Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Dialogues

It's interesting that all the excerpts picked by the class for this week's reading have involved just two characters interacting. Where the has been more than the two characters on stage at once (Henry IV, Closer, Angels in America), they have been paired off into couples, and we can compare the couplings to each other. It is by no means impossible to have more than two characters interacting at once, though after seeing these excerpts I wonder if you were to do some sort of mathematical analysis of all plays you would find that the majority of the time only two characters are interacting in this way (Leaving the monologue plays out of course. And the Greek ones, because strophing is an irrational number and would mess everything up). Or perhaps our generation just prefers scenes with only two people. Or perhaps the bias was generated because everyone was looking for exemplars of dialogue, and having only two characters on stage is almost closer to monologue than more action heavy scenes––the characters are allowed to ruminate and express themselves, and the lines stretch out.

Given the stories the class said go over well in plays, it makes sense that these intimate interactions were picked. We listed relationship stories, reflection, and the everyday amongst others. Truly, long scenes of just two people can tend to drag in film, but work incredibly well on stage (Or the page even, I was hanging off every word of the Closer excerpt). In film the camera trickery often involved in dialogue heavy two character scenes seems like it can prove ultra-unrealistic; the camera will switch back and forth from close up of face to face, often leaving the actors glued to the same position as to not cause disorientation. In contrast moment I found that worked incredibly well in Closer was a moment that would work best in the play medium; When Alice tells Dan to "At least have the guts to look at [her]" and he does. I believe strong outbursts like that line are best in live theater because we the audience get some of the same impact as if someone had actually said those things to us. The strength of the actor is almost irrelevant by virtue of those things actually being vocalized, live in person, whereas in film a more fine line must be tread between drama and melodrama––we the audience are more prone to judge the piece from more emotional remove. Also something that seems to work incredibly well in plays is the split scene as seen in Angels in America and Closer. Splitting the scene and putting two couples on stage at once allows them to be foils to each other and speeds up the pacing. While this is technique is totally achievable in film, the shortness of the scenes almost tends to make it irrelevent, the action moves to a new place before it would have a chance to return from the split scene.

One excerpt I found difficult was from Arcadia. I would very much like to see the play, because the excerpt was impenetrable in a way that suprisingly, none of the other plays removed from context were. This makes me wonder if the other plays aren't too emotionally simple in that I could pick up on everything I needed to given no back story and no context. In the Arcadia excerpt, the emotions seem to be far more reserved than in the other dialogues, though in many ways the dialogue was easier to believe, in that it sounded like a conversation that people have, when not at the climax of some particular plot arc. I would love to write a play that had this kind of reserve throughout yet somehow had emotional impact.

4 comments:

  1. Your observation that most of the dialogues took place between only two people is extremely interesting. Maybe it's easier to write that way. Or maybe it's more real... We tend to reveal big information when there are very few people around. It would be interesting to pair these scenes with others where the characters interact with more people -- to see how things may or may not change when they are talking to others (especially others who are not significant others).

    I agree that Arcadia is very difficult to penetrate. I've seen the play many times... and it's like that almost all the way through. It's an interesting challenge for the actors -- they almost have to be the most likable people in the world for us to really feel for them by the end (which I did in the production I saw). It's difficult, though. Not sure if I'm interested in writing a play that is so walled and protected from the masses.

    An interesting point that it was more real in that they weren't revealing huge life-changing information. I guess the challenge is how to make these "real" moments captivating enough for the stage and not boring.

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  2. Jared. Stop blogging and go read Arcadia. Do it now. I'll wait.

    See?? Unbelievable. Un-believable. It suffers for this exercise in that, like Shakespeare, we are none of us, alas, Tom Stoppard. But I do think that especially in this play, Stoppard is doing what you've set here as a goal. The dialogue, the actions in the scenes, the moment by moment is understated and day-to-day realistic. But the punch at the end of it all will knock you out. Don't believe the haters.

    And indeed, most of most plays happen between two people. Some of that is constraints of the medium -- got to get everyone heard and hearing each other and facing the audience and finding their light and looking not overly awkward and all that. More than just a few people at once gets tricky to stage for very long. I also think that's just what happened here because of the assignment -- when there are many actors on stage, the focus is usually action; when there are few, the focus is more on the words. All that said, try it. Write a scene with three then four then more. The split scene is a nifty way of doing both at once -- focus on words, focus on action. It avoids the awkward staging by halving the stage space for each scene. It creates intimacy (this is what film can't do) and comparison. Neat trick.

    Seriously, go read Arcadia.

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  3. I find it interesting that you felt that "Arcadia" was the most real. For me, this was the hardest one to connect with. I felt like I had no connection to the characters and no way into the story. I think that might change were I to read the rest of the show, but at this moment, I couldn't connect. However, it's definitely possible that this is the most real scene because of that. They are just having a conversation, not TRYING to connect with anyone seeing it.

    I like that you mentioned the two person tendency of the scenes, which I hadn't noticed. It seems interesting to juxtapose these scenes to a play like "12 Angry Men" where there is 12 people onstage the entire show and the play is based on a group discussion. But even there, people tend to pair off into mini discussions. I think there are two main reasons: simple human nature and also a tool to make the scene easier to follow. Thoughts?

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  4. Jared,

    I completely agree with what you said about Arcadia. I think that is why I had a negative response to it. It was just inaccessible for me, but I suppose I should read it..

    I think our generation is obsessed with relationships. By that I mean we are a love-starved generation where people doubt that true love even exists. Thus they are drawn to any exploration of those dynamics. Two person dialogues are the most effective at exploring something honestly and emotionally. The more people in a room, the more introverted the characters become. There are too many elements to keep track of, so it is with the minimal people that you get the most time to delve into truth about characters themselves and their relationships with one another.

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