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Where is the Passion?

Sat, 2 Mar 2002, 04:39 pm
Walter Plinge17 posts in thread
When I recently called for expressions of interest in a play that required actors to perform nude and in some graphic, but nonetheless simulated, sex scenes, the overwhelming response was negative. Actors (mostly female) accused me of being a creep. My motivations were called into question by complete strangers, falling just short of libel, and attacks on my personal integrity and my character became the order of the day.

While the response was not unexpected, the vociferousness of it was.

As a result, the past few weeks has seen me do some serious thinking about theatre, particularly in Perth (since this is where I live), and my own reasons for doing it.

What *are* my motivations as a professional theatre practitioner? And do they gel with the motivations of other "professionals" practising theatre in Perth?

Well, the second question is easy. The answer is unequivocally "no".

But why?

To answer this, I must answer the first question.

(deep breath) Here goes:

My motivation is to create theatre that burns people. Theatre that asks you to re-examine your self. Not the glib, superficial, self-congratulatory theatre that has been crafted for us, and in which we so happily wallow... the depressingly predictable parade of theatre that re-inforces stereotypes, pats ourselves on the back for our magnificence, sucks up to politically correct socialist rhetoric, preaches self-indulgently in a faux-provocative fashion to the converted, and perpetuates cliches and platitudes under the guise of bemoaning them.

I am interested in theatre that truly and profoundly confronts an audience, both in a messy, "in-yer-face" way, and in a wry, subtle way.

After one particular performance of "Hamlet" at the Belvoir Street Theatre in Sydney, director Neil Armfield was approached by a member of the audience. The man shook ArmfieldÂ’s hand passionately, and, in doing so, squeezed three $50 notes into it. He said "Buy the cast a drink".

When Swy Theatre presented "A Night in the Arms of Raeleen" back in the early nineties, a member of the audience, who had lived a life similar to that depicted in the play, approached one of the actors, shook his hand, and with tears in his eyes, said repeatedly "Thank you. Thank you. Thank you".

This is called affecting the audience, and on the few occasions when an audience member has approached me in a similar fashion, I have been profoundly humbled by their response.

This has led me to realise that theatre performs a civic function, and is not just a way for actors to earn money and get their names in the paper.

This is why IÂ’m different to the bulk of the so-called "professionals" in PerthÂ’s theatre scene today... IÂ’m in it for the work, not the pay-cheque.

I'm not denying anyoneÂ’s right to earn a living (God knows, I could do with some income about now... I am quite literally having to sell everything I own, just to pay the bills), but what bugs me is that it appears that money is the prime motivating factor in the mind-set of the vast bulk of Perth actors. How else would you explain the demise of the Hole-in-the-Wall, reduced, in its most recent incarnation, to the same fractured state as any other independent production company, instead of being the on-going production house it should have been? Or the turning of Effie Crump from a once open, egalitarian springboard for semi-professional practitioners, into just another professional company struggling for survival?

Industry pressure forced these companiesÂ’ hands. Actors pressured their union to pressure these companies to pay full equity rates to all. As a result, HITW is now effectively dead, and EffieÂ’s is a closed shop, providing limited opportunities to actors and directors, and constantly flirting with liquidation.

So where is the love? Where is the passion?

The simple, necessarily pessimistic answer is: there is none.

Actors want to be paid. They would rather be *paid* to be an actor once or twice a year, than to actually *be* an actor all year round.

And those that do decide to perform year-round, in profit-share productions, would rather be liked than be good.

They want to do plays that re-inforce the nice things in life, and that make them look good to casting directors. They want professional directors like Becher, Ross, Schmitz, etal., to come and see them in "nice" plays, and not something where their tackle is on display or where their performances are too close to the bone for anyone's comfort.

Classical texts have become an excuse to show-off, new plays an excuse to get in good with the funding bodies, and experimental productions a chance to be seen as "cutting edge" and "cool".

When it comes to theatre in Perth, street cred seems to have superseded artistic integrity.

*Is it* just about the money and the glory?

"Oh, of course not, David. I do it because I love it!"

Prove it.

RE: better to die on your feet than live on your knees

Tue, 12 Mar 2002, 12:36 am
Walter Plinge
>I, too, would love to create and be involved in theatre that "burns"
>people, but I question that nudity is necessary to this.

It's not *always* necessary, but it is a useful tool to have in one's arsenal (both as an actor and a director) should the work in hand require it. My fear is that political correctness, fears (mostly female, it has to be said) about body-image and the perception of "exploitation", not to mention the new "vanilla" conservatism that has come to dominate all forms of performance culture in recent years, is slowly but surely eliminating what can be (in the right hands) and incredibly potent theatrical device.

>Personally, I would prefer to be financially comfortable, than not knowing
>how I was going to pay the rent but having a fantastic experience putting
>on a really good production of something. Does this make me not passionate?

I'm not talking about "drop-it-all" passion. I'm talking about a calculated assessment of your priorities in specific circumstances. If it's a choice between being "comfortable" doing a paid gig you don't have your heart in (unless, of course, it comes in the form of a speaking role in the new Star Wars film), or only just scraping by doing something you feel passionately about, I suspect that the true artist would go for the latter.

But I would never ask anyone to risk homelessness or legal bankrupcy for art.

>>If it come to that, why am I giving away my performance as Hamlet
>>(especially since I have had to quit a perfectly good full-time day-job
>>to do it, resulting in me further crippling myself financially)?

>Man, why are you?? You CHOSE to do it, so I hope you're not complaining.

I _am_ complaining. The constant precariousness of professional theatre in Perth means that I have never been, and probably never will be, offered the chance to play Hamlet in the New Fortune for full pay. And under current conditions, neither will anyone else.

The only chance for me to play this role in this theatre (while I am still the right side of forty), is to give it away. It p-sses me off royally to have to give up my financial security to do it, but the that's what the monumentally f--ked up theatre scene we have here dictates. NO-ONE ELSE IS DOING THIS STUFF.

Once again, my priority is the work. I would ***_LOVE_*** to be paid to play Hamlet (indeed, I was, the last time I did it, five years ago, in Queensland), but as long no professional company in Perth can afford to offer me a paid gig as Hamlet, I will happily fuscal my fiscal, because my devotion is to art, not money.

>You didn't have to do anything.

True. And let my skills get stale and rusty.

>Why don't you start a company like one you've suggested?

Already in the works. Just looking for a venue and some passionate souls to go the hard slog alongside me.


D.M.

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