Drama Therapy for Autism
How story, play, and creative expression support autistic children and adults with social communication, emotional regulation, and wellbeing.
How story, play, and creative expression support autistic children and adults with social communication, emotional regulation, and wellbeing.
Most therapeutic and educational approaches to autism focus on what autistic people struggle with, social interaction, communication, sensory regulation, and attempt to build skills in those areas. Drama therapy takes a different starting point. It begins with what many autistic people have: a genuine affinity for story, character, imaginative play, and alternate worlds. It builds from strength rather than deficit.
This distinction matters. Many autistic people, particularly those who were diagnosed and treated in childhood, carry a deep message that they need to be fixed, that the way they naturally are is wrong or deficient. Drama therapy is one of the few therapeutic approaches that doesn't communicate this. It invites the autistic person into a creative space and follows their lead.
Anxiety is one of the most common co-occurring conditions in autism. Studies suggest that between 40% and 80% of autistic people meet criteria for at least one anxiety disorder. The unpredictability of social interaction, sensory overwhelm, and the constant effort of navigating a neurotypical world all contribute to chronic anxiety in autistic people.
Drama therapy addresses anxiety through structured, predictable creative frames that gradually build tolerance for uncertainty. Roleplay allows rehearsal of anxiety-provoking situations. The group context normalises social interaction. Research by Hod Orkibi and colleagues at Haifa University has documented significant reductions in social anxiety following group drama therapy with autistic adolescents.
Roleplay and character work in drama therapy build social understanding through practice and perspective-taking. Taking on a character's perspective requires understanding that other people have different thoughts, feelings, and motivations, what researchers call theory of mind. Drama therapy gives autistic people a structured, playful context in which to develop and practise this understanding without the high stakes of real social interaction.
Crucially, drama therapy approaches social communication as a two-way process rather than a deficit in the autistic person alone. It works with authentic social connection rather than training surface behaviour.
Many autistic people experience difficulty identifying, labelling, and expressing emotions, a pattern sometimes called alexithymia. Drama therapy provides alternative channels for emotional expression: through character, through story, through movement and embodied play. Clients who cannot identify or articulate what they feel can often express it through a character or an object. This is not a workaround. It is often a more direct route to emotional experience than verbal description is.
Social isolation is a significant problem for autistic people across the lifespan. Group drama therapy provides a context for genuine peer connection that many autistic people rarely access: a shared creative activity with a clear structure, where difference is expected and where the emphasis is on collective play rather than social performance.
Many autistic people who have struggled in other group therapy formats find drama therapy groups more accessible because the activity gives structure to the interaction. There is something to do together, which reduces the anxiety of unstructured social contact.
Autistic adults in particular benefit from drama therapy work on identity and self-acceptance. For those who were late-diagnosed or who masked heavily for years, there is often a significant process of understanding who they actually are, separate from the performance of neurotypicality they learned. Character work, storytelling, and roleplay can support this process, providing a creative space to explore different aspects of the self without the pressures of real-world social evaluation.
Drama therapists working with autistic clients adapt their approach significantly:
Sue Jennings' Embodiment-Projection-Role (EPR) model is particularly applicable to work with autistic people. The model describes a developmental sequence: beginning with sensory-physical (Embodiment) engagement, moving through externalising experience through objects (Projection), and gradually into role-taking. For autistic people who struggle with the demands of roleplay or direct social engagement, EPR allows the drama therapist to begin at whatever level feels accessible and move at the client's pace.
Research on drama therapy for autism has grown in recent years, particularly from Israeli and UK researchers. Studies by Hod Orkibi and colleagues at Haifa University have documented improvements in social self-efficacy, reductions in social anxiety, and better theory of mind scores following group drama therapy interventions with autistic adolescents. UK studies have examined drama therapy in special educational settings, with positive findings for social communication and wellbeing. The field acknowledges that research is still developing and that much current evidence is based on case studies and small-group studies rather than large randomised trials.
Drama therapy here is not social-skills training in disguise. It doesn't teach masking. It builds from what the autistic client already loves, a story, a character, an object, and uses that as the shared ground where connection and self-expression can happen without the cost of performing neurotypicality.
Sue Jennings' Embodiment-Projection-Role sequence lets the therapist start at whatever developmental layer is accessible today, and move only when the client is ready.
Sensory-physical engagement, texture, breath, movement. No story required, no performance asked.
Put experience outside the body, in objects, puppets, sand, figures. The feeling is held by the thing, not the self.
Step into a character. Try on a perspective. Only when embodiment and projection feel steady underneath.
Both are common autism supports. They start from opposite premises, and that changes what happens in the room.
| CreativeDrama therapy | BehavioralSocial-skills training | |
|---|---|---|
| Starting premise | The client's interests and expressive style are the material. | Specific target behaviors need to be taught and reinforced. |
| Communication | Verbal not required, objects, movement, and roles carry the work. | Generally verbal and observable-behavior focused. |
| Relation to masking | Neurodiversity-affirming, doesn't teach performance of neurotypicality. | Varies; some programs inadvertently train masking. |
| Session feel | Structured but creative. The client's lead shapes the content. | Curriculum-driven, skills-based, often homework. |
Also relevant: Drama therapy for children and drama therapy for anxiety.
Research supports drama therapy for autistic children and adolescents, with studies showing improvements in social communication, emotional regulation, theory of mind, and reductions in anxiety. It works with autistic young people's existing strengths rather than treating autism as a deficit to correct.
Social skills training teaches specific behaviours and scripts. Drama therapy builds genuine social understanding through play, story, and character exploration rather than surface behaviour training. It focuses on wellbeing and self-expression rather than normalization, and is adapted to the autistic person's own communication style.
Structured drama games, roleplay for perspective-taking, storytelling and character work, puppet and object work, and group drama therapy. Sessions are highly structured and adapted to sensory needs. Verbal communication is not required.
Yes. Drama therapy uses embodied and projective approaches, movement, gesture, object work, puppets, effectively with non-speaking or minimally verbal autistic people. Sue Jennings' EPR model, which begins at the level of sensory-physical engagement, is particularly applicable.
Yes. For autistic adults, drama therapy addresses anxiety, social isolation, identity and self-acceptance, and the challenges of navigating a neurotypical world. Group drama therapy can address the loneliness many autistic adults experience, providing structure for social connection that reduces interaction anxiety.
Online-Therapy.com is a structured online therapy platform with worksheets, journals, video sessions, and licensed therapists. A useful bridge if you need to start online while searching for a specialty drama therapist.
Chasen (2011, 2014), Gallo-Lopez & Rubin, Haythorne & Seymour, see the autism section for the full reading list.