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Richard S. Beam

​97       Random Thoughts on a Recent Show, part 1 (there MIGHT be a part 2 someday….)

7/26/2017

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Bonnie and I went to the Omaha Community Playhouse a few days ago to see “Billy McGuigan’s Rock Twist,” a new concert/show developed and performed by a local guy with quite a strong reputation in the community.  Unfortunately, I can’t say that I really enjoyed it all that much.  I guess that it’s fair to say that I’ve been less than enamored with many of the selections of the OCP, which explains why we haven’t been to too many of them.  Of course, they are reasonably expensive, with tickets generally running about $40-50 a seat, and we are not what I would refer to as wealthy.  If one buys season tickets (10 shows), one can reduce that to about $22 per seat, but unless you are really interested in everything on the season (which I have never been), it’s still not what I’d call an inexpensive night out.  After all, if you go out to dinner before the show, the evening costs close to $100 for a couple, and that’s not at a very fancy restaurant.  Maybe I’m just old and cheap, but that’s a bit steep for a show I’m not especially interested in seeing.  Yes, my tastes are probably a bit limited, but I’ve also never had what I felt was enough money to just go to the theatre for the sake of going to the theatre.
 
Anyway, even though we got a reduced price as a group from the New Neighbors League, I was not overly fond of the “Rock Twist” show we saw the other night.  In part, this was because I felt I was misled as to the nature of the performance.
 
The event was advertised as: “Classic rock tunes with a big band twist; big band standards with a rock and roll twist.  Backed by a full horn section and an all-star lineup of Omaha’s finest musicians, Billy’s brand new show will have Playhouse audiences rocking like never before.  Frank Sinatra?  Check.  The Beatles?  Check.  Harry Connick, Jr.?  Check.  Billy Joel?  Check!  Fresh re-arrangements of rock and jazz standards performed as only Billy can.  It’s rock with a twist.”
 
I read this to mean that this was a show that featured songs by the likes of Sinatra, Harry Connick, Jr., Billy Joel, etc.  I did expect some Beatles and some Buddy Holly because Billy is best known for shows of music from those performers, he even does shows composed of only their material.  So, I believed that I was in for an evening of standards with (perhaps) a bit of a rock flavor.  Well, there were a couple of Sinatra tunes, I think a Billy Joel and a Harry Connick, Jr., so it wasn’t exactly a lie, but the vast majority of the 23 song evening was full-out, full-blast rock and roll, which was often near the threshold of pain for my ears.  There were some moments I really enjoyed.  The young lady, primarily the piano accompanist, did a really nice job with “Downtown,” the Petula Clark song from about 1964, but, mostly, I thought it was pretty loud, somewhat repetitive and not terribly strongly performed.
 
I mean, the Beatles were almost always pretty articulate – you could understand the words, even if you couldn’t always make sense of them.  That was not always the case during this performance, even of Beatles’ songs, and it was more pronounced on a fair amount of the other stuff.  The Sinatra stuff was pretty clean, but I think Billy would have been shot if it hadn’t been.  Frank was NEVER hard to understand.  It may, of course, just be that I’m getting old, but I think my hearing is still reasonably good.  For me, just as in the theatre, I LIKE TO UNDERSTAND THE WORDS!  When I can’t, I’m unlikely to be impressed.  Still, that’s enough about the music, which wasn’t awful, just not really what I expected.
 
My biggest complaints about the production were tech related.  There was no “costume” designer indicated on the program, although Billy did make three costume changes (nobody else changed even once).  I really have no idea why he felt this was necessary, as concert performers, at least in my experience, often don’t change costumes at all, let alone multiple times, unless their costumes are a part of their show, as with Cher, for example.  Frank might loosen his tie, or even take his jacket off, at least when he was really “cooking,” but I don’t think he changed his outfit completely as a regular thing. 
 
In any event, Billy started off in a suit.  Not a BAD suit, it just appeared to be considerably tighter than seemed desirable.  He just looked uncomfortable.  Still, that was obviously what he wanted, because even when he pulled the button on his coat loose doing some of his gyrations, he immediately rebuttoned it when the song ended.  Then, after several numbers, he went off stage and took off his coat and tie.  This could have actually helped, considering most of the material was getting more into “rock,” except that the shirt seemed to be just as tight as the coat had been.  I found it hard to enjoy a performance by someone who just plain looked uncomfortable. 
 
For the start of the second act, he had on a different shirt, which he sweated through almost immediately.  Okay, it probably WAS hot on the stage (lots of lights and lots of physical activity), and this shirt didn’t seem quite as tight, but a different choice would probably have been wiser, especially since it was just a different shirt, which didn’t seem to reflect a change of style, or mood.  To end the evening, he put on a plain, colored tee shirt and fairly well-fitting jeans, so he actually looked more comfortable, although he did comment several times during the performance as to how hot he felt (we could tell this from the sweat-stained clothing), as if that proved how hard he was working, so he must be good.  I confess that I wasn’t impressed.  I find it hard to believe that any experienced costumer would have thought his choices in clothing were wise.  I didn’t really mind that he felt the need to change clothes, although I didn’t see the need, but it would have been nice for the changes to reflect the material in some way, rather than just be changes of clothes.
 
I thought the lighting was awful.  Yes, I could see the “star” pretty well most of the time, but even when the band (eight pieces: piano, guitar, bass, drums, two saxes, trumpet and trombone, NOT the Count Basie Band, nor Phil Spector’s “Wall of Sound”) was all lit, I found the lack of evenness in the lighting distracting.  This was especially true of the bass player, who was placed about on centerline, hence right behind the lead singer most of the time.  He was quite clearly more dimly lit than the other players around him.  The three backup singers weren’t involved in every number, so they came and went and weren’t too distracting as they faded in and out and were on and off. 
 
What really got to me was the use of EIGHT moving lights.  Apparently five of them were ganged together over center stage in such a way that either none were lit, or all were.  Since they didn’t always all have the same color, they seemed to be separately programmed, but I’m not a moving light programmer, so I don’t know.  They did always all seem to be on or off (mostly on).  Anyway, these lights were NOT evenly spaced across the stage and some spent a lot of time lighting the haze (which I guess was intended to create a smoky, “nightclub” atmosphere). 
 
This, of course, emphasized the fact that the spacing was uneven, which I found quite distracting, especially since there was no obvious reason for it.  The other three moving lights varied (as I remember them) between being backlight for some of the upstage musicians and gobo patterns on the simple (fairly effective) curtain backdrop during the first act.  They didn’t really bother me much.  During the second act, the backdrop was changed to a rear projection screen which was filled with (often quite distractingly mediocre and repetitive) rear projections.  They bothered me a lot, but at least those three moving lights were just used as backlights.
 
Then there were the light-up show logo panels on the front of the seated musicians stands.  As many numbers ended with a total blackout (a reliable, if old and cheap trick, which tires me out when overused [as it was here]), these, like the rest of the lights onstage simply cut out.  After all, a blackout is (and should be) fairly easy to achieve, you just turn off all the power.  But, when the lights came back up, these panels didn’t dim up, they turned on full blast in some sort of sequence which wasn’t quite random but was certainly not together nor (rationally) synchronized.  Again, probably because of spending much of my career working in tech, I found this sloppy and quite distracting.
 
Finally, the overall lighting scheme didn’t seem particularly flexible, or the designer’s imagination seemed pretty limited, at least to me.  There were many, many cues, not necessarily making any sense with the material, and to the point that they quickly became quite repetitive, at least to me.  One really doesn’t HAVE to change the lights every few notes (or beats).  I know this has become accepted in musicals, but I still find it distracting when it’s overdone.  A soft ballad (they do still occur, if infrequently) really doesn’t need a couple of dozen major light changes, at least in my book.  Sometimes less is more!
 
All things considered, I think the lighting for this production had many examples of the “We CAN do this, so let’s DO it!” sort of thinking which I’ve never really understood.  Yes, I did spend a lot of time working with limited equipment in underequipped theatres, but I think that (at least on occasion) my lighting was fairly effective because I had a specific reason behind each choice I made.  I felt I HAD to achieve good, appropriate visibility and, once that was achieved, whatever was left could be put to use for specific effects or moments, with the priority being given to those which were most important to the story or which contributed the most to the show.  All too often, throughout this whole show, I got the feeling that the designer was just trying to show how “flashy” the lights could be, not how effectively they could support the performance.  I thought that was too bad.
 
That’s not to imply that I am against using the equipment one has, or can obtain.  But, instruments (moving or otherwise), dimmers, cues, etc., are tools, and not all tools are appropriate for all occasions.  Try hanging a lighting instrument with a hammer!  A hammer’s a good tool, but not for that purpose.  Use the tools you have, but make sure that their use makes sense to the audience, not just as an excuse to say “Look at my fancy stuff!”
 
At the end of the evening (with yet another very loud number ending in a blackout) most of the audience leapt to its feet to give the show a standing ovation.  I confess that I was slower to my feet than many others, because I really wasn’t all that highly impressed.  Yes, I did enjoy much of the program, although I thought a lot of it could have been improved.  It just wasn’t the sort of thing I would normally think of as being “standing ovation” quality.  It wasn’t bad, but it wasn’t really all that special, at least in my book.
 
However, this got me to wondering when a standing ovation got to be an expectation, rather than a reward for excellence?  I tend to resort to Wikipedia a lot for quick references (as some readers may have noted), but this seems another case where that might be appropriate.  It says, “A standing ovation is a form of applause where members of a seated audience stand up while applauding after extraordinary performances of particularly high acclaim.”  It goes on, “Standing ovations are considered to be a special honor.”  This is what I’ve always considered them to be. 
 
It seems to me that the idea of the standing ovation has become considerably devalued by the notion that every performance is worthy of such.  I do understand the idea that parents want to show their pride in their child’s performance in the school or church play, but that really doesn’t mean that EVERY performance deserves “special” recognition.  I confess that I think it’s too bad that this seems to have become the case.  My feelings probably aren’t going to change the practice, but I do think that it would be nice to single out really excellent work for special recognition, in spite of the fact that some work is adequate and appropriate, some is not, and, occasionally, some is truly superior.  That’s not a statement of worth of the individual involved, but a recognition that while “All Men (Humans) are created equal” (at least in the eyes of the Creator) not all can (or, at least, do) do everything equally well.  That’s just the way it is. 
 
LLAP
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​96a     Heard Any Good Ones Lately #3a

7/15/2017

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This Hagar the Horrible cartoon was in the paper just yesterday and I couldn’t resist it!  After a career in theatre education it struck a chord which I found just too funny to pass up.  I’ve started work on a more usual post which I expect to put up in 10 days, or so, but I thought that this should be posted as an addendum to my post of a couple of days ago.
Picture
Until later,
 
LLAP

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96 Heard Any Good Ones Lately?, #3 (Sort of…)

7/12/2017

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Every so often I like to just write something that I hope is amusing.  Lord knows we need that on occasion.  As I think I’ve said before, I also “collect” comic strips from the paper which I enjoy.  So, this time, instead of making you read jokes I’ve collected, I thought I’d just send a few fairly recent strips along just because….  These are, of course, the property of their creators and they hold all rights to them.
 
Anyone who has ever been a teenager will understand this one from “Zits”:

Picture
After my recent posting about Julius Caesar (#94), this “Thatababy” struck a real chord:
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Anyone with a spouse/partner who is into a “healthier” diet will probably sympathize with this from “Between Friends”:
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On the other hand, from “Pickles”:
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If you even try to understand “Pop” culture and philosophy, you’ll get this from “Shoe”:
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As I have said, I enjoy the occasional trip to an art museum having spent a fair number of hours at the High Museum in Atlanta, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Joslyn Art Museum here in Omaha, so I could NOT resist this “B.C.”:
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At some point, I’ll include some written jokes again, but I just couldn’t resist sending these.  I hope you enjoyed them.
 
LLAP

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​95       Independence Day

7/1/2017

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As I write this the Independence Day weekend (which will last through Tuesday this year) is underway and we are about to engage in our usual frenzy of food, parades, family gatherings and FIREWORKS!  When I was growing up in Evanston, Illinois, fireworks were limited to children running around with sparklers trying to avoid getting burned by the magnesium (usually) based “sparks” which can heat the metallic stick which supports them to somewhere between 1800 to 3000°F.  The skyrockets, Roman candles, bombshells, etc. were restricted to licensed professionals and neither available for the general public to buy or use.  Of course, that was not true everywhere and it certainly isn’t true here in Omaha where most of the many places to buy such items (there are many) are, in fact, sponsored by various charities.  I confess that that has amused me a bit since I learned it was true as the injuries resulting from the misuse of such items may well require charitable services, but that’s not really the point.  No, the point is that we, as citizens of the United States, are celebrating the birth of our nation.
 
In point of fact, of course, the nation was simply being declared to be in existence, it didn’t actually have any real shape, form, or structure yet.  The Declaration was truly just a statement that we weren’t just a bunch of rebellious colonialists, but that we were (at least according to us) a new nation.  And, in the second paragraph of that statement, we stated that; “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed…”.  These are lofty ideals, worthy, in my opinion, of being celebrated, as well as defended. 
 
When the War of Independence was over (sort of, at least) we tried to set up an actual, functioning government to allow us to accomplish these goals.  It took us a couple of tries, but, eventually, we created what I think is a rather marvelous document (the Constitution) which has gone a long way towards making it possible to achieve this difficult task.  It hasn’t proven to be perfect, but it’s been better than most people probably expected and, since it contained a process for fixing things which didn’t work completely satisfactorily, it’s worked pretty well. 
 
One of my favorite parts of it, however, is the Preamble: “We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”  I’m especially fond of it because it seems to set out more explicitly than the Declaration of Independence does what we should expect from our government.  It’s supposed to “establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity…”.
 
The hard part, of course, has always been to live up to this high standard.  After all, when we created these documents, we didn’t start out too well by current standards.  Citizens (originally) were only property owning, white, males.  Females couldn’t (of course) be citizens, nor could Negroes (they were just property, at least in many places and usually didn’t even count as full humans) and those “savages” whom we had mostly chased off of the land we former Europeans wanted, didn’t really count as people.  Oh, yes, we established “treaties” with their “nations” when it suited us, but we have a poor record of honoring those treaties and we did set out rather methodically to destroy their culture, religion and society.
 
Some of this has changed over the years, although it took a Civil War to establish recognition of Negroes as people and 150 years later we still haven’t fully come to grips with the problems of racial bias, etc.  If anything, racial and ethnic prejudice, etc. has been worse for a good part of the time.  Any student of American history is, or should be, aware of the many forms of anti-immigrant laws and practices which were a feature of the American scene for much of it’s history.  No, we have a long history of prejudice and prejudicial actions against women, Negroes, Irish, Italian, German, Spanish, Puerto Rican, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Catholics, Jews, Muslims, Christians of many denominations, other religious minorities, LBGTQs, those who are old, infirm, fat, ugly, uneducated, homeless, addicted,  and (probably) others I can’t think of.  This is all there in our history, although we don’t tend to talk about it (let alone teach about it) because we know that it’s nothing to be proud of.
 
On the other hand, it’s not unfair to say that, overall, things have improved for most people in the less than 250 years since we declared ourselves a country (a VERY short time in the history of civilization), but we do need to be a little cautious about pretending that we are anything close to perfect, let alone permanent.  Still, we (somehow) do seem to, make progress towards living up to our ideals in some sort of fashion.  We aren’t there yet, but I think we are trying, in spite of the shenanigans of politicians who are more interested in being elected (or reelected) than in accomplishing anything to “promote the general Welfare.”
 
So I’m going to fly my flag on the Fourth (unless it rains, as I do not have an “all-weather” flag) and I expect to go out to watch some fireworks and get together with some of my family to celebrate the occasion.  I AM proud of my country, but I think a good citizen’s job is to work to make it better, even if that means disagreeing with other citizens at times about what the country stands for and how we should proceed in the process of forming a more perfect Union, establishing Justice, insuring domestic Tranquility, providing for the common defence, promoting the general Welfare, and securing the Blessings of Liberty.  I have read the Constitution.  I’ve studied our history.  I recognize that we haven’t always been perfect, but I’m also trying to make us better.  How about you?
 
Food, parades, and fireworks aren’t the answer.  Solving problems takes work!  So have a good time this weekend, then let’s get down to the job of being what we say we wish to be.
 
LLAP
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