
Find all our Student Opinion questions here.
What was the last live performance you saw? Did you or others in the audience use your phones during the show? Were you allowed to?
Watch the short video above about what happened during a recent performance of the Off Broadway musical “The Wrong Man.”
What’s your reaction to the video? Do you think it’s acceptable to use your phone during a live performance? Why or why not?
In “Filming the Show: Pardon the Intrusion? Or Punish It?,” Michael Paulson and Michael Cooper write about the incident and several others like it:
Joshua Henry, the star of a new Off Broadway musical called “The Wrong Man,” had tried repeatedly to signal his disapproval to the man in the onstage seating who was using his smartphone to capture his performance, but he wasn’t getting through.
By the third song, Mr. Henry had had enough. So he reached into the seats, deftly grabbed the phone out of the man’s hand, wagged it disapprovingly, and tossed it under a riser — all mid-song, without skipping a beat. “I knew I had to do something,” he explained later.
Just a few nights earlier, in Ohio, the renowned violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter had stopped playing Beethoven mid-concerto to ask a woman in the front row to quit making a video of her. After the woman rose to reply, she was escorted out of the hall by the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra’s president, and the music resumed.
Both artists were cheered — first in person, later on social media — for taking a stand against the growing ranks of smartphone addicts who cannot resist snapping pictures and making recordings that are often prohibited by rule or by law, that are distracting to performers and patrons, and that can constitute a form of intellectual property theft.
But such confrontations are fueling a new debate about digital-era etiquette. No one likes a ringing cellphone to interrupt a cathartic moment. But both theater and classical music have aging fan bases and a desire to attract younger and more diverse audiences, and some suggest that an emphasis on behavioral restrictions is a form of off-putting elitism.
“It’s turned into a battle over who belongs, and who gets to set the rules,” said Kirsty Sedgman, a lecturer in theater at the University of Bristol and the author of “The Reasonable Audience,” a book about contemporary debates over theater etiquette.
“Everyone goes into the theater thinking their own personal vision of what theater should be like is clearly the right one,” said Dr. Sedgman, who noted that expectations that audiences will be reverential date only to the 19th century, and that in Shakespeare’s time patrons were famously rowdy.
On the night a few weeks ago when Rihanna visited Broadway to see the edgy “Slave Play,” she texted the playwright, Jeremy O. Harris, during the intermission-free show. Instead of chastising her, he celebrated the exchange on Twitter, saying, “When my idol texts me during a play I’ve written, I respond.”
Predictably, his tolerance of her texting prompted a backlash. But he was unapologetic.
“I’m not interested in policing anyone’s relationship to watching a play ESPECIALLY someone who isn’t a part of the regular theatergoing crowd,” he said on Twitter.
Students, read the entire article, then tell us:
Do you think it’s ever appropriate to use your phone — whether to record, text, tweet or do anything else — during a live performance?
Do you think audience behavioral restrictions are “snobbish, elitist, or even manifestations of white privilege” as some have suggested? Or are they necessary?
Do you think it’s time for the rules of etiquette to change? What guidelines, if any, do you think there should be about phone use or audience etiquette at live performances?
Do you think relaxing etiquette expectations might help attract young, diverse audiences to theater and classical music? Would you be more likely to attend these kinds of performances if there weren’t strict rules about how you should behave at them?
Imagine you were a performer or creator of a show. How would you feel if audience members were using their phones during the performance? Does taking this perspective change your mind about etiquette rules at all? Why or why not?
Students 13 and older are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/09/learning/what-rules-if-any-should-there-be-about-phone-use-during-live-performances.html
2019-10-09 09:00:00Z
CBMie2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tLzIwMTkvMTAvMDkvbGVhcm5pbmcvd2hhdC1ydWxlcy1pZi1hbnktc2hvdWxkLXRoZXJlLWJlLWFib3V0LXBob25lLXVzZS1kdXJpbmctbGl2ZS1wZXJmb3JtYW5jZXMuaHRtbNIBf2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tLzIwMTkvMTAvMDkvbGVhcm5pbmcvd2hhdC1ydWxlcy1pZi1hbnktc2hvdWxkLXRoZXJlLWJlLWFib3V0LXBob25lLXVzZS1kdXJpbmctbGl2ZS1wZXJmb3JtYW5jZXMuYW1wLmh0bWw
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "What Rules, if Any, Should There Be About Phone Use During Live Performances? - The New York Times"
Post a Comment