“THERE IS AN ART TO THE BUILDING UP OF SUSPENSE.” (COMMENT). Nick commented on my post about coin flips that: “This would probably alter the implications of the opening scene to Tom Stoppard’s play about Hamlet…” It would alter some of the philosophical implications, but, I think, not the theatrical impact. Tom Stoppard’s ROSENCRANTZ AND GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD begins with a series of coin flips, all of which come up heads. The total reaches 76 in the first minutes of the play. Rosencrantz has the first five lines of the play: “Heads. Heads. Heads. Heads. Heads.” They are spoken slowly as five coins are flipped. Then comes Guildenstern’s line: “There is an art to the building up of suspense.” I have seen the play several times. Suspense builds during those lines—with the exception of one performance where the lines were said too quickly (demonstrating, I guess, that building suspense is an art). How do the actors know how to pace those lines? I think that they pick up the rhythm from the audience’s reaction, as part of the interaction of live theater. (In contrast, in a movie there is no interaction with the audience, and the movie of ROSENCRANTZ AND GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD begins with a very large number of coin flips, all heads.)
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