politics, theater

belatedly,

Terry Teachout, one of my favorite drama critics, and author of the influential theater weblog About Last Night, has weighed in on LCT’s choosing director Bart Sher to direct August Wilson’s JOE TURNER’S COME AND GONE. He writes, in the WSJ on Dec 20th:

Sometimes nontraditional casting works, sometimes it doesn’t, and there are no hard-and-fast rules that are universally applicable. That’s the nature of theater: It’s an empirical art form whose rules are made up from scratch each time a group of actors comes together to put on a show. But as for the alleged institutional racism of Lincoln Center Theater, I don’t buy it for a second. My guess is that Bartlett Sher will do at least as well by “Joe Turner’s Come and Gone” as he would by “The Iceman Cometh” — and if he doesn’t, I doubt that it’ll be because he’s white.

I don’t doubt that this is true, at least in the respect of Sher’s excellence. He is an extraordinary director. Unfortunately, I still wish Wilson’s wishes about having black directors direct his work were being respected.

I stand by the principle that copyright is not a good thing for playwrights, and that directors and producing institutions should have greater freedom in their productions. Now, here are the consequences of that principle. I have argued elsewhere against respecting playwrights’ wishes when it comes to all sorts of things – casting, edits, stage directions, even the text. It seems to me that the sooner that living playwrights become dead-and-uncopyrighted playwrights, the better for their plays. But Wilson is not long dead, and this conscious disregarding of his adamant preference simply doesn’t feel respectful. It’s too soon, and the American theater landscape still has far, far, far too few opportunities for directors of color. (Don’t even get me started on women directors…)

No matter how you look at it, by choosing Sher to direct this play, Lincoln Center is going against August Wilson’s explicit wishes, or what they were in his lifetime. That startles me, and I have trouble believing it’s true. On the other hand, to be fair, LCT and Sher have the approval of Wilson’s widow, Constanza Romero, in this choice. (Via BroadwayWorld.)

The remarkably small amount of outcry over this director casting means only one thing – August Wilson’s popular plays, which are frequently performed all over this country and the world, are going to be directed by more and more white directors from now on. Why? Because more directors are white, and more producers are white, and more successful, well-known directors are white. The easiest casting choice, when a white producer chooses a director, is – another white director. I have seen this proved over and over again in practice in the field.

Now that LCT has done this, anyone can. Where one of the country’s most prominent theaters leads, the smaller institutions will follow. This, more than anything, is what I wish wasn’t true, because there are many great black directors in this country who made their careers on August Wilson when they weren’t getting hired for Shakespeare and Chekhov.

Ultimately, this turn of events means that another avenue for black directors to advance in American theater has been narrowed.

Here’s another interesting article: Brendan Kiley’s take on the whole thing, in THE STRANGER’s SLOG blog.
If one has faith in Wilson’s work and theater audiences, one expects Beijing directors to be working with his scripts in 2687. So whey-faced Sher directing him is only a baby step in what will be Wilson’s long, universal legacy.
Kiley goes on to quote actor James Williams and agree with him that the most disturbing thing about LCT’s choice is “not the whiteness of Sher, but the blinding whiteness that surrounds him”: in other words, the fault is with what Williams calls “the dominant culture,” white culture, not with LCT and Sher in particular.

I suppose that’s true, but if the particular is not to be held as an example of the culture, then everyone can always blame the culture as opposed to themselves.

(Addendum: I was not aware of one fact mentioned in the Teachout article, which was that Gordon Davidson had recently directed Wilson’s JITNEY for the Kennedy Center staged reading festival of Wilson’s work earlier this year. )

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quotes, theater

at the end of the journey

Mr. Pinter said he thought of theater as essentially exploratory. “Even old Sophocles didn’t know what was going to happen next,” he said. “He had to find his way through unknown territory. At the same time, theater has always been a critical act, looking in a broad sense at the society in which we live and attempting to reflect and dramatize these findings. We’re not talking about the moon.”

Speaking about his intuitive sense of writing, he said, “I find at the end of the journey, which of course is never ending, that I have found things out.”

– from the NYT article on the life and death of playwright Harold Pinter, who died Wednesday at the age of 78.

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Cali, theater

(phew)

Shakespeare Santa Cruz has raised enough money to keep their doors open. As of Monday, they had raised over 400K, beyond the 300K they needed to stay open and produce the 09 season. According to the Merc, between 80 and 85 percent of the donations to the campaign came in figures of $25 to $100.

I remember going there with my family to see a production of SHREW, years ago, and walking up the tall hill back to the car, surrounded by the redwood trunks, and having a dialogue with Shakespeare in my head, something along the lines of “Yeah, yeah, you’re all right, you’re okay, that’s all well and good, but just wait till I get started, buster, I have something to say about this whole men and women business too.”

The SSC website has a nice quote from Dana Gioia at the NEA: “The generous public support to save Shakespeare Santa Cruz has set a shining example for the American arts. This may be a local event, but it has national importance.”

A warning note amid this celebration from UCSC chancellor Blumenthal:

“SSC’s future viability requires stronger private support, increased revenues from ticket sales and other sources and reduced operating costs.”

So true – and a reminder that in this economic climate, all such victories are temporary.

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quotes, theater, Uncategorized

worth giving up baseball

[Philip Seymour] Hoffman was the second youngest of four kids. He was raised Catholic and played three sports until a neck injury during wrestling practice forced him, under doctor’s orders, to quit contact sports. “I thought, O.K., I’ll play baseball,” Hoffman said. “ But I’m 14 with a neck brace. I’d see some girl from 10 blocks away, and I’d take it off until she passed me. I was this freckle-faced kid, and I perceived myself as not attractive. When the doctor asked me if I still had pain, I lied. My pact with God was that I would no longer play sports. So instead of trying out for baseball, I auditioned for a play.” Hoffman smiled. “And also there was this beautiful girl. I had a huge crush on her, and she acted. It seemed like something worth giving up baseball for.”

-from “A Higher Calling,” the NYT article on PSH

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theater

trouble in the redwood forest

On Monday, it will have been one week since the Merc announced Shakespeare Santa Cruz had one week to raise $300,000 or go dark. State budget cuts made it impossible for UC Santa Cruz to maintain its economic partnership with the theater whereby, as they had the last few years, UCSC made up SSC’s budget shortfalls. Currently, they are at $278,516 (as of Friday). On Monday, they’ll announce whether or not they made it.

To donate and help save the Shakespeare festival surrounded by the California redwoods, click here. I wish I had money to give them myself.

These times are hard. We are facing the very real danger of shutting our doors forever. But theatres have faced hard times before, and theatres will face hard times again. And I’ve always thought (perhaps perversely) that hard times are when we need theatre the most.
SSC artistic director Marco Barricelli

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theater

that and fifty cents

Over all, [NEA] endowment officials said, the demand for nonmusical theater simply is not what it used to be.

“In a sense, the dilemma of nonprofit theater can be simply summarized — supply has outstripped current demand,” Dana Gioia, the chairman of the national endowment, wrote in a preface to the report. “The remarkable growth and professional management of theatrical organizations across the nation has not yet been matched by equally robust growth in audiences.”

– from an NYT article on the declining audience for “nonmusical theater”, via ArtsJournal.

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theater

stalling:

I am on one deadline, and I have nightmares about another one. I dream, variously, of not having organized everything for the set build (I have no sets that need to be built) and of financial shortfalls in a theatrical production (no such production exists.) My mind reverts to the most recent set of artistic stresses. It’s kind of nice to wake up feeling guilty over having neglected a nonexistent play, when I haven’t worked on any theater since June. My anxieties are retro.

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poetry, theater

spoken of the soul

This Saturday, Poetry magazine is presenting a theatrical staging of some Dana Levin poems at Links Hall. If this isn’t what I came here for, I don’t know what is. Life is real! Life is earnest!

“What use had I for hands,” a theatrical interpretation of five poems by Dana Levin. Conceived and directed by Valerie Jean Johnson. Devised and performed by the ensemble: Jennifer Crissey, Aaron DeYoung, Katie Eberhardy, Jennifer Guglielmi, and Kate Olsen. THREE PERFORMANCES: Friday, December 12, 8 PM, Saturday, December 13, 8 PM (followed by a discussion with poet Dana Levin), and Sunday, December 14, 7 PM. Admission is free; call 773.281.0824 or visit linkshall.org for reservations.

Oh, to be able to tag every post with both “poetry” and “theater.” To have the twin sisters always be able to have play dates in the same park. But maybe I wouldn’t appreciate it so much if it happened all the time. Maybe they are like twins, and what they really need – despite my desire to have them dressed in the same matching pinafores (pinafores?) – is time apart.

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