Just a quick question to all the directors and set designers out there working for low-budgeted off-off-Broadway and off-Broadway shows. Is a set really necessary for your show? I ask this in all honesty, because I don't know how budgets are handled or artistic decisions are made (is there a stigma with bare-bones?), but I've seen far too many shows lately that shoot themselves in the foot by trying to put something cheap and flimsy up on stage.
For instance, I took some criticism lately for criticizing the periaktoi used in Barcinda Forest, and I just called out the nondescript distraction of the set in Cherry Docs. I'm not calling for elaborate sets, however. I'm calling, in these cases, for a blacker box. The sort of audience that goes to off-off-Broadway isn't expecting to be blown away by a set. They're going because they believe in the power of theater -- in action itself -- or because they want to see something radical, something too experimental to be seen as commercial viable.
I'm not saying sets aren't a nice touch, but would theatergoers have been disappointed at The Happy Sad, an underground show at The Flea, if there hadn't been a faithfully reproduced sign for the Atlantic Avenue subway stop? Shouldn't the emphasis be on getting the play itself up? That's why I commend big shows like The 39 Steps, or directors like Leigh Silverman (Yellow Face, Beebo Brinker Chronicles, Well): they remind us how creative we can be with so little. That's what's great about independent groups like The Debate Society: they know enough about working with a little (as with A Thought About Raya) that when they get a lot (The Eaten Heart) it doesn't feel wasted. So it goes with puppet-ensembles that work on a small enough scale to know exactly what they need: Lone Wolf Tribe knew it needed a warehouse of material for Bride; Wakka-Wakka shaved blocks into exactly what they needed for Fabrik.
This must seem a bit odd to read for those of you who know me as a huge supporter of aesthetics in the theater. But understand: the shows I've found sublimely beautiful, like The Cataract, or transFIGURES, or The Thugs, or God's Ear -- they knew the exact cost, the "heft and weight" if you will, of each plank, scaffold, elevator, or tile on that set. And if a show is going to spend money just to have a set, or is going to splurge for a mediocre show (as happens a little too often on Broadway -- Young Frankenstein anyone?), it gets to be distracting. It takes away from the art, which, if you read too many blogs, is apparently dying on a daily basis.
So really, to all the set designers, directors, and companies out there: what sort of thinking goes into your stance on the visual production elements of your shows?
Aaron, Speaking of doing more with less in terms of set design, have you seen Glory Days? Talk about minimalistic, although I guess you could argue that it's more than some of the other shows you've mentioned.
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