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Should Londoners be Laughing?: Just the Play for Masochistic Yuppies
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13925 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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2 / 1988 |
2,233 Words |
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Herb Greer Herb Greer is an American writer and playwright who lives in
Britain and on the Continent. |
During the sixties and early seventies, a curious amusement took the fancy of London's theatrical fringe, later spreading to the august precincts of the Royal Shakespeare Company. This sport had no formal name, but it took the form of insulting the audience, by way of peddling some more or less abstract banality about politics or society ("the system"). Once during that time there was actually a play put on called Insulting the Audience, imported from a ferocious Continental writer. It consisted of an extended and aggressive harangue by a single character and was at least a critical success on the fringe, provoking comments on the "breaking of new ground," and the like. Another production, the name of which I have forgotten, was staged by a very fringy group called the People Show, directed by a self-styled poet with the appropriate name of Geoff Nuttall. He herded the audience into cages, turned blinding spotlights on them, and had the actors stalk about the auditorium, banging on the cages with iron bars and clubs, meanwhile shouting imprecations and calumnies at the paying customers. This went on for a couple of hours, after which the audience was let out to go to the bar and discuss how awfully excited and amused they had been, how this was really "breaking new ground" in the theater, and such. This was the heyday of Herbert Marcuse, and the idea was to make a point about our tolerantly oppressive society, or system.
Gone with Fidel's Halo
Until last November I had imagined that such japes were old hat, vanished, gone with the wind like hippies, the delights of psychedelic mushrooms, Fidel Castro's halo, Timothy Leary, and that little harmonium used by Allen Ginsberg to accompany his mantras. It came as a surprise to
... (1996 of 12882 Characters)
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