> Anyone else here ever have this problem? And are there any words of wisdom
> from my fellow (more sane) designers to inspire me to get through the next
> week till the show opens?
Yes, I have, but it taught me to be proactive in the future and explain to the
director exactly what happens when they behave like this - right at the very
first opportunity you have to talk with them!
Live and learn.... ;-)
Charlie
| - Charlie Richmond - Richmond Sound Design - Skype: charlierichmond - |
| - http://www.RichmondSoundDesign.com "Performance for the Long Run" - |
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Indeed, I have been in this very situation. I was working on a show where the Director fired the Lighting Designer the night of first dress (mind you, this was a COLLEGE show), yelled at me (and I mean berated me for 20 minutes about how I was unprofessional and useless in front of the entire cast/crew) for missing a rehearsal because I was in the HOSPITAL (and had lost 20 lbs in two days… mind you, I’m only 115 to begin with), and forced every one of the designers to redesign every single thing they had done to her exact specifications. This was the first day of tech… down to the last stitch.
We, as students/designers/cast/crew, met and decided that a grade was not worth the ultimate belittlement and harassment that we had endured. After the LD got fired, we were going to strike, and walk out on the production, but decided on a different course of action. We, as a group, went to the ‘Producers’, in this case the Deans of the Design & Production and Drama Schools, voiced our opinions, and told them that we would uphold the reputation of the school and put the show on, but only if this particular director was never hired again. It wasn’t an ultimatum, but a director like that shouldn’t be allowed to direct, much less teach. So my suggestion to you would be for you to go to the producers and at least voice your concerns. You were hired as an artist, not a monkey. They should know that one of the people they hired to work with the rest of the artistic staff is not doing anything of the sort.
Her name isn’t by any chance Kaia is it? ;)
Rebecca Sullins - CTS
Senior Design Engineer
Sound Image
Nashville, TN
Tel: 615.256.0528 x30
Fax: 615.256.9945
Cell: 615.516.8123
> We, as students/designers/cast/crew, met and decided that a grade was
> not worth the ultimate belittlement and harassment that we had endured.
> After the LD got fired, we were going to strike, and walk out on the
> production, but decided on a different course of action. We, as a group,
> went to the ‘Producers’, in this case the Deans of the Design &
> Production and Drama Schools, voiced our opinions, and told them that we
> would uphold the reputation of the school and put the show on, but only
> if this particular director was never hired again. It wasn’t an
> ultimatum, but a director like that shouldn’t be allowed to direct, much
> less teach.
I'm torn by this "mutiny". The Director is the ultimate
artistic authority on any show. Our job is best to support
that artistic vision. That's it! Doesn't matter if the
Director is Godzilla or Mary Poppins.
Yes, there is a "Professional" way to enable that vision and
your Director's way. But if s/he felt that you were not
supporting that vision, then the blame lies with everybody else.
Sorry about your hospital stay, but my old Profs said that
only death should keep one from rehearsals.
Chip
I'm torn by this "mutiny". The Director is the ultimate
artistic authority on any show. Our job is best to support
that artistic vision. That's it! Doesn't matter if the
Director is Godzilla or Mary Poppins.
Chip
(snip)
I certainly bow to your much more extensive professional
experience. $$$$Producers are rare in my experience of ed,
pro, and am productions.
However, even tho Director's are fired, don't the new ones
have artistic control?
Chip
I've recently left the community theatre world because after getting a
taste of the small-equity-theatre world and the organization that
surrounds having a fixed structure and being forced to be efficient
since suddenly actors are being paid and there's an eye out for
overtime, the wild-west nature of the CT environment wore me out.
There's something to be said in knowing at you've got a 10-out-of-12 to
get everything done in, as opposed to the fluid "The cast (and by
extension crew) was here until 2:30 this morning re-blocking the last
number..."
When at the CT level I would suggest things that worked really rather
well at the Equity SPT level -- things like pre-production meetings,
post mortems where the designers and crew heads stay after tech
run-thrus to run down punchlists, etc. -- I'd be met with eye rolling,
"we don't have the time", "none of us are getting paid", etc.
So, my advice and words of wisdom are "It'll be over on Friday and make
the best of it. After opening, it's drinks at the bar and 'I never have
to see these people again.' (Until I do.)"
Good luck and there's light at the end of the tunnel!
> I've recently left the community theatre world because after getting a
And I left the professional sound design world when Lily Tomlin's company
basically insisted that the sound design crew perform the impossible: leave the
notes session at 1AM with 5 pages of changes which had to be accomplished by
9AM. Of course these days technology makes this easier to do but still not
necessarily reasonable.
What I have recently found out though is that directors now think the technology
is like [most] lighting requests and every change can be done instantly!
Sheesh....
C-)
I will wish you a good outcome for the show.
-- JLB
However, even tho Director's are fired, don't the new ones
have artistic control?
Chip
> -----Original Message-----
> From: theatre-s...@googlegroups.com
> [mailto:theatre-s...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Chip Wood
> Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2008 4:55 PM
> To: theatre-s...@googlegroups.com
> Subject: [theatre-sound-list] Re: Working with Impossible Directors
>
> I'm torn by this "mutiny". The Director is the ultimate
> artistic authority on any show. Our job is best to support
> that artistic vision. That's it! Doesn't matter if the
> Director is Godzilla or Mary Poppins.
>
> Yes, there is a "Professional" way to enable that vision and
> your Director's way. But if s/he felt that you were not
> supporting that vision, then the blame lies with everybody else.
>
> Sorry about your hospital stay, but my old Profs said that
> only death should keep one from rehearsals.
>
I too would have to say I disagree. This was in a academic environment
first and foremost. While I'm all in favor of giving real world
experiences to students and feel that many programs (I'm not speaking of
any program in particular just a sweeping generalization...) have a
tendency to coddle their students, treating them with kid gloves
sometimes.... and not giving them realistic assessments of the student's
progress. I also think lots of academic institutions have way more toys
to play with than you'll find in the "real world" more often than not.
They also don't stress the financial issues you'll deal with, often have
way too many crew positions than you'll see professionally and my pet
peeve... they don't follow equity/union break rules. :-) Blah,
blah, blah....
You get the idea...
However I don't think that means that they should be subjected to
condescending tirades as Becca described. Lets remember that ultimately
the students are the producer in an academic environment. They are
paying so they can learn from professionals. (or supposed
professionals) While I'm certain they will run into experiences like
that out in the "real world", that is NOT how you teach a student and
help them progress in their field of expertise. All that kind of
behavior is going to do is make students want to run away from a career
in the arts all together, or at least it would make me strongly consider
transferring to another academic institution. I wouldn't be where I'm
at today with out the supportive yet fairly realistic guidance I got
from my college teachers. I'm not saying mine were perfect, but I
certainly was never treated as Becca describes until I was in the
professional world. :-)
In my personal worst experience; in the professional world, but the time
the show opened the director would not even acknowledge my existence as
I walked down the hall. I would say hello, and he walked past me as if
I didn't even exist. Not sure if the silent treatment is better or
worse than a yelling tirade but to me it was just as bad I'll tell you.
That treatment was the straw that broke the camels back for me. I was
already not very happy about my position at The Cleveland Play House at
the time, but after that treatment it made me go turn my resignation in
as soon as the show closed. (well OK it was a bit after that, but not
long)
Which brings me to another point... You can only treat employees like
this for so long (or students) before no one will work for you any
longer (or you have no students any longer). So as a producer or a
college dean it's wise to nip this kind of thing in the bud. Or at
least a smart administrator will do so.
In my case I was put on "probation" after this production, and that is
when I said "F this... I'm out.. bye"... :-)
(granted I won't say I was guilt free in all the issue this production
had... but I know now {being older and wiser} that a wise administrator
would have simply let me know that they knew I could do better and that
they appreciated all the many years of good work that came before that
show.... since only the Production Manger saw it that way I bailed...
Oh.. and to confirm my point I was the 1st of MANY key positions that
left by the end of that season. :-) (including PM, TD, both SMs, and
many others...) LOL..
Anyway... just my $5 worth here..
Richard B. Ingraham
RBI Computers and Audio
http://www.rbicompaudio.20m.com/
> -----Original Message-----
> From: theatre-s...@googlegroups.com
> [mailto:theatre-s...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Phil Kreisel
> Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2008 12:37 PM
> To: theatre-s...@googlegroups.com
> Subject: [theatre-sound-list] Working with Impossible Directors
>
> Anyone else here ever have this problem? And are there any
> words of wisdom from my fellow (more sane) designers to
> inspire me to get through the next week till the show opens?
>
See other post on the subject....
But I would add that you should finish the show and get it up and
running. Unless you really never want to work there again and don't
think you'll ever care about burning that bridge I would just grin and
bear it until it's all over.
Then just never work with that person again.
In those kind of situations I just kind of go into Sound Engineer mode.
I know this may not be the best way to go about it, but if I'm put into
a situation where I'm not allowed to "design" the show or I really thing
it's completely "wrong", then I just I give the director exactly what
they ask for to the best of my ability, nothing more and nothing less.
If they don't ask for it, then they won't get it.
Although I do agree with the other feedback about being more proactive
in getting a meeting. However I know how some of these organizations
work all too well. I've done shows where my phone calls are not
answered until it's almost tech week and no meetings are called and I'm
lucky if I know when a run thru is occurring.
If this person is not the artistic director of the organization and you
have a good relationship with the person who is, then maybe you should
also talk to them. (or whatever this organization calls their "person
in charge") I have very good relationships with the artistic directors
of all the organizations I work with on a regular basis, and now that I
know what that is like (being 180 degrees opposite of my Cleveland Play
House experience) I can not tell you how much I value that. It doesn't
mean we always agree 100% of the time, or that we don't both do things
that drive the other one crazy (I'll admit I'm just as guilty as they
are...), but it means that we respect each others work and opinions and
talk about things. I would now have no problem going to most artistic
directors I work for on a regular basis and saying... "if you hire this
boob back to direct another piece, it will be without me!" LOL
And in the couple of cases where I wanted to say that... the artistic
director beat me to the punch.. and let me know that "they" wouldn't be
back and thanked me for dealing with the BS. :-)
Even if this person is the artistic director and you otherwise enjoy
working there, then maybe after it's open you ask for a meeting where
you can calmly discuss how you like to work, and why this experience was
not to your liking, etc...
I agree with most of the posts regarding my little story. I have to say though that I didn’t believe it would start such controversy among the proverbial peanut gallery that we are.
Yes, I do believe that staging a ‘mutiny’ as it was so delicately put, is not the proper course of action 99.9% of the time. However, in this case, I truly believe it was. This woman was not on staff, she was a guest artist. We were mostly trying to make sure that the school did not continue to bring her on staff and subject more students to her crap. There were many witnesses, both adult and student. We went to the Deans and explained exactly what happened calmly and rationally, but absolutely stated that this woman was not an acceptable artist to try and teach. And yes, we wanted to learn, not be berated endlessly by a woman that had a VERY twisted ‘artistic view.’ I definitely switched into Engineer mode as well. I gave her exactly what she told me to, nothing more. Luckily, after my professor got wind of everything that had happened, he forgave me for my engineering mode.
My answer is still… go to the producers. They are ultimately your boss. They are the money, just like Jim says… and in Theatre, you can always follow the money.
Rebecca Sullins - CTS
Senior Design Engineer
Sound Image
Nashville, TN
Tel: 615.256.0528 x30
Fax: 615.256.9945
Cell: 615.516.8123
From:
theatre-s...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:theatre-s...@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Hops...@aol.com
Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008
8:43 AM
To:
theatre-s...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [theatre-sound-list] Re:
Working with Impossible Directors
In the academic environment it is the department's job to control abusive directors. In this case, the students need to bring any abuse to the notice of the Chair immediately, and get as many witnesses to back up the complaint -- one student complaining might be a disgruntled student, but when several come in with the same complaint, there will be action. Document everything, and be specific. What did they say? What did they do? When was this? Who heard/saw this? Going in alone to the Chair and saying "He's a dick, fire him" won't work, but if you can say "this is exactly what they said, and here are five people that can back it up" will work. They may not fire anyone, but a warning to the director may happen, or a faculty "observer" might be assigned to the show which almost always reins in any abuse. If it doesn't, there will be a reliable witness to help you press your case.
On Thu, 2 Oct 2008, Jeff Knapp wrote: > I've recently left the community theatre world because after getting a And I left the professional sound design world when Lily Tomlin's company basically insisted that the sound design crew perform the impossible: leave the notes session at 1AM with 5 pages of changes which had to be accomplished by 9AM. Of course these days technology makes this easier to do but still not necessarily reasonable. What I have recently found out though is that directors now think the technology is like [most] lighting requests and every change can be done instantly! Sheesh.... C-)
On Thu, 2 Oct 2008, Jeff Knapp wrote: > I've recently left the community theatre world because after getting a And I left the professional sound design world when Lily Tomlin's company basically insisted that the sound design crew perform the impossible: leave the notes session at 1AM with 5 pages of changes which had to be accomplished by 9AM. Of course these days technology makes this easier to do but still not necessarily reasonable. What I have recently found out though is that directors now think the technology is like [most] lighting requests and every change can be done instantly! Sheesh.... C-)
I'll admit there are some times I really miss "I'll get back
to you in a couple of days" and "It's in the mail." I don't
think that Man (gender neutral) has evolved fast enough in
the last 20 years to handle the instantaneous info flow.
But then I look at my grandkids and their Gameboys and
"texting" and think maybe I'm just getting old.
Chip
> -----Original Message-----
> From: theatre-s...@googlegroups.com
> [mailto:theatre-s...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of JvB
> Sent: Saturday, October 04, 2008 1:08 PM
> To: theatre-s...@googlegroups.com
> Cc: theatre-s...@googlegroups.com
> Subject: [theatre-sound-list] Re: Working with Impossible Directors
>
>
> Pleas, no one in the theatre department could be called a
> "Purple Ace" at U of Evansville.
>
No they all run around with UET shirts, sweats, etc......
But they are purple...
and Brad is a USI (Southern Indiana) guy anyway.
Lastly... while I enjoy working at Evansville very much, no thanks
Brad... I'll stick to Ohio. Too republican for me... :-)
> Yeah, I was gonna say that this person sounds like a number of people
> that I've worked with. Maybe we should make a database of crazy
> directors to refer to. This sounds like a job for Charlie Richmond.
As if I don't have enough to do and now you want to saddle me with a project
that would make me have to defend dozens of slander charges all by myself.
Sheesh, thanks a bunch..... I'm still waiting to hear from Lily Tomlin's lawyer
;-)
> So take it for what it's worth.
Good advice and worth plenty! Maybe I should put together a page with all the
advice given so far! Hmmmm... wait a minute... It thinks we've done that
already in the archives here ;-)
C-)
I have found this discussion very interesting. Those who have contributed
procedures for dealing with producers, artistic directors, musical
directors, and directors have been most helpful. Yes, the horror stories
have also contributed by telling us what can happen with out prooper
preperatiion, as well as telling us we are not alone out there.
However, the real education needs to be not be directed just to the sound
designer, but to the director. After observing a lack of communication and
knowledge in the area of what a sound designer should be responsible for, I
am currently attempting to gently educate an artistic director of a
Shakespeare Festival (mixed equity and academia) as to what his director
and sound designer should do in terms of communication and duties to assure
an excellent show. Dealing with all those PhD's has not been easy, but
maybe some progress is being made.
Thanks again to everyone,
page daniel
> -----Original Message-----
> From: theatre-s...@googlegroups.com
> [mailto:theatre-s...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Steve Mayo
> Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 11:28 AM
> To: theatre-s...@googlegroups.com
> Subject: [theatre-sound-list] Re: Working with Impossible Directors
>
>
> I make a point (very slowly, with big hand gestures and
> diagrams if possible) that programming sound on a computer is
> the way forward for the consistancy of a show and helps
> maintain acurate performances on a daily basis and then
> stress very very clearly how we will never be able to program
> as quickly as lighting (well, quantum computing might help
> our grandkids!) and that the clearer the original idea of how
Huh?
I'm not sure why you would say that. I regularly work FASTER than the
lighting designer now days. Or I should say faster than many lighting
designers. I certainly rarely feel that I'm holding up the show (so to
speak) unnecessarily. No more so than anyone else does during the tech
rehearsal process at the very least.
There is no more rewinding tapes to play something over again. There is
rarely long conversations with a board op about what you want them to
try this time through. No waiting for the board op to write a small
diary about each sound cue. What's not faster than that "old days"?
:-)
I think people that feel sound is holding up the tech process are either
younger and they never worked in theatre when things were mostly on open
reel decks. Or they just have a bad memory. :-)
Not only is it a lot more repeatable with modern technology. It's a lot
faster than it used to be. It also allows much more complexity than we
could achieve without it. It allows a board op to pay a lot more
attention to the show as well. Spending less time worrying about cueing
up decks or setting levels and more time listening, and if you trust
them, allowing them to make minor adjustments to compensate for
variations in performances, house size, etc... And the big seller for
the producer..... you'll need less crew to achieve the same results.
I can not even image how many people it would take pushing faders and
running open reel decks, without computers or automation, to implement
many of my recent sound designs without them being simplified in some
fashion. It would be interesting to find out, if I ever had the time,
money and will power. But I doubt it will ever happen.
If that's not a good enough list of reasons to convince director types
that computers do actually make the sound of the show a lot better...
well... then I would say..... actually I won't say anything as it
would just offend the director types in question.. :-)
> Huh?
>
> I'm not sure why you would say that. I regularly work FASTER than the
> lighting designer now days.
Agreed. Right from the beginning of our contribution to computer controlled
sound (1985) we started getting reports from Tony Tait of the Old Globe that he
was now faster than lighting and it has stayed that way ever since. These days,
some directors actually expect the composer to set up shop next to the sound
designer in the house and compose the music and tech the show simultaneously,
starting first day of tech and finishing two days later, maximum! Too fast for
my feeble old brain but some designers manage it...
Charlie
Now I'm just weighing if it will be worth it for me. Ideally I'd like to provide a nice package, sans speakers and amps, probably with some kind of computer control and playback system built in that tied into the mixer as well, all in a nice road case that'll fit in my car. But I think for what I'm looking at is around $20k right now, which is the sticking point ;)
> Oregon Trail;)
They have that on facebook now....
C-)