Theatre Articles- A
Theatregoers Modern Guide to Etiquette
by
Paul Rudnick
1.You should arrive at the theater far too early. This will allow you ample opportunity
to complain about finding parking, the punishing cost of the tickets, how uncomfortable
the theater seats are, how there's no place to stash your coat and your shins,
and how fiendishly tedious the last 12 plays and musicals you've seen have been,
particularly those events that the critics proclaimed "searingly brilliant."
But at least you're not late.
2.While
waiting for the show to begin, it's fun to read the various bios in Playbill,
but please do not keep repeating in a vigorous, braying tone, "Never heard
of 'em!" 3.Unwrap
all hard candies well before curtain, so that the distracting rustle of this activity
will not occur during the performance. For some reason, the crackle of cellophane
will rivet an audience more than Sir Ian McKellen in "Richard III,"
or Kathleen Turner in the raw. The only thing more disruptive than unsheathing
a lozenge is coughing, because one cough in the orchestra section inspires another
in the mezzanine, and so on, until the theater becomes a ward. A hint: If you
feel a tickle coming on and fear that it might soon blossom into a catastrophic
hack, just imagine what Elaine Stritch would do to you if she found you. 4.There
are only three reasons for ever carrying a cell phone into the theater. One: You're
awaiting an organ donation. And make that a major organ, not merely a lung or
a leg. Two: Your wife is about to give birth to your first child (subsequent children
are old news). Three: You're a world leader who could be called upon in a nuclear
emergency (and even then, your phone must be set on vibrate). As for everyone
else, you are just not important enough for anyone to call you at the theater,
even during the 11th year of "The Phantom of the Opera." It is permissible,
however, for performers onstage in "Phantom" to receive calls. 5.If
your companion is hard of hearing, do not explain the onstage action by shouting
a running commentary, such as, "Now King Lear is hugging her! Go figure!"
When your favorite star makes an entrance, restrain the urge to howl, "Frank
Langella I love you!" Mr. Langella has undoubtedly heard this phrase
countless times before, especially alone at his dressing room mirror. 6.If
you are female, do not rush from your seat 15 minutes before intermission. Your
predicament, however, is understandable; someday a savvy producer will reap a
fortune by cutting the show entirely and advertising, "Thirty spotless, spacious
ladies rooms on ground level in midtown! $500 a seat!" 7.If
the person in the seat next to you begins to snore audibly, nudge him awake. Then
whisper, "You missed the nudity." 8.When
a latecomer finally appears and, as is always the case, forces an entire row of
decent, punctual people to stand up so that she can stumble to her seat, murmur
to that criminal: "Everyone hates you. Not just the people in this theater.
Everyone." 9.Never
arrive at the theater dead drunk, unless you're an English actor starring in the
play. 10.You
are entitled to the use of only one armrest. The other one belongs to the large,
smelly, chatty stranger sitting next to you, the individual with the soggy umbrella 11.If
you are offended by the show's crude language or overt sexual content, protest
by seeing it several more times. 12.Do
not leap out of your seat and race up the aisle skipping the curtain call in a
calculated attempt to get first dibs on your car or taxi. What if, at the Pearly
Gates, you discover that God is an actor? 13.If
you bring small children with you to a show, after duct-taping and shackling the
adorable toddlers, remind them that, "If you fidget, Simba will die."
14.A
standing ovation is not automatically mandated by a show's massive budget, or
by the entire cast lining up and grinning maniacally while they raise their arms.
Rise and cheer only if you are truly moved to do so, or if you love ABBA that
much. 15.Is
it appropriate to attend a show during previews, and then to go online via your
Palm Pilot to dish the first act at intermission? Yes but only if the show's creators
are allowed equal time to discuss your hairpiece |