Monday, January 21, 2013

The Play's The Thing?

For a long time I've had trouble with most one-man or one-woman shows where an actor portrays some famous figure for an evening's entertainment.  I'm not denying they can be enjoyable, but is it drama?  That generally comes from the clash of two or more characters, not one person relating a series of anecdotes.

Then I read a (negative) review in the LA Times of Freud's Last Session, featuring Judd Hirsch as Freud and Tom Cavanagh as C.S. Lewis, and it got me thinking.  The action has them meeting and arguing for their viewpoints.  It's only the latest of a number of such plays featuring a couple (or three of four) famous people having a meeting--sometimes fictional, sometimes based on a real meeting--where the playwright dramatizes what they said and did.  For instance, there's the highly regarded Copenhagen, featuring Werner Heisenberg and Niels Bohr, or The Meeting, with Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X.

Okay, we've got two (or more) people with opposing goals, and that can make for drama, but there's something else that's troublesome.  These are not characters invented by the playwright.  Not entirely, anyway.  These are famous people.  So rather than being required to create characters that will hold our attention, the playwright starts with an advantage--names we're intrigued by before we've bought our ticket.  So I've got to ask, would I care if these were two characters I'd never heard of before?  Because if I wouldn't, then the show is closer to a stunt than a good play.

4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

drama comes from many different sources- not just characterization

6:13 AM, January 21, 2013  
Blogger LAGuy said...

Drama comes from conflict. While you can have conflict without two people clashing, it isn't easy. And if your characters are mostly interesting because of what people bring to the play, not to what you the playwright created, then you're in even bigger trouble.

2:45 PM, January 21, 2013  
Anonymous Denver Guy said...

Doesn't using historical figures save time for the playwright? If you pick someone that the average audience member already knows the history of, you don't have to waste precious time establishing a background.

Of course, I don't see the point of having Neils Bohr and Werner Heisenberg meet. Even for th erelatively few who know a little about the science they worked on, most wouldn't have a clue as to what kind of person each was or what life experiences he had.

8:09 AM, January 22, 2013  
Blogger LAGuy said...

Obviously plays about historical figures goes back a long way, but if the playwright is letting knowledge about the character do heavy lifting for him, then he's not doing his job.

8:18 AM, January 22, 2013  

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