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Staged Radio Show

Printed From: Community Theater Green Room
Category: Producing Theater
Forum Name: Directing
Forum Discription: For questions about handling shows, actors, crew, board members, children ...or do we repeat ourselves?
URL: http://www.communitytheater.org/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=2574
Printed Date: 4/29/24 at 2:16pm
Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 8.05 - http://www.webwizforums.com


Topic: Staged Radio Show
Posted By: BeJa
Subject: Staged Radio Show
Date Posted: 8/10/07 at 3:28pm
Has anyone directed a radio show that was performed on the stage and not for airing on the radio? Was it well received by your audience or were they bored? Thanks for any info.



Replies:
Posted By: MartyW
Date Posted: 8/20/07 at 8:21pm
Not sure what you are going for, but we just had a what I think went over well in our "second stage slot"  We had been considering a reader theater for a short reheasal slot we wanted to fill and the director came up with doing an evening of old time radio shows.. They are in the public domain so no royalties.. We did a total of four episodes, one each of Dragnet, Our Miss Brooks, Sorry Wrong Number and All About Eve.. We used the previous set (Steele Magnolias) Threw a little paint on it to make it look kind of run down and institutional, came up with a folley system of hands on sound effects, set up some wooden chairs, three stand mics, put the actors in rudamentary period costumes (street clothes from the period) and then they read thier parts, just like they would have in the radio shows... it was complete with commercials, and announcer spots... Some actors did multiple episodes, others were only in one spot.  In my opinion it was a great night of entertainment.. and was quite cheap to do, with minimal rehearsal..  Just a thought


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Marty W

"Till next we trod the boards.."


Posted By: eveharrington
Date Posted: 8/21/07 at 12:38am
I was in a radio show that we performed in front of a live audience and taped for later broadcast. The people in the audience seemed to really enjoy it. They got the jokes and seemed to love watching the sound effects being made.

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"If nothing else, there's applause... like waves of love pouring over the footlights."


Posted By: swlanz
Date Posted: 8/21/07 at 4:41am
I have not - but I think this group in Moorpark, CA has one: http://www.highstreettheaterfoundation.org/ - http://www.highstreettheaterfoundation.org/


Posted By: Linda S
Date Posted: 8/21/07 at 8:29am

There is a local group that does one around Halloween for Public Radio. The broadcast sold out the last time I went. It was fasinating to watch, and very entertaining.

Linda

 



Posted By: BeyondKen
Date Posted: 11/11/07 at 2:06pm
We re-enacted live radio shows at Theatre Cedar Rapids.  I played 'Daddy' in Baby Snooks and Daddy.  We had a packed house and the show was very well-received.  (I did get some boos when I read a vintage 'Lucky Strike' commercial)   Ouch




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~(τΏτ)~


Posted By: TonyDi
Date Posted: 11/14/07 at 7:56am
Years ago, I worked for a local dinner theater and they decided to do a radio live broadcast (over 13 stations in 4 states) of Dickens' Christmas Carol.  There was an audience who paid to get in that filled the auditorium, they served only drinks (no food for this two time performance). The sound effects were MOSTLY all created like an old time radio show. We only supplemented with taped sound effects for crowds, ambient outdoor noise but everything else was done live.  No costumes, just actors doing their thing when required at three mikes. I got to say it was a BLAST to do.  GREAT FUN and the audience absolutely LOVED every second of it.  It was as close as we could get to that old-time feel and people really responded to it.  Now the fact that it WAS live, actually broadcast and listened to, was just that much more fun.  But the old time radio shows were just fun anyway and to try to recreate that for an audience is a study in nostalgia, history and style.  I think audiences might respond to that.  Your audience MIGHT be an older audience but ours was quite mixed....from seniors to kids.  I guess parents just wanted to give them a taste of what it was like and the seniors just wanted a fond memory of something they knew well.  I mean I grew up on the radio too - listening and absorbing all those great shows of the past.  TV wasn't there too early in my house...but radio ALWAYS was.  And let me say (at my age) it's fun to remember those days of listening to the radio in the dark and seeing that familiar orange glow of vacuum tubes and radios that were rich sounding and warm.  GREAT fun that everyone should get the chance to do at least one time.  I wish I could do it again.
 
Good luck.
 
TonyDi
 


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"Almost famous"



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