Guidhall School Rachel Grunwald staged a production of
Marathon ‘33 in 2013. The play ran from November 29 to December 4 at the
Guildhall School of Music and Drama. The company comprised 26 acting students, along with a jazz band of six students. Grunwald described her aim in producing the play as portraying an era that resembles
reality TV today and the harsh treatment of performers in the entertainment industry. To match the feeling of dance marathons, Grunwald’s production took place in a theater that transformed into an arena in which the audience became the audience of dance marathons. The posting for the play read “This is a Dance Marathon, an endurance test in which couples must dance perpetually, until one by one they succumb to exhaustion and madness, in a spectacle of cruelty rigged to keep audience members hooked and spending money. Eighty years on, in an era of reality TV and ‘poverty porn’, the Guildhall School presents the British premiere of this extraordinary, visceral show written by Canadian-born American actress and writer June Havoc
.” Members of the creative team were
Nicky Shaw (design),
Mark Jonathan (lighting design),
Ehud Freedman (music),
Mikko Gordon (sound) and
Emma Annetts (choreography). In a review for
The Guardian, critic
Michael Billington praised Grunwald’s production for its design and originality. Billington, however, took issue with Grunwald’s thesis and wrote “I'm not sure I accept the implied parallel with the world of reality TV: even our sadism is surely not as great as that of the Depression-era spectators who watched dancers till they literally dropped.”
American Century Theater The American Century Theater company produced a version of
Marathon ‘33, which ran from July 27 to August 25, 2012, at the Gunston Theatre Two in Arlington, Virginia. The production design converted the theater into a dance hall style arena. The cast had 30 actors and a six piece jazz band, and during the play, there were comedy routines and song performances that resembled dance marathons of 1933. The play was produced by the company with the intention of comparing the Great Depression with the economy of the current period, while working with organizations associated with the local high school and the local retirement community. == References ==