In Jacksonville, Fla., even as the mayor imposed an indoor mask order, the Alhambra dinner theater is continuing to stage “Cinderella.” The theater is selling only 50 percent of its seats it has installed plexiglass between its seating tiers patrons must wear masks after they eat performers wear gloves and face away from each other during any partnered dancing and, at the end, Cinderella and the Prince share an elbow bump instead of a kiss. And in Salt Lake City, where the Grand Theater was planning a run of “To Kill a Mockingbird” in which all the performers were masked, the theater scuttled the production just four nights before it was to begin, citing rising local caseloads.īut many are persisting. In Houston, Theater Suburbia canceled “ Daddy’s Dyin’ Who’s Got the Will?” citing a local stay-at-home advisory. In Fort Myers, Fla., the Broadway Palm Dinner Theater postponed “The Sound of Music” as the number of confirmed cases surged in that state. The pandemic remains a concern for any of the planned productions. “If we can prove that we can do this safely, maybe other groups can do safe theater as well,” said Susan Charlotte, the founding artistic director. Food for Thought Productions, a company that presents staged readings of one-act plays, is planning to restart in a private club on July 13, with Louise Lasser and Bob Dishy performing and attendees required to have taken coronavirus tests. “Someone has to be the first to take that cautious step into the dark to see what works and what doesn’t,” said Phil Kenny, a sometime Broadway producer who has a role in “ Willy Wonka” in Orem, Utah.īut even in New York City there are signs of theatrical life. “I am hopeful and also very cautious,” Fonseca said, “careful that I don’t create a problem.”īy putting on shows, some theater artists are, in effect, making the case that it is a mistake for the industry to wait for New York to lead the way, given the risks there. The company plans to stage “Hype Man,” a three-character play by Idris Goodwin, outdoors, for 65 mask-wearing patrons. “We’d rather go down creating good theater than die the slow death behind our desks,” said Bryan Fonseca, the producing director of Fonseca Theater Company in Indianapolis. There are also financial reasons for continuing: Some theaters say they cannot survive a year without revenue. “Even with 22 people in the audience with masks on, that energy is so strong.” “Our theater got its name from the invisible energy that flows between performers and the audience,” Claassen said. The theater, which has been running a four-character play called “Filming O’Keefe” indoors, installed an air ionizer, allowed patrons in only one-quarter of its seats, mandated that they wear masks, and put on a show. ![]() “Our commitment is to do live theater - there’s a huge difference between that and seeing something on a computer screen,” said Susan Claassen, managing artistic director of Invisible Theater in Tucson, Ariz., a state that has emerged as a Covid-19 hot spot. At the Footlights Theater, in Falmouth, Maine, actors will perform behind plexiglass.īut these precautions mean there is dinner theater in Florida. ![]() But even as infections surge in the United States, many theaters are finding ways to present live performances before live audiences. The coronavirus pandemic has shuttered Broadway through the end of the year (at least), and the nation’s big regional theaters and major outdoor festivals have mostly pivoted to streaming. On a 600-acre property in Arkansas, a cast of about 130 re-enacts the story of Jesus for several hundred ticket-holders spread across a 4,000-seat outdoor amphitheater. In a Denver parking lot, theatergoers in cars watch, through their windshields, four performers costumed as grasshoppers. Inside a former firehouse in Richmond, Va., a lone actor performs “ The Picture of Dorian Gray” for audiences as small as two. Photo: Members of Denver’s Buntport Theater, thinking drive-in theater would be pandemic-proof, tried to imagine what kind of creatures belong on a lawn. Their solution: “The Grasshoppers.” Credit…Rachel Woolf for The New York Times
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