Should Playwrights Direct Their Own Work?
Wed, 11 Nov 2009, 01:57 pmstinger29 posts in thread
Should Playwrights Direct Their Own Work?
Wed, 11 Nov 2009, 01:57 pmThe best of all possible bad worlds
Wed, 11 Nov 2009, 06:50 pmI have regularly directed my own scripts, and have also had others direct for me. It is always possible to get the wrong director for the script in question, and sometimes that can be the playwright. The only rule of thumb I can offer is that no one directing their own script should go into the rehearsal room thinking as a writer, only as a director. This works for me. I can easily imagine it failing for others.
These days, I write, direct and perform my own work. I also produce it, market it, manage it and pay for it. It keeps me honest, but may not be a good road for everybody.
I believe that Pinter - a regular director of his own work - admitted to having made only one change in all his career, and that was to do with a price increase.
The killer in any production is not the conflict between the playwright and the director, but preciosity - and any one of us can be guilty of that. (In my case, far too often.)
Noel
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