Monday, March 27, 2023

Musings on World Theatre Day

Today is World Theatre Day, a creation of the International Theatre Institute some 62 years ago. To be honest, I didn’t know it existed until a couple of years ago, and I’m still unsure of how one is supposed to celebrate it… or commemorate it… or whatever. 

I’ve seen literally thousands of productions over the years, and I’ve worked on hundreds in some capacity—as director, actor, producer, dramaturg, designer, technician, translator, house manager, and whatever else needed doing. It has been my privilege to see many of the greatest actors of the last half century in person: Laurence Olivier, John Gielgud, Fiona Shaw, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Ingrid Bergman, Diana Rigg, to name a few. I’ve even gotten to know a few people who qualify as celebrities, at least within the theatre community. 

And I’ve seen magic happen: the voting scene in Peter Hall’s Eumenides, Derek Jacobi as Hamlet actually answering the question in the “words, words, words” speech, a moment in Bazaar and Rummage in which the lyrics of a fast-paced song perfectly matched the items being pulled out of a box. I’ve even contributed to a couple of moments like that—a handful of times as a director or actor, even once or twice as a lighting designer. These incidents are truly evanescent; they seldom last more that a few seconds, usually not even that long. But they sustain us all—the production company and the spectators alike. 

Still, perhaps my most vivid memory of theatre wasn’t of a performance. I was interviewing for a position at Cornell College in Iowa. It was a lengthy process: I was on campus for nearly 48 hours. The last part of the visit was lunch with a half dozen or so students. They asked me, rather pointedly, if I’d seen the performance venue. I hadn’t, and I’d already noticed that a facilities tour had been (obviously intentionally) left off my itinerary. 

The students rolled their eyes and escorted me over to the theatre space, a two-minute walk from where we’d had lunch. It didn’t take long to figure out why the search committee hadn’t wanted me to see the place. The lighting positions were terrible, the hemp lines had long since needed replacing, there wasn’t a platform in stock I’d let an actor walk on. 

But. (And as they used to say in burlesque, it’s a big but.) I closed my eyes for a moment. Without seeing all the things that were wrong, I could focus on what really matters. Work happened there. Good work happened there. I could smell it, taste it, feel it. There would be lots of work ahead just to make the space safe, but the essence of the place wasn’t in the bricks and mortar. It was in the work, and the people who did it… and some of them were standing there with me. 

I knew in that moment that if I was offered the job, I’d take it. If you happen to achieve magic, it’s a wonderful sensation, but the quest matters more than the destination. It’s been half a century since I did my first college-level production, in a minor role during the summer between high school and college. I can’t even guess how many thousands of hours I’ve spent since then working on whatever production it happened to be at the time. 

What I do know now, with a clarity I didn’t have prior to that moment on a stage in small-town Iowa, is that it’s ultimately about the people, the work, and the dedication. So as we celebrate (if that is the correct word) World Theatre Day, I salute the thousands of students and colleagues who have brightened my path.