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Theatre

Theatre review: The Encounter

This production shows how to stream theatre, says John Nathan

May 14, 2020 14:02
TheEncounter_Complicite_prod_RJ_08 Robbie Jack copy.jpeg

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

2 min read

Last week, I called for theatre practitioners to consider how they might make online live streaming — theatre’s “sticking plaster” as the Old Vic’s Matthew Warchus calls it — less of misnomer. Because a so-called live stream is usually no more live than the light streaming through the lens of a cinema projector.

Of course, nothing can or will replace an audience being in the same room as a performance. Yet that sense of both sharing the same moment — if not the same space — might still be possible to preserve even as theatres face an existential threat.

Which brings us to another appeal, this time not to theatre-makers but to theatre watchers (formerly goers). There are a lot of productions online, much of them being provided free to a population in lockdown. Many thousands are watching. Fewer than that total are donating. But now there is a very real danger that we will lose theatres, especially those such as The Old Vic or The Menier Chocolate Factory which receive no subsidy. These playhouses will die if we don’t click on their website’s “donate” button whether they are streaming content or not. As Warchus says this week, theatre is in a “seriously perilous” situation. Theatregoers can and must save them.

In the meantime, the not-so-live stream of Complicité’s The Encounter, first seen in 2016, conveys a sense of the here-and-now in unexpected ways.

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