Popular is Not the Opposite of Relevant
If you have a moment, read the piece from the LA Times the other day wherein two local LA critics talk about the small theatre scene. It’s worth reading for its own merits, and it is an interesting discussion with a number of really perceptive insights from the two critics, Charles McNulty and Steven Leigh Morris
But one thing Morris said stood out that I want to challenge, or at least frame differently. It’s this one:
“Pleasing and selling are awfully seductive, essential really; they may lead to a popular theater but not necessarily to a relevant one. And that’s the paradox.”
I just want to note that “popular” and “relevant” are not opposites. In fact, I’d ask how the hell something can be relevant if no one cares about it. What do you mean by relevant anyway? To me, something’s relevant if it has a gravitational pull on the culture. Oom-pah-pah music, not relevant. Social media innovations, relevant. Those are obvious because one’s obviously nearly dead in the culture, and one is almost universal.
But relevant doesn’t have to be a mass phenomenon. In fact, who cares if it’s a mass phenomenon? Morris says this:
“How are theaters supposed to go out and do work that they know will alienate 95% of the general population? What’s their incentive to be brave?”
Well, that’s an easy one: the love and support of the 5%. If it’s truly being done for the 5% in the sense that they are the niche that can and will support such work, that should be plenty to make any organization thrive. The goal over time is to grow the 5% to 6 and then 7 and then, well, as large as you want.
Trying to please the so-called “general population” is a fool’s errand that’s irrelevant to today’s market for anything. Everything is a niche market. Mass market is dead. Super dead. Cirque Du Soleil and the NFL are both huge, but they’re still niches. Why? Because their product isn’t for everyone; it started with a small, emerging portion of the culture which clashed meaningfully with the “general population” and then over time, their vision won out, or at very least, earned the right to survive and thrive. Football used to have to live on the leftovers from baseball, horse racing and boxing. Cirque Du Soleil was a freaky footnote to the head-in-a-lion’s-mouth school of circuses that cost $5 to see. Only in hindsight does it seem obvious that these are tastes shared by many people.
Although I understand it, I hate the mindset that says we can either do “good” work or we can do “popular” work. No organization has to please everybody and shouldn’t try. That’s a guarantee of failure. And imagining that there’s a “general population” is naive and out of touch. I vaguely feel like this is just snobbery dressed up in something that sounds like thought. There’s no general population. There are just people, and their tastes are really varied.
What’s hard, though, is figuring out who your work is for and then honing it to make it work for them. It’s easier just to hand wave the problem away and say that there’s a “paradox” where theatre gets stuck between what’s popular and what’s good.
On the other hand, if what is meant by “relevant” is really self-indulgent work that values mere self-expression without any regard to the audience and designed mostly to flatter the ego of the artist, there’s a different word for that.
Irrelevant.













I love this. It made me cheer!
I so often find myself trying to get Theatre artists to care about the audience.
It sounds weird but we too often do the art “because we want to do it- it is good art” without thinking about who wants to see it. Why should this play be done? Why should it be done here and now? Who will be entertained, uplifted, respectfully provoked or served by this play, now?
If we don’t know who our audiences are and how we are serving them- we are not doing good art. We are simply playing in the sandbox with our friends. And if we are doing that we deserve to be struggling and starving because we are not adding value.
And if we ARE thinking about our audiences then we are adding value and we deserve to be supported and live abundantly.
mari g
http://www.tpsonline.org
Leave your response!