described their style as follows: ‘Seven years, seven productions and hundreds of performances later, we’re still together, travelling the length and breadth of the country with our piano, giant puppets, props and ladders. We assemble our sets, play our own music, write our own songs and sketches. Our format is simple: comic cabaret, sprinkled with songs – humour and music have been the cornerstone of our work.’

Becoming politicised
Talking about her brief time with Spare Tyre in the early 1980s, Adele Salem commented on how working with the company had had a formative impact on her politics and on her identity as a feminist – ‘I’d seen their advert in Time Out and I was very nervous about contacting this Feminist theatre company, but I was quite excited and I wanted to find out more about it. So I went along and got involved, and they were doing this amazing work with this woman called Susie Orbach who’d written a book called Fat is a Feminist Issue and it started to turn my thinking around. I started to become politicised on women’s image, why we behaved certain ways, why it was acceptable to be this way, not acceptable to be that way. The show that we did was called How Do I Look? so it began to question the whole image thing, women’s image, why we dress in a certain way, to please, to charm, to be attractive. [It was a ] small touring show, perhaps about six of us. We did get paid at time, perhaps not a full Equity wage. It had Clair Chapman [now Chapwell] in it and Clair had been one of the original founding members of the Women’s Theatre Group, so she was quite, a sort of, politicized person. And part of that, later on in the Women’s Theatre Group, part of that politicization was that we should be paid properly as actors and as women, workers. So, thankfully… it was quite unusual, you know.’

Appreciation of Spare Tyre from Fat is a Feminist Issue author and company supporter
‘Spare Tyre not only made us laugh and weep over our own eating problems, they also encouraged women to try and do something different about them. They took up the message of self-help and spread it everywhere, joyfully and seriously. In mother-and-toddler groups, on the feminist theatre circuit, in diet clubs, they took their plays and skits and their enthusiasm for the anti-diet method around the UK and Europe. But they did more than this. They set up scores of groups on their travels – groups that helped hundreds of individual women who had been isolated in their own distress to find new respect for themselves, and the courage to face the complex of issues in their lives that come to be expressed in compulsive eating. It was because of the number of groups that Spare Tyre and The Women’s Therapy Centre generated, and the questions that those groups came up with, that I found the need to extend the ideas of Fat is a Feminist Issue into a more explicit guide to self-help.’ (from The Spare Tyre Songbook)

Reviews:
Baring the Weight
‘It’s very funny too, with the women playing characters from ‘Miss Slim Trim 1979′ to an anorexic teenager desperately dumping Mum’s bacon sandwiches in the bin on the way to school. The songs are great…. I’m going to be 8 stone by my birthday / In hot pants by July / I’ll start my fast tomorrow / Today I’ll bake a pie … and there are some quite memorable lines.’ (Carole Spedding, Spare Rib, 1979 )
‘You may not immediately identify with these characters, but judging from the argument in our office about who fat/anorexia qualified them as most suitable reviewer, fat is very much a universal issue in our looksist society. The show is sharply put together and performed, and the star turn on the night I saw it was the discussion afterwards in which slimmers of varying sizes of success told their tales. Recommended.’ (Ann McFerran, Time Out, 1979)
‘It is the sense of bounce – and – that word is used in all sincerity – that validates this particular show. There is scarcely a moment of propaganda or polemics without a built-in giggle at its potential absurdity and the musical interpolations composed by Clair Chapman are equally witty.’ (A.M.P., The Stage, 1979)

Listen to the song ‘Spare Rib and City Limits‘ for a response from Spare Tyre regarding criticism from the Feminist publication Spare Rib and Listings magazine City Limits.

Productions:

PRODUCTION NAMEVENUESDATES
Baring The Weight
Company devised
Script: Clair Chapwell
Songs: Clair Chapwell
Original company: Clair Chapwell, Caroline Eves, Tish Francis, Sylvia Hallett, Tina McHugh, Katina Noble, Harriet Powell, Joanne Richler, Nancy Roberts, Janine Turkie, Shane Vahey and Val Warburton.
Designer: Judy Farrar

A musical play about compulsive eating.
Jacksons Lane Community Centre, Bounds Green Health Centre; Ladbroke House, Action Space, Drill Hall, Fleet Community Centre, Maryville Community Centre, Albany Empire, Southbank Poly, Croydon Warehouse, Covent Garden Community Centre, Carlton Centre, Teatro Technis, Hoxton Hall, Women's Art Alliance, Kentish Town Health Centre1979
How Do I Look?
Company devised
Script: Clair Chapwell
Songs: Clair Chapwell and Harriet Powell
Performers: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble, Harriet Powell, Nancy Roberts and Adele Salem.
Designer: Judy Farrar

'A look at our beauty-obsessed culture through the eyes of 5 not-so beautiful women, with music and song' (Advert)
Albany Empire, Oval House, Dame Collet House, Inter-Action (Wilkin St.), Cheapstow Pub, Fleet Community Centre, Abbey Road Community Centre1980
Woman's Complaint
Company devised
Script: Clair Chapwell
Songs: Clair Chapwell, Harriet Powell and Katina Noble
Performers: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell.
Designer: Judy Farrar

A revue, showing the best of Spare Tyre from previous shows, plus new sketches and songs about women's health.
Oval House1981-89
On The Shelf
Company devised
Script: Clair Chapwell
Songs: Clair Chapwell, Harriet Powell and Katina Noble
Performers: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Designer: Judy Farrar

Musical play that covered a range of women's problems, from weight to boyfriends.
Inter-Action (Wilkin St.), New Variety, Wood Green Trade Union Centre, Chat's Palace, Muswell Hill Youth Centre, Oval House, Drill Hall, Cockpit Theatre1982
Just Desserts
Company devised
Script: Clair Chapwell
Songs: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Performers: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Designer: Judy Farrar

'...explores the fate of the single woman in a couple-orientated society, telling of the trials and tribulations experienced by a suburban housewife who is suddenly abandoned by her husband.' (Ad in the Hornby Journal, 1983)
Jackson's Lane Community Centre1983
The Invisible Woman
Company devised
Script: Clair Chapwell
Songs: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Performers: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Designer: Judy Farrar

'This funny musical cabaret deals with the way women are made to feel invisible in our society. We take a wry look at car maintenance, makeup and man-made language.' (advert)
Harmood Community Centre, Cockpit Theatre, Jackson's Lane Community Centre1985
You've Got to be Kidding
Company devised
Script: Clair Chapwell
Songs: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Performers: Clair
Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Designer: Judy Farrar
Victoria Hall (Harrow)1986
Laugh Lines
Company devised
Script: Clair Chapwell
Songs: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Performers: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Co-designed: Judy Farrar and Teresa Hare Duke

A musical play about getting older.
Fortune Theatre, Hackney Empire1987-88
Head Over Heels
Company devised
Script: Clair Chapwell
Songs: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Performers: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Designer: Judy Farrar

'Three women work on a women's magazine. Every day, they churn out reams of romantic slush for their readers and nightly return to their own lives, which are a totally different story.' (Listings, Guardian
Corner Theatre, Auderdale House, BAC, Cafe Theatre, 1988-89
Gone Shopping
Company devised
Script: Clair Chapwell
Songs: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell
Performers: Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell

'A tuneful but truthful look at women's relationship to money' (Bulletin, Guardian)
Battersea Arts Centre, Oval House, St Martin's Market Theatre, 1989

Interviewee reference: Adele Salem. An interview with Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell, recorded for the purposes of creating this webpage, is available on request from Unfinished Histories.

Links: Spare Tyre website, Clair Chapwell

Existing archive material: The Spare Tyre Company File at the V&A’s Theatre and Performance Archives and the Bristol University Theatre Collection. Also: Clair Chapwell files in Unfinished Histories own archive at Bishopsgate Institute.

Current work: Spare Tyre continues to produce theatre and conduct workshops, under the slogan ‘theatre without prejudice’. The company’s work since 1989 has largely focused on Theatre-in-Education, the LGBT community, adults with learning disabilities, and adults over 60. An overview of the company’s work can be found on its website, along with details of the company’s most recent productions and artistic approaches.

Bibliography:
Fat is a Feminist Issue by Susie Orbach (1978)
Fat is a Feminist Issue 2 by Susie Orbach (1982)
The Spare Tyre Songbook by Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriett Powell, introduced by Susie Orbach (London: Virago, 1987)
The Alternative Theatre Handbook, edited by Catherine Itzin (editions: 1979, 1980, 1982, and 1985/6)

Acknowledgements: This webpage was assembled with the generous help of the founders of Spare Tyre – Clair Chapwell, Katina Noble and Harriet Powell. We are enormously grateful to them for contributing their personal collections of images, scripts and assorted ephemera, as well as their reflections and time. The Spare Tyre and associated webpages were written and created by Eleanor Paremain. November 2013

The creation of this page was supported by the National Lottery through the Heritage Lottery Fund.