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In the kitchen t'other day, [livejournal.com profile] herooftheage and I were talking about SCA theater. He was trying to convince me to direct another show, and I seriously considered the matter. Part of the reason I *haven't* done anything since The Knight of the Burning Pestle is that if I'm going to spend months deeply involved with a show, I really want it to be something I can get behind 100% -- and Sturgeon's Law applies as much to Med/Ren theater as it does to any other field. Heck, I think part of the reason that Shakespeare gets thought of so highly is that only about 80% of his stuff was crud.

Tom brought up Henry V, and I allowed as how that was one of The Good Ones, as is Hamlet. But there didn't seem to be any burning *need* for me to do either of those. There are very good movie versions of each readily available, and those shows are each still popular enough that you can see one on stage in the Boston area every few years. I would certainly bring my own interpretations to any production I did, but I'm not (at the moment) convinced that my vision for either play is sufficiently unique and interesting to be worth the effort.

One of the reasons I did Pestle was because it *wasn't* readily available for viewing. If I wanted to see it, I pretty much had to do it myself, so I did. Sturgeon's Law has a flipside; 10% of everything *isn't* crud, and that is as true of the lesser-known works as it is of the famous ones. I feel that if I'm going to go to the bother of putting on a big production, it should bring something new and different to the table. At the moment, there isn't anything I'm aware of that is calling out to be done, and which hasn't been. But my awareness is very limited, so why not ask for input?

What (SCA-appropriate) play have you always wanted to see performed, but haven't been able to yet? What is it that you love about it? I make no promises, but if you can get me excited enough, I might help make it happen. And, of course, if you can't convince me, maybe that means that *you* should go out and do it yourself :)

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-23 10:22 pm (UTC)
ext_104661: (Default)
From: [identity profile] alexx-kay.livejournal.com
Great:
Henry V, Midsummer's, R&J, Macbeth, Hamlet.

Decent:
Richard II, Henry IV part 1, 2, Richard III, Lear, Comedy of Errors, Much Ado about Nothing, 12th Night, Antony and Cleopatra, Merchant of Venice, Tempest, Taming of the Shrew (this has been very close to the edge of the 'bad' list for me ever since I noticed how much it is a period primer on effective brainwashing techniques).

Better than bad, but I don't know well enough to judge more definitively:
Measure for Measure, Caesar, Othello, Love's Labors Lost.

Bad:
King John, Winter's Tale, Henry VI 1,2,3.

Don't know:
Coriolanus, Timon of Athens, Troilus and Cressida, Cymbeline, Pericles, Two Noble Kinsmen, 2 Gentlemen, All's Well, As you Like It, Merry Wives of Windsor, Titus, Henry VIII.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-23 11:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rickthefightguy.livejournal.com
You like R&J? woah. Aside from having the best villain in all of Shakespeare (best in that he gets away with arranging the murder of a slew of folks, and nobody ever even accuses him of more than being an idiot), and having a bunch of great speeches, really that story torques me off. It would make a logical commedia scenario, but for regular people to be that dumb makes me not really care that they all die.

And you don't like Blood of a Nation?! (Which is what I call Henry VI 1,2,3 - we did a combined production of them with that subtitle) That has awesomeness! It has a great theme ("Be careful what you wish for" plus "What goes around comes around"). And it has such great swings for the audience. We feel really sad when Richard kills Clifford. Poor old guy. And we totally get behind Young Clifford vowing revenge. And killing a bunch of soldiers. But when he catches Rutland (10 year old boy) being escorted off the field and brutally murders him, saying essentially, "Hey audience - you're the ones who cheered when I said I would have fitting revenge, if they didn't spare our old men, why should I spare their babes?", audiences find themselves re-examining whose side they are on. Which is awesome, because it flips back the other way a few acts later, until in the end we finally come to the conclusion that vengence is a bad idea. Really powerful stuff. Plus Warwick, with his speech telling Henry VI that he should run away, Henry says something like 'well, you were the one who fled at our last battle at suchaplace', and Warwick says his awesome line: "Then it was my turn to flee. Now its yours." Plus Margaret with her twisted hatred.
And for people who like that sort of thing there's the whole Joan of Arc thing.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-24 12:32 am (UTC)
ext_104661: (Default)
From: [identity profile] alexx-kay.livejournal.com
You like R&J? woah. ... for regular people to be that dumb makes me not really care that they all die.

When I was a hormone-crazed teenager, I was pretty dumb too, and I empathize with them.

And you don't like Blood of a Nation?! (Which is what I call Henry VI 1,2,3 - we did a combined production of them with that subtitle) That has awesomeness!

How long was your production, and how much did you cut? I don't deny that there is *some* awesomeness there -- but from my point of view it was buried under an awful lot of unmemorable crap.

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Alexx Kay

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