Vermont Magazine Summer 19 | Page 39

Sherman: Do you find yourself simplifying or “dummying down” your work? Or do you think you should make the audience work a little? Rebeck: I believe that the human experience is universal on some level. …And I’m not interested in plays that are only written for a certain kind of audience. I think that’s really a mistake. And… I don’t think that audiences should be disdained either. …I write seri- ous plays that have a kind of comedic bounce in them. And I listen carefully during previews to what I can learn from an audience. The whole idea of previews was built around listening to the audi- ence. “Do we lose them here? Does that scene go on too long? Does it not go on long enough?” And … the workshop process is all about that. And then - when you’re lucky enough to get it into production - [during] previews, you’re listening to what the audience is telling you about how they’re hearing - or re- ceiving - what you’ve written… I mean, there are times when I go, “I don’t care if they get that or not” or “I don’t care if I get that laugh or not.” But sometimes there are things that you do care about. Like, if they’re laughing in places that you don’t want them to laugh - you can kill the laugh. THAT’S SOMETHING THAT ALAN TAUGHT ME; how to kill a laugh. plays that required re-working. You know, a moment during re- hearsals in which you said, “This is not working”…? Rebeck: Yes. Last year, when I was working on Bernhardt/Hamlet, we had the great Janet McTeer play- ing the title role… She had read an early draft of the play, really liked it, and really wanted to com- mit right away. But because of her schedule, we had to bump up the production to the fall. It would have been better to be doing it in the spring,… but we had to move it Sherman: Can you share an forward. And so the fact is,that play example of a scene from one of your was being done cold on Broadway. TONY Award Winner Tyne Daly and brother, Tim, in DOWNSTAIRS (2017). Photo courtesy of Dorset Theatre Festival. 37