Murder on the Dance Floor - 12
Created | Updated Mar 24, 2004
Murder On the Dance Floor? No, but there might be a few dead bodies backstage!
What a week! What a show! What a woman!1
I head backstage for a change
I'm not quite sure when this happened, but somehow, my agreement to 'keep a wee eye on things
backstage' became in reality 'stage manage this show'. The show in question was a celebration of
Irish culture, involving dancers from the local group, actors and readers from one of the am-dram
societies, and 3 championship musicians being flown in from Ireland.
The director also came over from Ireland, and proved to be one of the most fantastic people I've
ever had the privilege to work with. She was completely unfazed to discover that all the backstage
team were either well-intentioned amateurs, or over-enthusiastic teenagers. And so she set about
weaving us all into one coherent production.
Feels like the first time
I've never stage-managed a show before, usually preferring to be IN the spotlight. The director
knew this, and promised to give me a briefing. She would 'call' the show, and give me my cues via a
walkie-talkie. We had no dress rehearsal, so Friday night's show was the first time we'd done it
with everybody and everything in place. About 30 minutes before curtain up, the director gave me
a training session of...oooh...a good 10 seconds on using the walkie-talkie. And off I went to get the
dry ice machine cranked up.
Standby curtain.....go curtain!
Ah, there's nothing quite like the sense of power that comes from striding round purposefully
(well, tiptoeing round purposefully...) with a script in one hand and a walkie-talkie jammed to the
other ear. At least I knew enough theatrical lingo to be aware that 'Standby curtain!' was NOT an
instruction for me to go and stand next to it.
It was without a doubt the scariest thing I have ever done in my entire life.
Stage managing means keeping one eye on how things are looking on stage, another eye on the
performers about to go on, flicking ahead in the script to see who needs to be called in about 10
minutes time, trying to guess how long the musicians are going to play for, finding someone to operate
the follow-spot when the person who knows doesn't turn up, having one's hand tugged by a 7 year old
dancer who's got a knot in her shoelace, wearing a roll of masking tape as a bracelet, and going
'Shush!' a lot. I could tell I was getting the respect I deserved when one of the dancers asked for
my permission to fart.2
And the verdict?
So for an attention-seeking egocentric megalomaniac such as myself, there are certain
advantages to this job! Major downsides too, though. While everyone else is whooping and
celebrating post show, I'm dashing round taking down the running orders taped at each side of the
stage. And it's a thankless task - no-body's going to come up to me at the end of the night and say
'Hey! Thanks for shouting at me all night!'. And no-one in the audience is going to go 'Wow! Look at
that fabulous stage-management!' So it's a bit like the furious paddling that goes on beneath the
swan's graceful glide across the lake, unseen and un-applauded.
There were some funny moments too - one of the dancers asked me, puzzled,
'What's this yeasty bit in the second half?'
'Yeasty bit?' I said, and we consulted the programme. 'That's Yeat's, you tube!' I spluttered.
Well amazingly enough, given the high potential for the show to completely fall apart...it didn't.
And there's only one person on my 'to kill' list. The audience was entranced, the actors and dancers
were happy with their performance, and I still have blisters on my feet. I cannot credit or praise
the director highly enough - she worked an absolute miracle, and gave us all the most magical
memories to treasure for ever. And that, my friends, is Show Business.
Murder on the Dance Floor
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