This post has been edited due to the amazing responses and assistance I have received here... you guys are awesome! Cheers...
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Hey all,
This question may have been posted before, so if it had please forgive me, as I'm still figuring out how to use the search feature and really don't have a lot of time to get on these boards and look around... * I LOVE my J.O.B.* with that said...
Is it ethically wrong from a performance perspective to introduce your assistants / cast / crew to the audience after a show? I know Copperfield doesn't give much of his staff credit... and that kinda bothers me... after all they are what make the show possible and make the magician what he is. What do you think about this?
I'm NOT that way where I won't give credit where it's due, if a performer wanted to ask those who work with him or her "take a bow" sort to speak, would the magician be looked down on as being "not as magikal" because he or she has a cast/crew that help make the magic happen?
thanks to all for your imput...
But if you have a crew that is david copperfield sized it will kill the curtain call.
As a rule of thumb most of the directors I have worked with do the cast then the Leads, Orchestra if there is one, and then the cast points at our sound booth and claps for them and then final bow and curtain.
Your audience might not want to clap through a 10 minute curtain call.
Problem can occur more in a commercial theatre, because where I work, I doubt the spotlight team on the very top floor, the lighting and sound engineers in the box at the back, the fly tower guys, general flight directors, costume team, and all the other staff... I doubt they would go on stage, it is just purely not their job to.
You can thank them on stage, but I do not think you would expect them to show themselves, the rare occasion they may show themselves in the programme, but that is about it.
Ah yes, you agree with me too then. Production team tends to mean a range of people from set designers, costume, directors, stage managers, and the like... I think you may be confused with the technical term for it.
I believe you mean all of the performers who are part of the production (not the people who created the production in production week), is this what I am right in thinking? If so, you are correct and this is how it normally works in a theatre.
David only has about 20 to 30 crew. If you had THAT sized crew working for you then chances are good you wouldn't be on this forum, nor would you be participating in or asking this kind of questions.
Yes. I was using production wrong. I refer to performers not ECT