The fact that we are in an age defined by technology is not news. At this point it is common knowledge. Technology has become such an extension of our daily lives that we no longer differentiate between our hands and our cell phones. However, this has caused live theatre to be redefined. Theatre was created to be something that people experience. It was in your face, and every night provided something different. People would come and experience something that pushed them artistically, and allowed them to think critically. The experience of watching something unfold before you, on stage, added to the experience of watching some fantastic story play out. Now, technology has come in and redefined one solid idea: What is live theatre?
Technology contradicts this seemingly simple term, ‘live theatre.’ More Broadway shows are being filmed on Broadway and produced for movie theaters, or they are automatically streamed on Netflix. Now the younger generation of theatergoers has the option to sit anywhere and watch a prerecorded NY version of a great Broadway tale. Who wouldn’t consider that what these people are doing is watching live theatre? Technically, they are. These films are set in a live Broadway theater, and you still do see the stage, the lights, and hear the audience. They are watching the experience unfold before them and they are able to observe almost everything that comes with watching a Broadway show. But, there is a defining line between watching screened, live theatre compared to being a participant in “living” theatre.
A scene from the Broadway hit Memphis. This show was recorded and streamed on Netflix.From the moment you buy a ticket the anticipation grows. You know for one night you will be transported to another world. You’ll sit in a fancy seat in a theater with hundreds of other people who, in turn, also bring with them all their hopes and excitements. You feed off of one another as the curtains rise. Being there together as an audience allows you to be a participant in what you are about to see, even though you will not physically be onstage in the show, you are still an active part of everything going on that night. These feelings and emotions are not able to be replicated for a TV- style audience. The dull tones that escape a computer speaker cannot compare to the moment you first hear the breath of someone standing on stage. You cannot beat having options, which is ultimately what technology has provided to theatergoers. I think options can be overrated.
-Sara