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Students and Novice Stage Managers / Re: Labtop vs. Pencil and Script/Notepad
« on: Apr 07, 2010, 04:36 am »
I have two (admittedly rather weak) reasons to add to the paper-please side of things:
1) I enjoy the tactile response of paper. Flipping the pages keeps me cognisant of where we are in the show, how much ground we're covering, where things fall sequentially, and so on. I find I miss this when I work with a computer, and it's certainly advantageous to have that sort of sequential data memorized.
2) I don't like having a physical barrier between me and what I'm observing. Even if my head's up and I'm looking forward, the laptop screen still occupies a good chunk of my frame of vision--which bugs me like you wouldn't believe. I've found that actors find it unnerving as well: they want to know what I'm writing, dammit! Is it innocent blocking? Is it junk for the rehearsal report? Am I making--*gasp*--line notes? (Oh no!)
And as someone else has said, when other people have used laptops in rehearsals, the clickity-clickity-clickity of typing just grates on me. (I also find this gets ten times worse once we move into the space: it's annoying in halls and studios, but get us in a theatre and I get tempted to toss your laptop off of the second balcony without a parachute, so help me...)
1) I enjoy the tactile response of paper. Flipping the pages keeps me cognisant of where we are in the show, how much ground we're covering, where things fall sequentially, and so on. I find I miss this when I work with a computer, and it's certainly advantageous to have that sort of sequential data memorized.
2) I don't like having a physical barrier between me and what I'm observing. Even if my head's up and I'm looking forward, the laptop screen still occupies a good chunk of my frame of vision--which bugs me like you wouldn't believe. I've found that actors find it unnerving as well: they want to know what I'm writing, dammit! Is it innocent blocking? Is it junk for the rehearsal report? Am I making--*gasp*--line notes? (Oh no!)
And as someone else has said, when other people have used laptops in rehearsals, the clickity-clickity-clickity of typing just grates on me. (I also find this gets ten times worse once we move into the space: it's annoying in halls and studios, but get us in a theatre and I get tempted to toss your laptop off of the second balcony without a parachute, so help me...)