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Mouthing Into the Void: Can the Prompter Sing?

KRAMÁR, Richie Lux

Basic information

Original name

Mouthing Into the Void: Can the Prompter Sing?

Edition

IFTR 2025, Kolín nad Rýnem, Německo, 2025

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Presentations at conferences

Field of Study

60400 6.4 Arts

Country of publisher

Germany

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

Marked to be transferred to RIV

Yes

Organization unit

Theatre Faculty

Keywords in English

Artistic research; opera prompter; trans* voicing; liminality; monster theory; operatic labour; vocal transition; acousmatic voice; queer performativity

Tags

International impact
Changed: 20/3/2026 13:49, Mgr. Jana Kořínková, Ph.D.

Abstract

In the original language

This conference paper presents a segment of ongoing doctoral artistic research titled "MONSTER SINGS," focusing on the liminal positioning of the opera prompter’s voice. The research explores the prompter’s vocal presence as a phenomenon perpetually suspended between public and private, silence and sonority, and being voiced and unvoiced. The author, drawing on his dual experience as a professional opera prompter and a transgender man, investigates the "prompter’s box" as a space of transition. The contribution frames the act of prompting—required to be perceptible to the singer yet undetectable to the audience—as a methodological tool for (re)constructing and rehearsing the trans* voice. By analyzing the "untraceable" nature of the prompter’s cues, the text inquires into the (im)possibilities of being heard and the erotics of vocal "leakage" in the operatic machine. Through the lens of "monster theory" (referencing Paul B. Preciado) and queer performativity, the paper proposes that the prompter’s voice does not merely assist the singer but forms a dialogical partnership that challenges the boundaries of individual identity. The work concludes by reimagining the "void" of the prompt corner not as a site of erasure, but as a fertile ground for new forms of "trans* voicing" and relationality.