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“One Small Step” And The Audience That Will Bring Your Work To Life

August 24th, 2008 | 2 Comments | Posted in update

When David Hastings’ play ONE SMALL STEP was taken up to the Assembly Rooms at the Edinburgh Festival this month - the festival’s most respected venue -  the outlook was quite pragmatic: take the show up there, expect a financial loss but gather thy reviews and hope they harvest into eyeballs and cash in the form of a UK tour of the play over the next year - something that might not even be possible without an Edinburgh premiere and the prestige that can garner.

So when Scotlands’ main national newspaper gave it a 5 star review last week  - one of only 8 of the 598 plays they’ve reviewed at the festival this year - hopes and expectations were raised a notch for the Oxford Playhouse team who brought the production up there.

Since Sunday, when the review was released, audiences that began at 20 and plateaued at 40 suddenly spiked sharply to a full house (122 seats) and haven’t relented since.

David Hastings, the author of the play and a friend of mine sent me an email:

“Audiences are going mad for it… it’s not the  play anymore which is exciting, it’s the audience. The atmosphere is extraordinary. I said to our producer, ‘We created it, The Scotsman discovered it, and Edinburgh audiences own it.’ - reality next week.”.

Whereas with the smaller audiences, ONE SMALL STEP was receiving a wholesome, happy applause, now they’re getting standing ovations for every show.

It’s interesting. In the next post, we’ll be looking at the film BLACK GOLD - an independent social-issue driven documentary that began life as something that no funders would sniff at and resulted in becoming a film whose success was so powerful that the audience, in taking it for their own, were almost too powerful and the demand almost too strong for the filmmakers to keep up with.

In both cases, I’d say it’s a classic case of the audience being the element that really breathes life into something clearly worthy but that, without their attention and investment, essentially fails. The upside is that when opportunities for audience succeed, alchemy takes hold. In the case of ONE SMALL STEP, as also in the case of BLACK GOLD, success breeds success - and without some kind of kismet, it’s uncertain how, when or whether history might repeat itself.

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    • CONTRIBUTORS

      LISA SALEM set out to walk the whole of LA pushing a baby-stroller with a video-camera attached to the end of it, facing inwards. When people approached her, she invited them to walk with her while she videoed their conversations. She posted those videos to a blog and in the process attracted a large and intrigued audience to what she was doing. Since then, Lisa's been looking at the process of audience-building in detail. She lives in London now and when not working on her film-portrait of Los Angeles "WALK LA WITH ME", she runs workshops that help filmmakers be more independent.

      LANCE WEILER has written and directed two feature films (Head Trauma, The Last Broadcast) which he self distributed all over the world. Lance is the founder of the Workbook Project, and is currently working on a number of film, TV and cross-media projects.