Difference between revisions of "A Life in the Theatre (1992)"

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== Introduction ==
 
== Introduction ==
  
A life in the theatre is spent giving things away. It is a life mobile, unstable, unsure of employment, of acceptance.
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A life in the theatre is spent giving things away. It is a life mobile, unstable, unsure of employment, of acceptance. We in the theatre tell stories about and on ourselves and colleagues, and these stories are exactly the same  onesAristophanes told to and on his friends. It is vey important to tell and retell stories as the only real history of the ephemoral arts is an oral history. We acquire skills through constant practice. They accrue in incrementsso small that we seem to be making no progress. We lose competance in the same way - taking for granted our hard-won habits and barely aware they are leaving us. When you go into the professional worls, somewhere, backstage, you will meet an older actor - he will tell you tales and anecdotes about life in the theatre. He will speak to you about your performance and the performances of others; he will generalise to you, based on his experience and his intuitions, about teh laws of the stage. Not only do these people exist, but as one continues a theatrical career, one has a tendancy to turn inot them. My play "A Life In The Theatre" is a comedy about this life>
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David Mamet
  
 
== Cast ==
 
== Cast ==

Revision as of 23:03, 7 April 2009

by David Mamet

Directed by Pip Piacentino

Performances: Tues 3rd - Sat 7th March 1992, Bell Theatre


Introduction

A life in the theatre is spent giving things away. It is a life mobile, unstable, unsure of employment, of acceptance. We in the theatre tell stories about and on ourselves and colleagues, and these stories are exactly the same onesAristophanes told to and on his friends. It is vey important to tell and retell stories as the only real history of the ephemoral arts is an oral history. We acquire skills through constant practice. They accrue in incrementsso small that we seem to be making no progress. We lose competance in the same way - taking for granted our hard-won habits and barely aware they are leaving us. When you go into the professional worls, somewhere, backstage, you will meet an older actor - he will tell you tales and anecdotes about life in the theatre. He will speak to you about your performance and the performances of others; he will generalise to you, based on his experience and his intuitions, about teh laws of the stage. Not only do these people exist, but as one continues a theatrical career, one has a tendancy to turn inot them. My play "A Life In The Theatre" is a comedy about this life>

David Mamet

Cast

Crew

Reviews

Some review quotes go here


Gallery

Reminiscences and Anecdotes

Members are encouraged to write about their experiences of working on or seeing this production. Please leave your name. Anonymous entries may be deleted.

See Also

References

<references/>

External Links