Do you think that Pooter thought his own thoughts to be Pooterish or well founded?
original post deleted in case it made me sound like a stalker.....As it happens, I'm currently finalizing a load of print for a tour of a version of Macbeth. We tried to create an image that conveyed something of the visceral nature of the performance, subject to what @srw pointed out about the show not actually existing in any visual sense until well after print deadlines. Some of the more bloody/Fred West's basement/untimely ripp'd options we discarded as being unnecessarily graphic or unsuitably depressing, and we went for something striking but a bit less literal and not too gory. Anyway, at least one venue has made it clear that they can't display such images because people will be 'offended' by them even before they see the show. So we'll have to either come up with something more anodyne, or spend money on print that won't get displayed or distributed. Then we'll have to field the complaints because the Cunobelin tendency didn't feel it was sufficiently 'warned' about the fact that theatre isn't necessarily there to reinforce their preconceptions or endorse their worldview. I reckon there should be an Old Fart Levy on mainstream theatre tickets that goes to fund risk and innovation. The consolation in all this is that writing responses to Disgusted of Newbury is one of my favourite pastimes. I honestly can't get enough of it.
Didn't stop me....original post deleted in case it made me sound like a stalker.....
there's me thinking "the play's the thing" I suggest you stick to west end musicals in future
Well not quite... it is more like going to see the Sound of Music and finding that it is in all respects the same except the setting and costumes have been modernised. Unless of course the Rylance Macbeth you went to see had changed to script to modern-day English as well?Absolutely, and the point you are still missing is that this was NOT the play they had advertised......
Lets take your "West End Musicals" analogy. It is a bit like going to see the Sound of Music, and finding that they have rewritten the music in the style of "We will Rock You", and borrowed the Nun's costumes form "Cats"
By your definition it is still "the Sound of Music"
If adverised as traditional then something more in keeping with a traditional performance and not a modern take on it.
yebbut what's a "traditional" performance ?
It never made me think it was a traditional performance or a modern interpretation.Yes, I agree on this point. I personally would have enjoyed the interpretation but I too would have been left wondering why in heaven's name the publicity material made you think it would be a traditional presentation.
I probably wouldn't have written to Trading Standards though - I would more likely have shaken my head in an amusedly baffled manner, then gone for a beer.
bb
I don't recall the witches' costumes being described in the text.
Bear in mind all the women were played by boys back in the day, something Roylance has done a few times, as was a recent semi-pro Hamlet I saw, and again, back in the day they would have been wearing "modern dress" of doublet and hose or whatever. Did people complain and ask for their money back because they weren't wearing authentic dark age warrior clothes?
I do understand the "not same as the poster point" but contend it is (beyond) stupid when talking of Shakespear.
It never made me think it was a traditional performance or a modern interpretation.
As it happens, I'm currently finalizing a load of print for a tour of a version of Macbeth. We tried to create an image that conveyed something of the visceral nature of the performance, subject to what @srw pointed out about the show not actually existing in any visual sense until well after print deadlines. Some of the more bloody/Fred West's basement/untimely ripp'd options we discarded as being unnecessarily graphic or unsuitably depressing, and we went for something striking but a bit less literal and not too gory. Anyway, at least one venue has made it clear that they can't display such images because people will be 'offended' by them even before they see the show. So we'll have to either come up with something more anodyne, or spend money on print that won't get displayed or distributed. Then we'll have to field the complaints because the Cunobelin tendency didn't feel it was sufficiently 'warned' about the fact that theatre isn't necessarily there to reinforce their preconceptions or endorse their worldview. I reckon there should be an Old Fart Levy on mainstream theatre tickets that goes to fund risk and innovation. The consolation in all this is that writing responses to Disgusted of Newbury is one of my favourite pastimes. I honestly can't get enough of it.