Performance Conventions
The Unconscious
Professional
Flair
Performance
conventions have to do with how the engineering product is handled
during design and production. Under performance conventions, the
engineering product connects to the audience three ways. One way
is how the product ties to the rest of the performance. For instance,
the engineering product might tie to the main theme or the contrasting
theme. Another consideration is answering the demands of the performance.
And, finally, the engineering product must help tell a story.
The play, Equus,
demands that an actor play the horse, Nugget. The main theme of
Equus is the combination of a triad of themes: religion,
horse, and sex. The play (mainly through Dora's dialogue) tells
of the importance of the combination of horse and rider, horse
and man, and that there was a time when people saw that combination
as godlike. Horse/man connects to religion, horse, and, (when
the play offers exposition about Alan's youth and his first encounter
with a horse and rider), sex. Tying to the main theme, then, Nugget
would be portrayed onstage by a man wearing a horse's head in
order to show that combination of horse and man. This way, the
production has the potential to express something mythic, depending
on the skill of the actor as well as the skill and understanding
in designing and building the horse's head. A skilled designing,
building, and handling of the horse's head helps tell the story
about Alan's pain and his passion as well as Dysart's fear and
pain because of the possibility of transcendence that can take
place.
Two guys in
a horse suit playing Nugget would reduce the play to buffoonery.
Also, the director or the producer for the film version decided
to relate Nugget and the rest of the horses to the contrasting
theme - the Normal - instead of the main theme triad. They used
real horses. Consequently, the film version failed to achieve
the sense of the mythic that the play demands.
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