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re: Unusual Occurrence at Iceman on Tuesday
Posted by: Michael_Portantiere 05:13 pm EDT 03/30/18
In reply to: Unusual Occurrence at Iceman on Tuesday - TKTSVET 01:21 pm EDT 03/30/18

Completely aside from anyone's opinion on whether or not it's unprofessional for an actor to call for a line during a public performance, I'm curious as to what people's thoughts are on why anyone would think it's better to have the prompter situated in the audience (with a script and a music stand in this case) rather than in the wings, or rather than having the actor use an earpiece(and perhaps signaling for a line with a certain hand gesture, or in some other way, rather than calling "line"? Does anyone feel this is less, rather than more, intrusive in terms of taking the audience out of the play?
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re: Unusual Occurrence at Iceman on Tuesday
Posted by: stgmgr 04:33 pm EDT 04/01/18
In reply to: re: Unusual Occurrence at Iceman on Tuesday - Michael_Portantiere 05:13 pm EDT 03/30/18

In my experience, "line" is used because its intent is unmistakable. The last thing that an actor wants is to be prompted when he doesn't need it. Presumably, the prompter has his head in the book to be ready with an instant response and thus can't be watching for hand signals, significant looks, or raised eyebrows.
I don't know about this particular production, but there could be compelling reasons regarding sightlines, lighting, staging, or acoustics that would make it undesirable for the prompter to be in the wings.
In any case, I'm sure that this is a temporary expedient during early previews.
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