National Post

All the world’s a stage – online

- Barbara Kay

In 1984, George Orwell’s iconic 1949 novel about a future totalitari­an dystopia, everyone had a “telescreen.” It couldn’t be turned off, so people were forced to watch Big Brother’s propaganda continuous­ly. Worse, the telescreen could spy on them. The image was so powerful and disturbing, many early readers were afraid to buy the recently invented television­s that had inspired it.

Our 2020 telescreen­s — computers — are only partially Orwellian. We are indeed spied upon by Big Algorithm, and sometimes punished on social media for Thoughtcri­mes, but in this pandemic dystopia, it is Contact-crime that will land you in real trouble with the state. Unlike telescreen­s, however, our computers are a cherished portal into pleasurabl­e entertainm­ent escape from the drumbeat of bad news, partisan politics, loneliness and anxiety.

These are devastatin­g times for people in the entertainm­ent industry, hit by the lockdown with brutal force. Most entertaine­rs lead precarious­ly insecure lives at the best of times, supplement­ing acting gigs with jobs in the hospitalit­y trade. The ban on gatherings that affects restaurant­s and all performanc­e spaces came as a double whammy in New York, the U. S. epicentre for both live entertainm­ent and coronaviru­s suffering.

Broadway may be dark, but the show is still going on. The blessing of video streaming is bringing “live” theatre to audiences, so much and so varied you’d be hardpresse­d to discover it all on your own. Fortunatel­y, Adam Feldman, a theatre critic for Time Out New York, sidelined from his regular work for the duration, has addressed and solved that problem for you.

Feldman is running a daily blog at timeout.com, in which he does a daily roundup of the best entertainm­ent content available online, from filmed performanc­es of the Metropolit­an Opera to England’s National Theatre production­s to a twicedaily program (2 and 8 p.m., normal theatre show times) called Stars in the House, where Siriusxm host Seth Rudetsky and his husband, producer James Wesley, interview theatre stars between songs.

A few days ago, for example, you could have watched a 2 p.m. reading — a one- off — of The Tale of the Allergist’s Wife, a 2000 hit play, read by Andrea Martin, Charles Busch and Richard Kind, who are quarantine­d in different countries. No director or rehearsal. But brilliantl­y synced from their separate locations.

Checking out the blog on April 6, I found a cornucopia of options: a video of

Mozart’s 1775 comic opera, The Secret Gardener, originally staged in 2017; a video of Shakespear­e’s Globe’s Hamlet, one of 34 Shakespear­ean plays to be rolled out by this company every Monday night at 6 p. m. through June; to honour playwright Terry Mcnally, who died last month of coronaviru­s complicati­ons, an 8 p.m. reading of his 1991 play, Lips Together, Teeth Apart ( donations benefit the AIDS COVID-19 Emergency Assistance Fund); by Crowdcast (a Zoom-type app), Mondays in the Club with Lance (Horne), songwriter, pianist and performer, “who hosts his own wild night of piano-bar singing, storytelli­ng and dancing at the East Village nightlife hub Club Cumming,” where visitors can sing along from home and make requests ( donations to the non- profit Orchard Project); show tunes at Marie’s Crisis Virtual Piano Bar (where Adam Feldman can sometimes be found singing on Open Mic nights); and the National Yiddish Theatre doing sketch comedy on “Kovid.” Twice last week the Pulitzeran­d Tony- winning play, The Heidi Chronicles, was read by the whole original cast.

There are different availabili­ty models. The Met Opera has a 24- hour window. Andrew Lloyd Webber gives you 48 hours. The Metropolit­an Opera shows a different archived performanc­e every evening at 7: 30 p. m.; April 6 was Aida. And as a bonus, London’s National Theatre is dipping into its treasure trove of past production­s to show one a week, available for a week — I have seen a number of these filmed National Theatre performanc­es in theatres; the production values are to die for — and kicking them off is the 2011 farce, One Man, Two Guvnors, the show that made James Corden a major star.

There’s lots more. Feldman is working 14- hour days amassing this material, so you can choose a week’s fabulous entertainm­ent in 14 minutes. He annotates everything succinctly, a great help in finding what you fancy.

Some of what is offered is pay- per- view, but most of it is free, although donations, which may go to the individual artist, or charities like the Actors Fund and Broadway Cares/ Equity Fights AIDS, are strongly encouraged.

In this dystopian historical moment, it’s a pleasure but also a duty to support artistic expression. Give your regards to — and show your regard for — Broadway, with your attendance at performanc­es, and by your generosity. It’s not charity. Because the entertainm­ent bang you get for your buck is — how shall I say? — oh yes: triple-plus-good.

 ?? Supplied ?? Stephen Fry and Mark Rylance star in this version of Twelfth Night at Shakespear­e’s Globe in London. The company is streaming plays online during the pandemic.
Supplied Stephen Fry and Mark Rylance star in this version of Twelfth Night at Shakespear­e’s Globe in London. The company is streaming plays online during the pandemic.

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