Tuesday, December 04, 2007

What's So Wrong with Pure Entertainment?

By Martha Reed

My niece and I went to see This Wonderful Life playing at the Pittsburgh Public Theatre. It’s a one-act, one-actor retelling of the Frank Capra Christmas classic, It’s a Wonderful Life, and the story is retold on a bare stage, with minimal props. And yet, Mark Setlock, the actor who plays George Bailey, had some audience members in tears, and I was one of them.

The reason I mention this is because one local reviewer said the performance ‘tells us nothing new”, and this comment made me wonder: what’s so wrong with plain old entertainment? With all the crap on television, all those wasted hours watching pointless reality shows that have no basis in reality, what’s so wrong with spending an hour or two watching a storyteller get on with the job?

Lately, I’ve given a lot of thought to the storytellers who lived among us before we humans learned to write the story down. There’s a continuity there, a commonality among us all.

Take the Bible, for instance. It’s full of stories, and it’s strange to think that the entire Judeo-Christian culture arose from some transitional Sumerian storyteller telling the tale of Abraham and Sarah to a bunch of nomads sitting around a campfire, but that’s probably just the way it happened. You can even still hear his/her voice in their spoken ancestral names: Abra-HAM, Sar-AH. I use the same breathy emphasis in my verbal storytelling to this day.

Geneticists are telling us that modern humans have only been able to speak for 100,000 years – our vocal cord mutation is that recent in our history. So, again I wonder, what did humans use for communication before we developed our voice? I think we used dance, and that’s why dancing remains so vital to the overall human culture. Look at every ethnic division and there’s a variety of dance, and if you look really deeply, you’ll see each group’s innermost culture expressed and exposed through their dance. A hunting tribe mimics the hunt; a coastal tribe mimics movement across the water. It’s still storytelling; the transmission of knowledge, spoken or not.

I wonder what our American kids are learning today as they dance to techno-pop, a computer generated series of squeaks and repetitive beats? MacWorld knowledge? PC? The beat goes on.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

When "rap" dancing first came out, I was in a supermarket and saw a teenage boy practicing his moves. As a folk dancer, I was so excited there was a dance form that got young men (tomorrow's partners) dancing!

Annette said...

My first response is considering the styles of clothes the boys are wearing, they're probably learning how to hold their pants up.

Anonymous said...

Speaking, writing, dancing, song -- we humans have a lot of ways to convey our thoughts and history. And up until the last few decades, I suspect that repeating the familiar stories trumped coming up with something new.

Thanks, Martha, for this thought-provoking blog.

Annette said...

Gina, kids seem to be inherently aware of this. Anyone out there with youngsters can tell you how many times their kids have watched the Little Mermaid or Toy Story or Shrek. Or more than likely, they've lost count.

Personally, I can recite great expanses of dialogue from Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

Isn't that why we buy DVDs? So we can watch our favorites over and over?

And that's why I have shelves of books I've already read...so I can go back and enjoy them again whenever I want.

Martha Reed said...

I also think of those Indian sagas that go on for nine or ten hours - sort of like our Star Wars trilogy, if you think about it. I wonder if "saga" is inherent, too?

Joyce Tremel said...

Annette, I can still recite some of the books I used to read to my kids--they are burned into my memory. Now if I could only do that with where I put things...

Annette said...

I do not like green eggs and ham. I do not like them, Sam I am.

Joyce Tremel said...

I do not like them in a house, I do not like them with a mouse. I do not like them Sam I am, I do not like green eggs and ham!

Anonymous said...

Hey Joyce...do you remember "Stop That Ball"? I think you must have read that to our nephew, David, about 200 times....minimum.
Amy

Joyce Tremel said...

I hit the ball. I made it fly. I hit the ball as it went by. It went around and then came back. I gave the ball another whack. How's that, Amy?