Keeping It Fresh
After the thrill of opening dwindles and the winter weather causes audiences to dwindle, how do you keep the energy of the company from dwindling? It's hard to get through eight shows a week (especially 3 hour epics like Les Mis) with the same passion and intensity we created and fostered back in November.
Many things affect 'energy', one of which is that theater is a collaborative art, and part of that collaboration is with the audience. Every audience is different and we feed off their energy. We've been lucky to only have a few shows where the audience was sparse. But man, there is a huge difference performing on a sleeting, gray winter Wednesday matinee with hundreds of seats left empty vs. performing on a clear Friday night when we're sold out.
The challenge, and part of our jobs is to give that Wednesday MAT audience a show just as good as the one we give that Friday EVE crowd. Ok, so how?
Well, energy in the theater is a pretty tangible thing. The whole company can feel it change. And after a 100 or so performances, I kind of have a sense memory of the energy flow of my character. Where my energy needs to be for each scene and how to give more or give less depending on the energy exchange with the audience.
How do I maintain my energy to be consistently "energetic" show to show? Sleep, eat right, work out right, physical therapy, massage, alexander technique...those are some ongoing practices. Also during the show I drink vitamin water with lots of Vitamin B, and coconut water with lots of potassium. There's always Emergen-C (in an emergency), and snacks. So that provides my body with the energy it needs to act.
Add to that my character's energy source...I often refer back to the novel before going on stage to, I find inspiration in every day events, and there's the constant inspiration I feel every time I watch/read the news about our men and women fighting, dying, and getting injured in Iraq. (Anyone catch ABC's Bob Woodruff Special? Dept. of Defense lying about numbers of wounded/treated soldiers and issuing gag orders on anyone wanting to tell the truth?!!!)
It's a challenge that all companies work on constantly. Tonight for example, with a smaller Tuesday night crowd and slower tempos, the energy backstage was dragging. So we rallied as a company, talked about it, and rose to the challenge. We inspire each other. Ah the rush of LIVE theater!

5 Comments:
It must be difficult to keep up energy! I find it hard just for a weekend or too, so i guess if I ever decide to pursue it I have my work cut out for me! That's what I find so incredible about actors, most people don't understand that it's a tough job! But the energy was infectious the night i saw it, i think it was the 23rd of this month, friday night. I ended up crying as usual so that's a good sign.
It was good to see you again!
Hope to catch you soon
That's what I love about live theatre... the energy. I'm a bit nervous because I'm seeing the show on a sunday matinee (the 9th) but hopefully the cast energy will be vitalized by the arrival of Lea Salonga. Try to think of all the fans who are seeing Les Mis for the first time. Think of your fangirls (and you have many :) )Hopefully the fact that pretty much every teenage girl who likes theatre is in love with you should give you energy. For now... 9 days more!
love the blog
I'd love to hear more about working with Lea Salonga and if that changed the cast dynamic/energy any.
As an audience member (believe me, I should create another blog named "An audience member's blog") I totally understand what you're saying. I have seen Les Miz 4 times, twice here in NY and twice in Mexico City (where I'm from). I always get into the show (literally) and enjoy every bit of it (even if I don't like it)... Thank you for sharing your theatre experience with us: the audience.
hello there.
Just a small note, I saw Les Miserables back in November for my sixteenth birthday. My high school had done a performance of it the spring before, and my mum only saw fir that she take me to see it. After being a part of a show as epic as Les Mis, seeing it was just as fantastic. The words my mother said to me after I will never forget. "Your performance was just about dead on to this performance." Coming from my mother, who mind you is not a stage mother, was magnificent. When I saw it those couple of months ago, the energy was so thick i would have been able to cut it with a knife. I enjoyed every minute of it.
I, myself, find it difficult to keep energy up during shows sometimes. Just a few weekends back, my company (in the high school), couldn't seem to keep our energy. Are there any things that can be done to keep moral and energy from going to the wayside?
It was brilliant to hear about your experiences and what it is like to be a part of this beyond epic opera.
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