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What constitutes a good show?

Mon, 4 Dec 2006, 08:21 am
Gordon the Optom11 posts in thread
What constitutes a memorable show?
Should a play still be considered admirable and worth recommending, if the sets are first class, the lighting outstanding, the direction imaginative, the acting amazing – never been better - but the script boring, clichéd and pointless? On this occasion the audience may depart the theatre frustrated and thinking what a waste of time and talent.
Or is the piece which has very little scenery, a few lights, the acting is wooden with the odd fluffed word, direction is dull and laborious, but the play has a brilliantly inventive, beautifully written script, a better show?
Possibly the play is one which is technically average, has good - but not outstanding acting - yet on leaving the theatre you realise that you have engaged in some kind of emotional experience? Perhaps you have laughed, cried, aroused, been scared witless and still are thinking about passages in the play a day or two later. Is this the 5-star production?

I realise that in the ideal show, all of these ‘quality features’ should be present, but isn’t the audience enjoyment factor the most important point of any show?
We hear of Art Galleries which have spent $20,000 on a pile of bricks, or recently in the UK of the 50,000 pounds spent on a standard urinal as the latest art. Likewise I feel that the number of productions which are weird and fit into some strange genre is increasing. There is a massive GENERAL public out there, which some producers may consider plebs, who need to be taught to appreciate the latest real and innovative theatre art. Are the public right or should a select few discerning theatricals receive preference?
The Da Vinci code was a massive seller, very popular but hardly the best written book of the year, but it was a good satisfying yarn. So how should books and plays be rated? Does the audience enjoyment factor matter?

I'm with you too Na

Mon, 4 Dec 2006, 11:27 am
I feel that the show is poor if I start looking at how the set was built or how the lighting was done during the performance. It obviously starts with the script. Doesn't have to be innovative or shocking but has to be well written and keep attention. Performances? I tend to get uncomfortable if one person is operating at a different level either hugely better or hugely worse than everyone else I think it's important that the cast is on a reasonable level and they have to understand the script. I have worked with actors who can put in what appears to be a good performance but lack understanding. I am a technician and designer so I guess the best result for me on the technical side is that nothing is obviously wrong. I see very few shows amateur or professional that really shine technically (who has the time) but as long as nothing is obviously wrong I can and will enjoy the show. I rarely would have lit a show the same way as shows I watch but that doesn't mean the LD was wrong just different. Was it a good show? If I want to tell people about it it was a good show. I take my mother to the theatre a fair bit. She used to be a very active amateur actress but she retired a few years ago and at 84 has decided that life is too short to be overcritical. She goes to the Theatre to enjoy it and does. Maybe we should all take a leaf from her book Is that all there is? Well if that's all there is my friend, then let's keep dancing. www.tonymoore.id.au

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