From: Cat HebertSent: 05/14/2001 12:46:51 PMSubject: RAT In support of in-home, in-class, on-line theater
In support of in-home, in-class, on-line theaterOne of the byproducts of a culture in which people watch 10-20 hrs ofacted-out storytelling per week is that, one way or another, everyone hasbecome a critic. The level of acting/editing is so high during TVstorytelling that less-than-superior performances get "thumbs down" fromthe woman on the street -- often using terms that echo the phrasing (ifnot the opinions) of on-air critics. (I overheard a lady cop evaluatingGeorge Clooney's performance in The Perfect Storm: " He always soundslike he's reading his lines. I wonder if they have a telepromptersomewhere for him. Don't get me wrong. I wouldn't kick him out of bed.")Community theater audiences bring this critical acumen with them as theyview local productions, and even though they may mentally make allowancesfor Frank the hairstylist's performance as the Rainmaker, their commentsin the lobby tend to be more of the nature of "Tessie was a lot betterthan I thought" or "How did she memorize all those lines?" than "I wish Iwere up there doing that". Those film performance comparisons are fixedfirmly in the water cooler section of our brains.Part of the problem in the U.S., of course, has to do with budget cutsand curriculum changes that have virtually eliminated theater from theclassroom, but we also carry cultural baggage that says "If you aren't aprofessional, you aren't any good." ... or ... "If I'm not professionalout there I'm going to embarrass myself."The highly competitive, often defensive, " semi-pro" theater communityreinforces these reactions by turning up its collective nose atperformers who have that "community theater smell" [actual comment] aboutthem. "Well, we all have to start somewhere." "Do you have any *real*acting credits?" Understandable? Yes. Helpful? No.The result is that even though the community theater movement in the U.S.is stronger than ever, fewer citizens are participating in the creationof theater. As we all know, theater audiences are heavily made up ofpeople who "do" theater. These audiences pay taxes, and elect politicanswho are responsible for funding theater.Rampant professionalism is the culprit, I'm afraid, and we need to dosomething about it before it spreads any further.One way to start a "get-back-to-basics" theater campaign is to get morestudents doing theater. What do suburban kids do the most (besidesthinking about you-know-what)? Hang out on the Internet and/or thetelephone.That's why I see online, in-room, in-dorm, webcam [videoconference]theater as a natural way to get kids involved in theater. It'll take aformal movement of some sort. Contests (sponsored by VH1?). You know.What'll they act out? You know, stupid stuff. They'll write/improviseabout their lives, about the neighbors. Do parodies of TV. *Be* parodiesof TV. But ... it'll be kids looking at other kids -- chatroom attached.Family online theater is a tougher sell. Teenagers will want to put thetech together or direct. Easier to get them to dive into a pit of zit pusthan to roleplay with sister Amie.:) Parents will try to avoid italtogether ["uh, I have to finish this fiscal year budgeting paradigm ...stuff"] -- unless, of course there are rewards involved or they can beguilted into using it as "quality time" or [tech trans.] "face time".They can write about the family: about the time Uncle Nick slipped on hisown toupee. They can model the effects of global warming. Whatever."And what theater of significance will come out of this?" Ofsignificance to whom? The acting out of stories has been with us a weebit longer than acting out stories in a loud voice for two hours and onepee break."Maybe it's time that theater got back to the joy of storytelling. And wehave just the hi-tech tools to help us do it.Cheers,Cat Hebert________________________________________________________________GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO!Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less!Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit:---------------------------------------To [un]subscribe to the rat-list, send an email to "majordomo@ratconference.com"with [un]subscribe rat-list" in the body of the message.For information on other functions send a message containing the word"help" to the same address. Do not use quotes in your message.---------------------------------------