To Prompt or Not to Prompt
Fri, 19 Nov 1999, 11:40 amLabrug18 posts in thread
To Prompt or Not to Prompt
Fri, 19 Nov 1999, 11:40 amI have never liked prompting. Ihave been in very few shows that have used such a device. The only time I welcomed a prompt was when it was used as a comical occurance throughout the show - Prompt walks on stage and bashes actor who can't get his lines right, etc.
I have recently be distracted by many things occuring in my life and recently dropped a line on stage. Fair enough, my cue line was missed or not given, but that really is not excuse. I should have been paying enough attention to the dialogue to realise what had happened. As it was, there was an uncomfortable pause before a whispered voice jolted my memory and feed me my line.
My first reaction was to quickly pick-up where'd I had left off, but I was resentful that I had needed prompt, then I mental-bashed myself for being so distracted.
It was later, after the show that I realised that I had become lazy by the very fact that there was a prompt there. I have missed cues before in other plays but have always been able to improvise a quick come-back and get myself back on track. In these shows, we had not prompt and we knew we had to rely on ourselves.
Can it be that the knowledge that a prompt is present (stage left) will encourage laziness in the performers?
Jeff "Missed" Watkins
I have recently be distracted by many things occuring in my life and recently dropped a line on stage. Fair enough, my cue line was missed or not given, but that really is not excuse. I should have been paying enough attention to the dialogue to realise what had happened. As it was, there was an uncomfortable pause before a whispered voice jolted my memory and feed me my line.
My first reaction was to quickly pick-up where'd I had left off, but I was resentful that I had needed prompt, then I mental-bashed myself for being so distracted.
It was later, after the show that I realised that I had become lazy by the very fact that there was a prompt there. I have missed cues before in other plays but have always been able to improvise a quick come-back and get myself back on track. In these shows, we had not prompt and we knew we had to rely on ourselves.
Can it be that the knowledge that a prompt is present (stage left) will encourage laziness in the performers?
Jeff "Missed" Watkins
Re: "No prompt required"
Mon, 6 June 2005, 11:25 amJoe McCabe wrote:
> However, I don't agree with the Tech who suggested "that the
> infamous 'BOOTH' should have shot the actor instead" - even
> if this may have been the high light of the SM's and Crews
> career, at least it I would know what show was being
> performed when 'Lincoln' got his last comp ticket - can any
> one help out with this info???
I've always wondered, too, so I did a bit of searching...
According to the online "Explore" Dictionary of Literature (link given below), the last play Abraham Lincoln ever saw was "Our American Cousin", by Tom Taylor. Apparently halfway through Act Three Scene Two, the funniest line of the play is delivered, and Booth chose this moment in the hopes that the laughter would cover the gunshot...
http://www.explore-reading.com/literature/O/Our_American_Cousin.html
: )
Shannyn
> However, I don't agree with the Tech who suggested "that the
> infamous 'BOOTH' should have shot the actor instead" - even
> if this may have been the high light of the SM's and Crews
> career, at least it I would know what show was being
> performed when 'Lincoln' got his last comp ticket - can any
> one help out with this info???
I've always wondered, too, so I did a bit of searching...
According to the online "Explore" Dictionary of Literature (link given below), the last play Abraham Lincoln ever saw was "Our American Cousin", by Tom Taylor. Apparently halfway through Act Three Scene Two, the funniest line of the play is delivered, and Booth chose this moment in the hopes that the laughter would cover the gunshot...
http://www.explore-reading.com/literature/O/Our_American_Cousin.html
: )
Shannyn
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