• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to content

RESPIRO E MOVIMENTO®

DISCOVER YOUR REAL POTENTIAL

  • Book a session
  • Events
  • Testimonials
  • Blog
  • Gallery
  • Media
  • Contact

THEATRE

The Art and Alchemy of Mask Theatre

September 6, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

The art and alchemy of mask theatre

At the end of many mask theatre shows, there is a brilliant moment when the actors remove their masks and we’re surprised by the performers behind. When I saw Vamos’s Finding Joy at Jacksons Lane in London in 2014, audience members were audibly astonished and delighted to discover the actors bore so little resemblance to the characters they had played. In mask theatre the old can be young again, while the youthful can play the old. Gender, too, is up for grabs. It’s also an economically advantageous art form: a small company can play many characters.

There is a strange alchemy about mask theatre. The ancient Greeks recognised its power and contemporary audiences seem increasingly drawn to a form that until recently was dismissed as a wee bit fusty.

“You have to recognise just how powerful mask theatre can be and learn to control it,” she says. “It means as a director and performer, you have to be alert to every tiny detail, every minute change of pace, and you have to keep paring back. It’s such a delicate balance but when mask theatre works audiences love it and respond so directly: straight from the heart.”

(via)

Filed Under: MASK, THEATRE

How Will the Age of Attention Deficit Affect Our Art?

August 31, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

We’re already seeing shorter running times on Broadway, as you may recall from this study we did.  That’s the most obvious repercussion from our new goldfish like brains.

But over the next ten years, we’ll see even greater changes to help satisfy what our new audience needs to get them to focus.  Here are some things that I think will change:

  • Shows will get even shorter.
    • 90 minutes will be the new two hours and twenty minutes.  Same amount of story-telling stuffed into a smaller box.
  • We’ll have more lighting cues.
    • Every time light changes, it’s like a little palette cleanser on the brain, forcing it to reset and start paying attention again.
  • Expect more sets and more spectacle.
    • The days of the “Drawing Room Drama” are coming to an end.  The next audience will need more stuff on the stage to keep them engaged.  And that stuff will have to do stuff.
  • Tech will be key.
    • Tech is practically a food group to the Pesky Whipper-Snapper set.  So the next gen?  They’re going to want it everywhere.
  • Classics will face challenges.
    • How will Death of a Salesman be told to the next gen?  What about Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, any of Shakespeare’s plays?  We’ll need some creative directors for shizzle.
  • Dialogue and direction will get quicker.
    • Expect more Mamet and Sorkin-styled plays in the future.

(via)

Filed Under: ATTENTION DEFICIT, BROADWAY, THEATRE

Cirque du Soleil Bends Broadway Norms to Revamp ‘Paramour’

August 16, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Filed Under: ACROBAT, CIRCUS, CIRQUE DU SOLEIL, THEATRE

What Harry Potter And Fringe Audiences Have In Common

August 12, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Harry Potter

As the audiences at Harry Potter and the Cursed Child prove, you don’t have to know any rules to be fully engaged in the theatre, you only have to want to be there and be told a really good story in an imaginative way.

When I spoke recently to Harry Potter’s director, John Tiffany, whose production of The Glass Menagerie is at the Edinburgh international festival, he talked aboutrealising how important it was to get the Potter play right for an audience who are heavily invested in the story, but for whom theatre is not a familiar medium. It was a responsibility he took very seriously.

“I knew in my heart that this is theatre on trial, because we’ve all read the books and we’ve all seen the films and have an expectation. Sixty per cent of the audience who have booked are first-time theatregoers, so I wanted to create a love letter to theatre and say to people it’s not about comparing the stage show with the books and films, but [rather]: ‘This is what theatre can do and no other art form can.’ All we need is your imagination. So, that was the guiding principle for us – it felt very pure because of that. Like a kind of rough magic.”

Photograph by Manuel Harlan.

(via)

Filed Under: AUDIENCE, HARRY POTTER, THEATRE

What Are The Important Things Acting Agents Look For?

August 5, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTING AGENTS, ACTORS, THEATRE, VIDEO

Review: Does ‘Cats’ Have Nine Lives on Broadway?

August 2, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

01CATS-master768

 

The overriding spirit of the revival appears to be the familiar motto: Don’t mess with success. Once again, the production is directed by Trevor Nunn, with sets and costumes by John Napier. Once again, a Broadway theater has been transformed into a grungy London junkyard, where trash piles up against the walls and spills out into the auditorium — albeit on a somewhat smaller scale. That levitating tire, as famous a set piece as a certain falling chandelier, presides once again at the back of the stage. (Apparently the license plate on the battered car, which reads “NAP 70,” is an in-joke indicating how many productions Mr. Napier has designed. Imagine how many leg warmers have been involved.)

The most significant nod to the intervening decades and changing tastes is the hiring of Andy Blankenbuehler — the Tony-winning choreographer of “Hamilton,” the newest now-and-forever musical (to borrow the marketing slogan from the first “Cats”) — to groom the original choreography by Gillian Lynne. (Ms. Lynne gave an interview to the website and newspaper The Stage in which she said she felt positively murderous at this betrayal.)

With its thread of a plot, about which feline will be chosen by the lord of the cat kingdom, Old Deuteronomy (an aptly august-acting Quentin Earl Darrington), to ascend to something called the “Heaviside Layer” on the night of the annual “Jellicle Ball,” “Cats” is basically a series of divertissements. The felines prance and romp and occasionally hiss at one another as they introduce themselves in songs that provide the show’s greatest allure, as well as its variety.

Mr. Lloyd Webber is a musical magpie who can compose soaring pseudo-classical music as smoothly as he can jaunty music-hall-style jingles or jazz-inflected rock songs. His dexterity as a composer has never been more vividly showcased as it was, and is, in “Cats.” (His “School of Rock,” with a zesty pop-rock score, is currently installed at the Winter Garden Theater, the original “Cats”-box.)

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, CATS, PERFORMANCE, THEATRE

Why Surprise Is The Secret of Theatrical Success

July 29, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Startlingly brilliant … Jesus Christ Superstar at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre, in London. Photograph: Jane Hobson/Rex Shutterstock
Startlingly brilliant … Jesus Christ Superstar at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre, in London. Photograph: Jane             Hobson/Rex Shutterstock

Surprise often comes with the shock of the new, partly because too much expectation about a show dulls the senses. I’m thinking of seeing the unknown Gregory Burke’s electrifying Gagarin Way, or stumbling across 1927’s Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea at Edinburgh in 2007, or watching Jonathan Harvey’s Beautiful Thing at London’s Bush theatre in 1993. There’s an exhilaration in being part of an audience that has seen something really special, something that most of the world still doesn’t know about. After seeing Black Watch in 2006, I recall how the audience could hardly contain their excitement as they left the Traverse in Edinburgh. Complete strangers were beaming at each other.

(via)

Filed Under: ACTING, ACTORS, MUSICALS, THEATRE

  • « Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • …
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Next Page »

Copyright © 2026 · Respiro e Movimento®· All rights reserved

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube