Flavian
Sunday 21st June 2009 7:49pm
651 posts
Quote: Griff @ June 21 2009, 4:16 PM BST
I would call Abigail's Party a "serious" comic play (and a great one) which has brilliant characterisation, a satirical purpose, and interesting things to say about society. I'm assuming (maybe wrongly) that the type of "nothing more than a comedy" play which Rick is talking about are pieces that have very little of the above, favouring gags over depth, which is why most theatres wouldn't be interested. This is not to say those kinds of shows can't be fun to watch, of course.
I also agree with Tim that certain sitcoms do have a very theatrical feel about them. Steptoe and Porridge you could easily imagine as plays (and indeed, both have recently been adapted into plays, I just remembered.) The Inbetweeners is not so easy to imagine as a play (but possibly a film?)
I've previously declared my undying love for Nuts In May. "Keith, do we have to follow the guidebook?"
Nope - you're spot on Griff. A big difference between Abigail's Party and the sort of stuff I'm trying to generate.
I directed Elton's Silly Cow last week - really good stuff. A play you can read through, and then go back and analyse how it all adds up. All great - but all for a specific audience.
I have friends that don't go to theatre - overall, they see it as self-indulgent pretentious non-film. They would never slag it off, each to their own and all that, but I dragged them along to Silly Cow and, even though the cast (except me) were excellent, many of them couldn't see how it qualified as a comedy.
The same friends saw my massively theatrically-inferior play a couple of weeks previously and some enjoyed it more. There was a plot, I'm not that much of an idiot, but it was all about the comedy. The plot was in place to increase the laughter and they want to see more.
I love Abigail's Party by the way and clever theatrical dramatic crafting, but I think there is a tonne of room for laugh-your-bollocks-off-and-go-home-happy stuff too.