mafief: (Default)
mafief ([personal profile] mafief) wrote2020-04-11 01:18 pm

Streaming theater

I’ve been taking advantage of content that’s newly accessible and might as well share what I’ve found.


National Theater Live is posting one new play a week. I think you can only watch it once. https://www.youtube.com/user/ntdiscovertheatre

I’ve watched last week’s show, One Man, Two Guvnors, which was super silly and not for me. There was a classic humor dinner scene, random lines, and characters breaking the fourth wall. I didn’t finish it, and I’m not broken up about it.

This week is Jane Eyre. I love the movie 1996 version with Charlotte Gainsbourg and William Hurt. There are apparently 16 versions of Jane Eyre and I’ve only seen that one.
I think this plays version is too artsy for me. The stage pieces, costuming, the cast were minimal. There was strange elements like when they were traveling by train they would walk in place. There was a random opera women in red. The baby scene at the beginning almost caused me to stop watching. To show Jane’s swirling thoughts, there was an few actors/actresses that would surround her and yell out her thoughts. It took me a embarrassingly long time to figure out that is what they were doing. Madeleine Worrall as Jane was fine. Felix Hayes as Mr Rochester didnt feel right. His voice was very rough and it felt like he was angry yelling all the time.
Next week is Treasure Island. Week after is Twelfth Night, which I know will confuse me so I’ll use sparknotes that day.


Cirque did Soleil is posting 60 minute specials. https://www.youtube.com/user/cirquedusoleil
These I liked. They have the strange cirque magic and it’s wonderful.

Broadway also has content available. I haven’t explored it yet, but I’m getting there. https://broadwaydirect.com/where-to-watch-musicals-online-the-musical-lovers-guide-to-streaming/
smallhobbit: (Default)

[personal profile] smallhobbit 2020-04-12 11:19 am (UTC)(link)
Yes - I do agree with that! I think Shakespeare can be updated - and I've seen some excellent productions where Hamlet, for example, have been. I've also seen some where it really hasn't worked. If it takes the essence of the play, and all the meaning, and makes it more modern it can help to expand the meaning, but if the sole reason appears to be 'clever' then I see no point.

A friend and I once went to a performance of Macbeth and it wasn't until we read the programme afterwards we realised what the setting was supposed to be - so a failure! On the other hand, I saw a brilliant reworking of Henry V, which showed the play being performed by English and French soldiers in a WWI battlefield hospital, which was incredibly poignant.