Too Lazy To Make The Trip To Threaten You

by:

Joe Patti

Berlin’s Deutsche Oper decision to cancel Mozart’s opera Idomeneo because it may enrage Muslims has gotten me to thinking about the implications.

Artists have often skirted controversy and many venues have cancelled performance under public pressure. These things are not new. Likewise, artists have frequently come under death threats as have the audiences who attend the works. Back in the late 80s/early 90s I had to go through a metal detector and a pat down because a production featuring Vanessa Redgrave had received bomb threats in response to her views on Palestine.

While you should never be in danger of being slain by someone at anytime in your life, as an artist or attendee, you recognized the threat to yourself by others by advancing ideas or choosing to be present at a performance. Just as your car should never be subject to damage, you recognize by driving during rush hour someone may hit you intentionally out of road rage.

What concerns me is that people will harm oblivious, uninvolved individuals within 10 miles of them for something occuring 3000 miles away. The opera is, of course, worried about problems locally because Germany has many guest workers from Islamic countries. Their decision is being made in the context of the violence and slaying for from Rome in response to the pope’s recent comments about Islam. I am afraid people will see the effectiveness of the ploy in cowing people and use the threat as a means of shutting down something they have never seen but have heard enough about to get whipped into a frenzy over.

For example someone in California upon hearing that the Vagina Monologues promote a lesbian lifestyle and is the primary instrument by which young girls are brainwashed into a homosexual relationship may decide to blow up a bookstore in a California town selling the script when Oprah announces on her show that she is sponoring a huge production in Chicago.

The fact that people thousands of miles away who probably have no knowledge of or opinion on a show could be endangered is frightening. The idea that artistic choices one makes might need to be altered out of concern for people half the world away from a production gives one a lot of pause.

The questions and decisions may start out attached to religious beliefs but there is nothing to stop people from employing the tactic with economic and ecologic ones. If you don’t back down to pressure now, you may rob the tactic as a viable tool for the future but end up shouldering the blame for injury and death for people today.

The argument that if we can put a man on the moon why can’t we X is a logical disconnect because all that proves is that a different group of people possessing different skillsets were able to solve a different problem.

So too will people probably discover that what worked to influence decisions globally for a different group for a short time (because I think people will eventually become inured to the threats) won’t be effective for them in another arena.

But it won’t stop them from trying and people most likely will be hurt in the process of discovering how ineffective the tactic might be.

All The Ways To Be Underserved

by:

Joe Patti

I have to attend one of the final rehearsals for a show going up this weekend, but I wanted to do a quick entry on something I learned today.

Shannon Daut, Director of Programs for WESTAF (Western Arts Federation) spoke to my booking consortium today about various benefits we will accrue by our state rejoining WESTAF. Our consortium was already receiving some financial support under a couple of their programs that didn’t require the state to be a member so we were familiar with a lot of what she said.

One of the things she did tell me that came as a sort of surprise was that for granting purposes an underserved community could be one that wasn’t served by the arts well at all as well as one that was underserved by a particular discipline. As an example of the latter, she mentioned that Denver where WESTAF is headquartered was underserved by dance.

What is necessary for the granting process is to make the case for why a community is underserved citing data be it historical trends or census data. One of the other criteria for the grants is that the arts organization be engaged with what the community wants. You can’t just seek financial support to bring Jethro Tull in because they never tour your part of the country unless there are a lot of people who want to see the band.

According to Shannon, if you have plans to present an group of an underserved discipline in proper proportion to the demand of your community, you have a fair chance of receiving support even if your community is renowned as a hot bed for other disciplines.

Connections and Transfers

by:

Joe Patti

Potentially coming to a municipality near you is another effort by Google to help you get where you are goin’. Currently Beta testing in select cities is Google Transit.

Punch in where are, where you are going, what time you want to leave or arrive by and Google Transit will tell you the next 4 times buses pass by your start address, how long the transit will be with transfers (if any) and how much money you are saving vs. driving.

There are a few bugs to work out. For example it told me to get off the bus at a stop 3/4 mile farther away from work than I needed to and really underestimated the walk to work. I chalk it up to the data Google was provided by the transit company since the more distant stop is listed on the schedule and the closer, heavily used location is not.

The benefit for arts organizations, once the service is more refined and wide spread, is that it will help remove a barrier to attendance. You can encourage people to take the Rte. 42 bus, but if they are uncertain if the line near their house intersects conveniently with 42 they really need to be motivated to attend. This is especially true for weekends and nights when buses run less frequently.

For now, tuck it away and keep it in mind as a future resource you can direct patrons to so they can get to you.

May I Touch You?

by:

Joe Patti

Via Arts and Letters Daily is this article about how political correctness is undermining the quality of ballet in Britian. (As an interesting sidenote, the article is the result of an interview with a gentleman participating in a roundtable for Battle of Ideas at the end of October.)

Dance instructor turned critic Jeffrey Taylor attributes the decline to taboos about touching dance students and subjecting them to rigorous training regimines the teachers themselves experienced.

“Taylor is horrified. ‘Touching is essential! The classical ballet technique is one of the most unnatural physical regimes ever invented by man…Children cannot be coaxed into these positions by words alone: they have to be shown. There is no way a child can understand how you straighten out your lumbar region, how you tuck your hips underneath you.�”

“Another of Taylor’s laments is the non-judgemental current creeping into ballet. Just as touching is now banned, so too are the physically punishing regimes that were once the mainstay of ballet training. ‘Today it’s almost official: you never tell a child what to do unless they are willing to do it.’ This just doesn’t work. There comes a point [in ballet] when you have got to do as you are told, whether you understand or approve.”

I haven’t heard of too many similar cases in the US, but then I am not in the dance world. One thing I do know is that the concerns about inappropriate touching, while protecting the teacher, can tend to confuse the students.

One of the dance teachers on campus is careful to ask if she can touch a student before making contact to correct a posture. It turns out that some of the students find this creepy. A rank your professor website had a few comments about the professor’s sexual hang-ups based specifically on the fact she poses the question.

I am interested to find out how prevalent this is in the US. I think I will drop a note to Doug Fox over at Great Dance and see if he would be willing to address this either in a response or on his blog.

I am also going to ask some acting teachers I know if this sort of thing has become a bigger concern of late. There isn’t as much touching necessary when teaching acting as with dance. I wonder though if David Mamet’s works are banned from the scene list for fear of offending other students.