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Topic: Looking for input on these plays.( Topic Closed) | |
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GoldCanyonLady
Celebrity Joined: 2/05/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 172 |
Topic: Looking for input on these plays. Posted: 5/13/06 at 9:26pm |
We are looking at plays for 2008 and I just wondered if any of you have
done any of these that are on our list to read. So far this list has
been made up from reading the catalog and the Playreading section of
this web site. I hate to order books if anyone has done one or more and
they were not good or difficult to do.
The Absence of a Cello Murder is a Game Cahoots Bad Year for Tomatoes Daddy's Dyin, Who's got the Will Faith County Murder on reserve Perhaps you have some to suggest that are not on our list. Barb |
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Barb Hofmeister,
MountainBrook Village Players, Gold Canyon, Arizona. |
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slicksister
Celebrity Joined: 3/20/04 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 105 |
Posted: 5/13/06 at 10:21pm |
Ok - I directed A Bad Year for Tomatoes and Faith County. Of the 2 Faith County is my favorite. It is screamingly funny, easy to costume, simple set and the cast can really run with it. The audience LOVED it. Tomatoes is quite funny too, but we had some problems with some of the lines/words in it (mongoloid, retard) so we changed them to make them a little less offensive. The two neighbor ladies absolutely make this show and I had great ones. I would do Faith County again in a heartbeat but perhaps not Tomatoes. Just my opinion.
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The Main Thing is to Keep the Main Thing the Main Thing
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Unclepeter
Lead Joined: 7/26/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 37 |
Posted: 5/15/06 at 11:46pm |
We have also done both Faith County and Tomatoes. I have to agree with Slicksister and say that Faith County is my favorite. It is absolutely hysterical if the cast is given somewhat free rein with the characters. They absolutely must be played over he edge, but not in their own eyes. For my wedding garb, (I was Luther) I had a doubleknit light brown tuxedo with dark brown trim. (And to think someone actually wore that thing before I found it at a flea market!) The tux was several sizes too big, for Luther would not have had one, but borrowed it from someone. For my signature finish, I wore a John Deere baseball cap. Tomatoes can also be hysterically funny, but again, agreeing with Slicksister, we also changed some of the words (don't like to do it, but if you know your patrons, you know what they will and will not accept.) I think the key to Tomatoes is,again, havinga cast that is not afraid to be a little wild. We did Tomatoes last year for the second time, the first being about ten years ago. It was a hit both times, but still believe Faith County was a bigger hit with the audiences. We had patrons come to see it twice during the same run, just to catch what they might have missed the first time.
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"Good judgement comes from experience - and a lot of that comes from bad judgement." (Will Rogers)
Uncle Peter |
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Dough Boy
Walk-On Joined: 3/20/06 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
Posted: 5/16/06 at 1:08pm |
Something in the same vein, but not on your list is "Messiah on the
Frigidaire" It takes place in a trailer park where the image of
Jesus appears on a refrigerator. Funny show, but also has some
poignancy to it. I also hear that the folks who did Dearly
Departed have a sequel called Dearly Beloved. If it's as funny
as the first, it may be worth a read.
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B-M-D
Celebrity Joined: 11/03/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 346 |
Posted: 5/18/06 at 1:02am |
Quoting slicksister and Unclepeter "Tomatoes is quite funny too, but we had some problems with some of the lines/words in it (mongoloid, retard) so we changed them to make them a little less offensive." "...we also changed some of the words (don't like to do it, but if you know your patrons, you know what they will and will not accept.)" Be extremely careful in changing dialog of an author's play. No theatre company professional or otherwise has the right to do that without the consent of the author and or the organization granting the performance rights. If the dialog will offend your audience I would suggest not doing the play. You open yourself up to a world of legal hassles in changing dialog, no matter how well meaning your intentions. |
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BD
"Dying is easy, comedy is hard." |
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slicksister
Celebrity Joined: 3/20/04 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 105 |
Posted: 5/18/06 at 1:25am |
I knew this was going to be pointed out and I was just waiting to give an explanation as to how it happened in our case. i was hoping I wouldn't have to but here goes. When we chose this play not one person had any qualms about the verbige in the script. Not the Board, not the AD, not the SM, not the cast..no one. 6 days before opening the set painter comes in to paint ( long story as to why this was put off till 6 days before opening). She and I are spending many, may hours together. She was someone I knew through my AD but merely an aquaintance not a friend. Any how, about 2 days before opening, the local paper calls me on my cell while at the theatre and asks for an interview about the show. So she and I are on the stage painting and I'm talking to the reporter and happen to mention that the script is a little dated in that it uses words like moron and mongoloid ( a major character makes up a "crazy sister" who lives upstairs). Suddenly my painter bursts into tears and rushes offstage and outside. To make a long story short she had a daughter with Down Syndrome and took offence. She refused to finish the set, called all her friends, called the local newspaper and basically went off the deep end. I apologized like mad, cried myself sick all night, called the board and they chose to change the language to appease her. They did major damage control and I was put in an incredibly awkward position. So, less than 12 hours before opening the words were changed (4 words) and we went on. Never changed words before haven't done it since.... I will refrain from further comment about your post.
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The Main Thing is to Keep the Main Thing the Main Thing
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B-M-D
Celebrity Joined: 11/03/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 346 |
Posted: 5/18/06 at 1:33pm |
I can certainly understand the intention and I'm not sure that I might not have done the same given similar circumstances. I guess the lessons here are: 1. be accutely aware of what may or may not be offensive your audience. and 2. never talk to the press. |
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BD
"Dying is easy, comedy is hard." |
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k8tt
Star Joined: 4/05/05 Location: Canada Online Status: Offline Posts: 73 |
Posted: 5/19/06 at 8:15am |
I would definitely do Faith County. I just directed it for our early spring play and we had a blast at rehearsals. We were sold out every show but one. This was the first play that we made lots of money on in 4 years. We had people crying they were laughing so hard. Of course you really need to pick your cast to fit the characters and let them play if for what it's worth.
When I first read the play I didn't like it - thought it was insulting to rural folk. But our rural audience LOVED it. Set is simple, costumes are easy and you have fun at rehearsals. We can't wait to do the sequel! |
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acmeactor
Player Joined: 2/25/04 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 28 |
Posted: 5/19/06 at 9:21am |
2. never talk to the press. ?????? Learn to talk to the press? Yes Do interviews in a quiet, private location? Yes Not talk to them? NO I can't speak for other parts of the country but if we are lucky enough to actually get a reporter to do an article it is huge and our ticket sales increase greatly. The press is an integral and neccessary part of theater (my PR person calls them a neccessary evil). If you are going to put yourself into a position to be contacted by the press learn to speak with them, have 4 or 5 set quotes you use to describe the show or give insight into it. Learning to speak in quotes will make the articles better, make your reporter's job easier and cover your butt. |
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Playwright
Celebrity Joined: 4/01/06 Location: Canada Online Status: Offline Posts: 126 |
Posted: 5/20/06 at 10:10am |
Hi, I totally agree with you, acmeactor. The press is an intregal part of theatre. I am lucky in that the two theatre critics for papers- one a local paper that comes out 3 times a week & the other a daily (except for Sunday) metropolitan- are fans of my work so they always go out of their way to write stories. One even put my name in the headline which was the first time ever my name was in the headline!!!! Both have in the past given me not-so-good reviews but the faults they pointed out were valid and I learned from them. I've gotten more good than not-so-good reviews. Received some of my best for playing a corpse in a play. I've even gone as far as to email them and thank them for their review (whether good or bad) and we end up back and forth discussions about past theatre experiences. Even though a critic is just one person's point of view, I always learn from them. I may not always agree with what they say but I do respect their opinions as they come from years and years of reviewing plays- professional and community theatre. |
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