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Topic: rude audiences?( Topic Closed) | |
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Tallsor
Star Joined: 2/24/04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 63 |
Topic: rude audiences? Posted: 10/06/05 at 10:06am |
Is it just in the plays I'm participating/attending in Kansas City, or is it all over - that audiences are just getting ruder and ruder? I'm talking about not only not showing up until 5 or 10 minutes late, but Park University Theatre (my alma mater, that I help out with from time to time) had a 'world-premiere' play, written by one of the students, last spring in the black box theatre. The Black Box is set up to where once the door is closed, it is CLOSED. There is NO way to seat people after the show starts without interupting EVERYTHING. On top of that, we had a sold-out show all three nights of performance - usually by 15 minutes before the show started. I not only had the 5 or 6 people those 5 or 10 minutes after, but actually had someone show up 30 minutes after the show started, expecting to be 'guaranteed' a seat. (No wonder movie theatres don't start when they say the show starts - not only for advertisements, but because people don't come in until after it's started .) Then, we've got cell phones and pagers. Park has a notice in the program. The house manager says something as the people walk in. They've even taken to having a short announcement right before the show starts. And STILL we have people who seem to think it's okay to not only have it on, but to have the entire conversation in the theatre! Then, we've got the talking during the play. I'm not meaning the small little conversations figuring out what's going on, or discussing characters or whatnot. I'm talking about the full-blown commentary I get from people behind me (my 'favorite' story had to be when I went and saw a local production of Brigadoon: the ladies behind my group talked about everything from 'the guy wearing the skirt' to 'oooh, do you think he killed that guy?'). Or even worse, talking about stuff that's not related to the show. (Park is currently doing The Laramie Project, and there were a couple of times during one performance where I could hear people behind me talking and giggling - during one of the more dramatic scenes in the thing.) So, is it just bad luck on my part, or is this becoming an epidemic? Angie |
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tristanrobin
Celebrity Joined: 4/25/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 704 |
Posted: 10/06/05 at 12:15pm |
wow - it sounds like you really are involved with the rudest
audiences ever. Frankly, our HIGH SCHOOL students act more civilized in a theatre. We don't have that problem here in New Haven. It's quite a theatre-oriented city. We have Yale Rep, Longwharf Theatre, the Shubert Theatre, and the Princess Theatre - all professional theatres ... as well as 8-10 amateur companies. All in a small city of 125,000. We're also only an hour from Manhattan, so many people attend Broadway plays regularly. Consequently, polite theatre audience behavior is fairly consistent.I can't imagine dealing with what you are dealing with. That is the way second graders behave during plays before they're taught theatre manners. I'm very interested in hearing if others have this issue! |
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tristanrobin
Celebrity Joined: 4/25/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 704 |
Posted: 10/06/05 at 12:18pm |
now that I think of it, I just saw the matinee yesterday of
Longwharf's "Midsummer Night's Dream" (the most beautiful and accessible production I've ever seen - including the Royal Shakespeare Company's production - but that's for another thread). In the audience there were THREE different high school field trips...AND several groups of elderly people with hearing issues LOL. You could hear a pin drop in the theatre. (If you're anywhere in CT, I highly recommend seeing this production! It's glorious.) |
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Gaafa
Celebrity Joined: 3/21/04 Location: Australia Online Status: Offline Posts: 1181 |
Posted: 10/06/05 at 12:25pm |
I agree with you whole heartedly & I wish I could suggest a way around it!
But it has been going on for a very long time, especially during the time when punters were invited to pay to sit on stage & even become put of the production! As a wee kid I remember being pelted with fruit {on a good night] to being showered in coins [which I enjoyed on a bad night] thrown by the punters. I?m sure old Shakey would have had to endure & also expected disruptions from the groundlings &/or others. So much so it became an integral part of the audience participation & form of enjoyment of live shows. Admittedly it is annoying to sit near some galah who squawks a running commentary or leaves their phone or pager on. While it might be also disconcerting for the warm props to have noises at inappropriate times! Unfortunately this is what IT is all about! Although I tend to think that it is getting to be less of a problem these days than it was, as the majority of punters comply by turning off their phones & whatever. The thing that does get right up my nose, is the wally who takes a flash photo in a blackout or other parts of the performance. Then gets upset, when the front of house ask them to refrain or leave. Unfortunately signs & announcements, only work as a reminder to the punters who respects others. While all the other wombats, will just do their own thing regardless! |
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Joe
Western Gondawandaland turn right @ Perth. Hear the light & see the sound. Toi Toi Toi Chookas {{"chook [chicken] it is"} May you always play to a full house} |
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Shatcher
Celebrity Joined: 2/21/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 251 |
Posted: 10/06/05 at 2:01pm |
Don't know how to fix this problem but I have a funny story. When I was in college we were doing our new plays fest. there was a woman in the house with her baby, the baby did not make a sound but the mother didn't want to miss the start of the 2nd act so she laid the kid down in the ailse and started to change his diaper!. the cast entered that way, so the head of the department stoped the show, had the SM turn the house lights up and asked the rest of the house to please wait while this woman finished up. The woman had the gall to say someting to him about it after the show along the lines."How dare you embarass me like that"
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Linda S
Celebrity Joined: 4/16/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 312 |
Posted: 10/06/05 at 2:39pm |
It is nice when the other audience members do the policing for you. I was getting ready to go over to ask an audience member to put her cell phone away. I was house managing, and it was obvious that she was disturbing everyone. She was text messaging! That was new one. That lovely green glow could be seen all over the theater. She must not have been getting very good reception because it looked like a lighthouse beacon flashing around the room! The woman next to her finally asked her why she bothered buying a ticket to talk on the phone. I didn't have to say anything! The phone went away. Linda
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Nyria
Celebrity Joined: 1/20/05 Location: Canada Online Status: Offline Posts: 157 |
Posted: 10/07/05 at 2:03pm |
Do you have ushers at the doors? Don't let people in after the show starts - if you put a notice on your tickets and posters then they can't complain (well - they still will but at least you can have a back up). Also - have your ushers tell people to be quiet and talk to them about cell phones etc.
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NYRIA
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POB14
Celebrity Joined: 7/01/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 349 |
Posted: 10/07/05 at 4:19pm |
No help here, other than what others have said, but since we're swapping stories: My dad, now long since deceased, used to like to go to the old standard musicals. One time we went to see Gypsy. If you know the beginning, Louise and June are onstage trying out for Uncle Somebody's show, and Rose enters from the back of the auditorium calling, "Sing out, Louise!" So Dad is on the aisle, and when Rose enters (full makeup, costume, and a dog under her arm), he whirls around to her and yells, "Shaddup, goddammit, can't you see there's a show going on?" |
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POB
Old Bugger, Curmudgeon, and Antisocial B**tard |
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falstaff29
Celebrity Joined: 9/17/04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 155 |
Posted: 10/07/05 at 10:57pm |
Yeah, rude audiences suck. But, apparently, we're swapping stories, so here goes. A few months ago, I was in a production of Nilo Cruz's A Bicycle Country. Just a quick description of the scene, since most people don't know the play. In the second act, the three characters are on a raft going to Florida from Cuba. There's a sort-of, not-really love triangle thing going on, but one character has sorta let it go, although there's still some feeling for the girl. So, this character's asleep and the other two decide to have sex. It's a powerful scene because it's not romantic-comedy-style, ooh-let's-get-it-on sex. It's embarrassing, confusing, etc. Really mature sensibility here. Quiet, powerful scene, right? One night, this old lady in the front row, in a whisper so loud she might as well have been talking, says to her husband, "Are they gonna f--- now?" |
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glinda90
Walk-On Joined: 11/03/05 Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
Posted: 11/04/05 at 5:13pm |
It isn't your fault. I watched a few plays that had some of the rudest audiences. You're not the only one irritated. As an actor, it can be very uncomfortable acting in front of people who don't even pay attention. But it is even worse when you're an audience member and you are the one who wants to see the play. Of course, the show must go on! |
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