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re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical
Posted by: ashleylm 01:43 pm EDT 07/07/17
In reply to: re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical - Michael_Portantiere 12:36 pm EDT 07/07/17

I personally can't relate to your perspective that the content is not the stuff of drama

I was a plane person--not in Gander, but in Minneapolis--and I can guarantee that while my experience was not nearly as dramatic as losing friends and loved ones in 911, the experience was much more than a passing inconvenience. It was the worst week of my life.

I had just left New York, that wonderful place, and this senseless horror was happening, and I couldn't get home, and I couldn't get home, and I couldn't get home ... and it felt like World War Three was about to start ... the borders were closed, the trains were stopped, the flights weren't running, there were no rental cars to be had for love or money (I thought about buying a car just so I could start driving back to Canada!) ... I'm still not over it, and came close to not seeing Come From Away because I was afraid I couldn't handle it--but for the most part, I could.

For this, this is definitely the stuff of drama.
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re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical
Posted by: oddone 06:14 pm EDT 07/07/17
In reply to: re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical - ashleylm 01:43 pm EDT 07/07/17

I was also stranded on 9/11 - in Juneau, Alaska. So no option other than planes for getting back to NYC. (Juneau is only accessible via boat or plane). I wouldn't say it was the worst week of my life, but it wasn't fun. It felt like being on the moon, watching everything and everyone you care about go through something, and you're isolated all by yourself. And watching all the tourists come through on their cruise ships, and watching the people in town only vaguely pay attention to news about NYC and DC - it was pretty surreal.

I HATED Come From Away. It certainly didn't capture what my experience felt like, although then again, there weren't 7000 of us there. But that isn't the biggest reason for why i didn't like the show.

I do agree that it lacked drama - it presented the whole experience as a minor inconvenience, and it isn't like there is any question about whether or not they would get to go home. So the dramatic stakes are pretty low. No tension, etc. There was next to no character development. And lots of other problems. Don't get me started on the racist joke with the "Spanish-speaking" gym teacher.

But the biggest reason I don't like this show is because it's all ersatz sentimentalism. It's easy feeling that claims to "teach" valuable lessons about living with difference or something, when it fact it does nothing of the sort.
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re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical
Posted by: Michael_Portantiere 03:00 pm EDT 07/07/17
In reply to: re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical - ashleylm 01:43 pm EDT 07/07/17

Thanks for your post, ashleylm. Over the years, I have spoken with several New Yorkers who became stranded in cities outside of the city during the tragedy, and I've always found there stories and experiences as compelling in their own way as the stories of those who were here (myself included) and/or directly affected. Tragedies affect people in different ways, due to any number of variables.

I could be wrong, but I think the issue in this discussion is not that some people find no drama in the situation of the plane people PER SE (though it may have seemed like that's what they were stating), but rather that they don't feel the situation is well dramatized in COME FROM AWAY.
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re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical
Posted by: Delvino 09:12 pm EDT 07/07/17
In reply to: re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical - Michael_Portantiere 03:00 pm EDT 07/07/17

"I could be wrong, but I think the issue in this discussion is not that some people find no drama in the situation of the plane people PER SE (though it may have seemed like that's what they were stating), but rather that they don't feel the situation is well dramatized in COME FROM AWAY."

This was my contribution: choice of characters, and character's issues mined, and the execution of the resulting stakes excavated.

For what it's worth, I've found this entire discussion to be a very thoughtful and well argued one. I've learned a lot about both this show, and the universal experience that's greater than what happened in Gander. Which "Come From Away" seeks to illuminate. And, once again, been required to examine how musicals work, and why some work for some audience members and not others.
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re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical
Posted by: showtunetrivia 09:14 pm EDT 07/07/17
In reply to: re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical - Delvino 09:12 pm EDT 07/07/17

Well said!

Laura
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re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical
Posted by: Ann 03:06 pm EDT 07/07/17
In reply to: re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical - Michael_Portantiere 03:00 pm EDT 07/07/17

Right - I got a lot more from ashleylm's description than from most of the characters as portrayed in the show.
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re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical
Posted by: Michael_Portantiere 05:00 pm EDT 07/07/17
In reply to: re: Come From Away: The Mountain out of a molehill Musical - Ann 03:06 pm EDT 07/07/17

"Right - I got a lot more from ashleylm's description than from most of the characters as portrayed in the show."

Gotcha. I think the creators of COME FROM AWAY purposely avoided anything that might be viewed as emotionally manipulative or too heavy or tear jerking, but they may have gone too far in that direction for some people's tastes, including yours.
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