Tuesday, July 7, 2015

When the play was produced in New York, the magic-lantern slides were omitted. Is the device an extraneous gimmick? Might it even interfere with...

Critics and theatre directors alike have argued that the
inclusion of the slides was and would have been unnecessary for the action of the play
can and should be able to speak for itself. The strength of the dialogue and the
characterization alone tells the story. As they can be a distraction from what the
characters are doing on the stage, I can easily see how they would be a distraction,
particularly for an audience that was not accustomed to that sort of convention.
However, on the other hand, as Tom was a writer and this is Tom;s story, I think you
could also argue that the slides might be representative of the story that is playing
out inside of Tom's head in his memory. They are very cinematic, and with Tom;s
connections to the movies and his love of escaping from the apartment that serves as his
prison there is an element of dramatic narrative that could be played our on these
slides. They can create an almost split focal perspective - which can be either a good
or bad thing depending on how they are implemented.


Some
theatres have integrated the use of slides effectively. Kansas City rep, for instance,
updated William's original concept through projected cinematic imagery and integrated it
into the action of the play to give the play a "new" interpretation that stayed faithful
to Williams' original concept (see review). The Broadway revival, on the other hand, has
been criticized for integrating the device as a full curtain which served to conceal so
much of the action that it ended up being a distraction, (see
review).


As a director, I have directed the piece without
the inclusion of the images, and I have worked on a production in which they were
included. The biggest problem with them is that, although they can serve as a glimpse
into Tom's writers' mind (as the play is autobiographical, this can be useful) they are
often more distracting than driving. They tend to split the audience's focus, and that
can be dangerous.

No comments:

Post a Comment

In Act III, scene 2, why may the establishment of Claudius's guilt be considered the crisis of the revenge plot?

The crisis of a drama usually proceeds and leads to the climax.  In Shakespeare's Hamlet , the proof that Claudius is guilty...