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 pmI have recently been involved in two plays where the playwright was also the director. In one case, the person concerned felt that he would sooner have someone else direct his plays, but he didn't like to impose on anyone. In the other case, the person concerned felt that he was the best person for the job since he had such a clear vision of how the play should be performed. Also, he could be on hand to do the inevitable rewrites as the rehearsals got under way. That person subsequently expressed amazement at how differently the lines were performed to how they had imagined them in the writing, even despite their own direction.
In my view, once the writing is finished, a playwright should be prepared to sever all ties with his or her brainchild (except for the royalties) and let it fly on its own merits. Also, a director should be prepared to go with the written word and not expect to be able to rewrite the script according to his or her whims or those of the actors.
Me too!
Thu, 12 Nov 2009, 12:47 pmThis is interesting, I'm agreeing with the same person twice on one thread, I must be mellowing.
There is nothing worse than struggling through a rehearsal period with the wrong actor in a role. This is one reason why I pre cast, I will often read a play and immediately think "hey, Freddy would be great in that part." I also hold auditions because I sometimes have no idea who is going to be best opposite Freddy.
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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