Tuesday, July 23, 2013

HOW TO BUILD AN ARTS DISTRICT (REPRISE)

Oops! This reprint was posted accidentally when I was perusing my archive and hit a wrong button. Google won't let me reposition it til a day has passed, so I'll have to leave it here temporarily. Hmmm...I kinda like this post. On second thought maybe I'll leave it up.




My favorite theaters are small. It's better to have several small theaters in an arts district, even ones as small as the one in the Cruikshank picture above, than to have a single giant one with elaborate parking facilities. Big theaters just don't belong in the intimate walking streets of an arts district.



Influenced by Charles Dickens' theatrical writings, I've come to like small semi-professional theaters where the matinee prices are cheap enough to attract people who wouldn't ordinarily go to live theater. The plays performed should include the classics, but also melodramas with lots of gun fights and fireworks. Maybe some vaudeville and magic shows, too.



Of course you have to entice people into the theaters, and that requires outdoor public displays. I like this idea (above) of putting performer/barkers on second floor balconies and cubicles.



Maybe the the smaller theaters should have fronts on an outdoor arcade like the one above. I like the way Hiroshige (above and below) depicted Eto's geisha district. The low and linear wooden architecture and the room lights spilling out give the street a terrific feel. I imagine the geishas stood on the platform outside the first floor and caught the eyes of passers-by, and the second floor lights must have been mysterious and intruiging. I like the way the shops are open to the street.

Maybe a Japanese arcade could be one of the arteries of the arts district. Others might be a farmer's market, or an arab-type outdoor bazaar.






Wow! Maybe we need a Japanese dinner theater, even if anglo plays are performed there.


5 comments:

  1. What prompted you to make a post so early, Eddie? I'd be very happy if this meant that you were going to write blog posts more often again instead of just Mondays and Thursdays.

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  2. Roberto: Thanks for noticing! It was a mistake. I was reading randomly in the archive when I pushed a wrong button. I'll remove it to a later date when I'm able.

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  3. All the theaters I've been to (two) were average sized. Not too big, and not too small (though the one here where I am is small). I dread imagining going into a big one (especially one that's AGES old) because I'll probably get lost in it while searching for the bathroom or something, or it's haunted and something will grab me and throw me into a pitch black room, haha.

    A Japanese Dining theater actually would be a really good idea; Eating while your being entertained. Who doesn't love that? Prices would be sky high though..

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  4. Sara: Interesting comments. A reasonably-priced neighborhood dinner theater near me used to put on plays by people like Agatha Christie and Gilbert and Sullivan. The woman who ran it was a genius. I wonder how she managed to keep the prices down?

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  5. I wonder that too! Because people where I am tend to have prices kinda high for things. Maybe I should move down there one day. I'd like to actually get some entertainment without having to pay so much money that's completely ridiculous.

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