The Prompter: Discord, Care, and Cues for Survival
🗓️ Wednesday, 24 June — 9:30am
- 10:10am
(40 mins)
Presenters
Image
Abstract
In the opera house, the prompter works as a vocal prosthesis, a disembodied voice dedicated to filling gaps when the operatic machine falters. This figure lives in perpetual readiness to serve yet is structurally excluded from authorship and public history. This research identifies a parallel between the prompter and the trans subject through their shared navigation of the gap between body and voice. While this discord, an asymmetrical or desynchronized relationship between how one sounds and how one is seen, is a site of safety and an official function for the prompter, it remains a site of high-stakes danger and political endangerment for the trans subject.
This lecture performance explores how the prompter’s labor can be reclaimed as a survival strategy. It moves away from the institutional demand to save or document the trans voice, proposing a methodology of cruising instead. Much like the silent high-stakes codes of cruising, prompting is a private linguistic exchange, a shorthand of whispered cues and cryptic marks on a score intended for an audience of one. By treating the vocal score not as fixed but as a site for unauthorized intimate connection, the work explores the pleasure a trans subject derives from a voice that refuses to appear for the general public.
The performance enacts this discord as a tactile labor of care. The presentation is intentionally non-frontal and desynchronized, creating a tension that requires the audience to proactively activate the material. Through live vocalization and opaque video traces that maintain a specific gaze without offering full disclosure, the work invites a process of participatory sense-making. Rather than a smooth delivery of results, the performance functions as an open rehearsal, a space where the trans subject and the prompter become co-conspirators in a practice of resistance against narrative standardization.
This lecture performance explores how the prompter’s labor can be reclaimed as a survival strategy. It moves away from the institutional demand to save or document the trans voice, proposing a methodology of cruising instead. Much like the silent high-stakes codes of cruising, prompting is a private linguistic exchange, a shorthand of whispered cues and cryptic marks on a score intended for an audience of one. By treating the vocal score not as fixed but as a site for unauthorized intimate connection, the work explores the pleasure a trans subject derives from a voice that refuses to appear for the general public.
The performance enacts this discord as a tactile labor of care. The presentation is intentionally non-frontal and desynchronized, creating a tension that requires the audience to proactively activate the material. Through live vocalization and opaque video traces that maintain a specific gaze without offering full disclosure, the work invites a process of participatory sense-making. Rather than a smooth delivery of results, the performance functions as an open rehearsal, a space where the trans subject and the prompter become co-conspirators in a practice of resistance against narrative standardization.
Biography
Richie Lux Kramár (Richard L. Kramár) is a poet, translator, director, dramaturge, kabarettier, and librettist. He is currently pursuing a PhD in Dramatic Arts at Janáček Academy of Performing Arts in Brno. He co-founded the independent cultural space Divadlo na Ă´smom poschodĂ in Bratislava. He has published four poetry collections and is part of the editor-in-chief duo of PsĂ vĂno, a digital curatorial platform for contemporary poetry. During the 2022/23 season, he worked as a full-time prompter at the State Opera in Prague, where he now continues as an external collaborator. The chamber opera TU JE OSTROV, for which he wrote the libretto, is set to premiere at the Janáček Brno 2026 festival.