Theatrical Conventions
Magical
Suspenseful
The Unexpected
The Revelation
Magical
Magical
means to make the engineering product appear without showing the
mechanism that makes it work. The magical convention usually stimulates
a sense of wonder in the patron, and helps create an otherworldliness
kind of experience for the audience. As with all theatrical conventions,
the Magical theatrical convention happens during performance.
Much
of the machinery during the Italian Renaissance period, especially
machinery to change scenery, was developed to allow the magical
convention. The style of the day was to create illusion. Combining
the illusion created by perspective and the illusion created by
the magical convention run by unseen machinery helped create a
theatrical world, an otherworldliness, for the patron. Combined
with audience expectations, the illusion created a world in the
theatre of what ought to be. The illusion was a reality to the
patron, and the magical convention helped make it real according
to the verisimilitude of the time by stimulating a sense of mystery
or wonder. Mystery was a factor in separating the everyday world
of what is with the theatrical world portraying what ought to
be.
Theatrical
artists/engineers who developed machinery during the late nineteenth
century had a different goal relating to the ideology of the day.
Their goal was to create the illusion of a reality of perception
primarily through the five senses. By concealing the mechanism
that made something work, the audience saw the theatrical world
paralleling the everyday world. The verisimilitude in the theatre
depended on a matching of what they saw and heard onstage either
with what they actually saw and heard outside the theatre or,
if their life experiences were narrow, with what they believed
to exist in real life outside the theatre. Belasco was especially
concerned with crafting that kind of illusion.
Modern
productions in proscenium type of theatres often, but not always,
use the magical convention. The opening number of the 1980s run
of Pippin in New York City showed what seemed to be a lonely
handkerchief on the stage floor. The actor reached down and pulled
on it and, magically, the entire set entered the stage. It set
a vital mood of wonder, mystery, theatricality, and magic for
the remaining performance. Sound and lighting are also major utilities
for the magical convention in many modern theatre productions.
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