Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Is there such a thing as too much schmoozing?



Hey Gang!

Monday night was Company One's inaugural Member Schmoozer down at Brownstone, bringing together anyone and everyone related to all things C1. If you happened to miss it, I hate to tell you, but you truly missed out. It was a fantastic time full of faces old and new. And I was there rubbing elbows with everyone. Best of all, from my vantage point, it appeared as though everyone there had a wonderful time. Drinks were flowing as fluidly as conversation, hugs and handshakes were exchanged at a rapid rate, and the cubes of cheese and tiny burgers were stacked high for everyone's enjoyment.



During the course of the festivities, I had the great fortune to meet so many new faces, along with reconnecting with some old ones. I met a couple who have seen every C1 show since 2003. I met artists and designers from other theatres around town. I yucked it up with actors and designers who worked on THE OVERWHELMING and whom I hadn't seen since closing night. What was so great about it, though, was that so many of the people who make a true impact on the company, not just the staff, actors, and directors, but also the donors, board members, fellow artists, and best yet, actual audience members and true fans of the work C1 is doing, were all there in one place. And how great it was to have them all together. It was a collection of so many of the people who together allow the company to exist in the first place and to continue to grow and prosper. It's not just actors, directors, and the staff that keep the theatre going; it's EVERYONE, and the event was a great and a very vital reminder of that.



A director once told me, "Theatre is the act of shared imagination." A great sentiment, though one he was certainly quoting from another director, who was probably quoting someone else, and so on and so forth. Regardless, the point remains. At the time, this director was referring to the imagination being shared between a production, or the art being portrayed on a stage, and the audience, but I think the idea still applies to last night as well. Although no art was necessarily created last night, the Schmoozer showed how theatre is bigger than just a handful of people acting out a scene on a stage. It takes more than just actors, a director, and a script to put on a show. The collective imagination of Company One was on display, and it's safe to say everyone enjoyed the view.

So, is there such a thing as too much schmoozing? God, I hope not.

Over and Out,
Max

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