caitri: (Cait Yatta!)
Last night we went to go see 2 Henry IV. They only did two performances of that one this year because they were practicing original constraints, which is apparently an increasing trend with Shakespearian performances--to try to perform them as closely as the Elizabethan actors would have done. So, they kept the house lights up for the whole thing (because plays would have been done during the day); they did away with mics; the actors interacted with the audience a lot.

In some ways that was the most interesting part because audiences aren't used to interacting with performed Shakespeare--it's not done because High Art, so the audience didn't always recognize cues, which led to actors kind of forcing audience participation. In the first half, one of the actors went into the audience and the audience member had no idea what to *do*, so in the second half the actor had some cards with some words for the random audience member to say. It was pretty great. But the interaction thing mostly reminded me of doing Ren Faire plays.

The other interesting thing to me was the prep work the actors had done. So for instance in Elizabethan times, they told us, there were no directors etc., all of the choices were left up to the actors. They waited to do these shows towards the end of the run because now the actors all know each other and could play on that comfort. So they got to pick their own costumes and props, which were a mixture of things. In one great scene, Lady Westmoreland (huzzah genderswap!) rolls a line of caution tape to separate out the space for the sides to parley. The other thing they told us was that, per Elizabethan standards (they said), the actors had only rehearsed the play about 20 hours, versus the 130 hours of the other productions (and apparently that's tight by industry standards). So some actors carried their sheets with only their lines (which would have been done in period) or could request a line from the prompter. So you know how in movies people always ask for a line in a sort of sour, demanding way? Here the actors would say "line" as they naturally performed the rest of their speech, so you would only catch what was happening when you heard the prompter's voice.

All in all, it was a really great performance. (I note they didn't do original time constraints--as I recall from... somewhere... they would have done the whole play straight in about 80 minutes. Here there was an intermission and they did I think the whole play in nearly three hours.) I really am struck by that Ren Faire like aspect to the performance--heavily audience dependent with lots of interaction, vs. our traditional high art expectations.I'd really like to see more Shakespeare performed that way; at first it unsettled the audience and then people relaxed and enjoyed it. For instance at the end the audience was charged to yell "Long live the king!" at Hal and then at his end procession to cheer a lot up until Falstaff.
caitri: (Default)
Spent twelve hours in various airports across two timezones Xmas day, arriving at 11:30pm Colorado time. They lost our luggage though and it took a day to get back. The rest of the week has been a blur of meeting Scott's family and friends, sightseeing, etc.

The Colorado mountains are amazing and I would love to come back in summer to see more of them. When it's been clear (a few hours on Tuesday) it's been amazing how far in the distance you can see. Lately you can see the mountains ending in the cold smush of snowclouds.

I also deeply covet a prairie dog and a pika. Those animals are beyond cute.

I was supposed to fly out to Atlanta this morning for a couple days in Georgia but no such luck; right now I'm supposed to be flying to DC tomorrow morning if the second wave of the snowstorm allows. Mom plans to come to visit me next week instead. Right now I am so sick of travel.

Scott's leaving to go on his ski trip in a couple hours and I'm trying not to fret. I told him I'm behaving this time but now he has fifty years of nagging to look forward to.

Wish me luck!

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