Author Topic: End of Day break  (Read 4458 times)

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mzvalentine

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End of Day break
« on: Jul 25, 2012, 11:53 am »
I feel a bit silly asking this, but I've polled a few friends and come up with different answers.

After coming back from a 10 with an hour left in the rehearsal day, is is necessary to take a 5 in the last hour or do we assume that because the end of day comes before the next required 10 we can rehearse to the end?  Should that previous break be a 15 to count the 10 from the previous 80mins and the upcoming 55mins?

Thank you-- I imagine I'm over thinking it:)

loebtmc

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Re: End of Day break
« Reply #1 on: Jul 25, 2012, 01:16 pm »
My practice:

Since you can have an 80/10, you can just run the last hour - or if there is any question, simply bring everyone back 5 minutes into the hour instead of on the hour (ie take the 10 then a 5), and then run the 55 straight through.

MatthewShiner

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Re: End of Day break
« Reply #2 on: Jul 25, 2012, 04:42 pm »
run the hour. The next break would be due 20 minutes after rehearsal ends.

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Anything posted here as in my own personal opinion, and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of my employer - whomever they be at a given moment in time.

hbelden

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Re: End of Day break
« Reply #3 on: Jul 25, 2012, 10:58 pm »
We aren't promised a certain number of breaks in a day, we're promised a ration of break times after a set period of rehearsal - no longer than 80 minutes.
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loebtmc

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Re: End of Day break
« Reply #4 on: Jul 26, 2012, 12:00 am »
So you have 3 folks confirming for you that you need no extra break in the final hour - and if you have fussy or exhausted actors, you can opt to break thru 5 minutes into the hour, and run then straight then.

But mainly, yes, given our options being 55/5 and 80/10, you absolutely can run straight through the final hour without concern.

VSM

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Re: End of Day break
« Reply #5 on: Jul 26, 2012, 02:31 am »
I let the feel of the room dictate the rigidity of the breaks.
If it's a brand new piece, creative juices flowing, give them what they want/need...
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MatthewShiner

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Re: End of Day break
« Reply #6 on: Jul 26, 2012, 02:06 pm »
Yes, it's a sign of truly being mature and in tune with the room when you know when it's time to take a break early (your are at a natural stopping point, the next chunk will take up to 80 minutes, etc) and when to let the natural flow of the room end before calling break (seriously, let them finish the speech then call the break).  Know of a great story where the actor was four lines into "TO BE OR NOT TO BE", and the SM called break because it was 80 minutes since the last break - true, it was the "by the rules" thing to do - but sadly, not the most diplomatic.

I am big at talking with my cast up from on how I like to run rehearsal, and asking them how rigid do they want the breaks to be called.  If they like the organic nature, I will let the work come to a natural pause, and if we just rehearsed 85 minutes, I will give them a 15 minute break.  Often, actors can slip out and go to the bathroom, grab coffee during a call- and lord knows I slip out and use the restroom often during rehearsal - since during break I am being descended on.  Other times, they are working with a director who is famous for wasting time, so they want the breaks called on time - to keep time moving.  I full ultimately it is about making sure NO time is wasted, and everyone's needs are respected. 


But, this is based on my management style, I am not sure every stage manager can get away with being organic and actor-centric as I tend to be.  (This coming form someone who can keep three rehearsal rooms running for 8 hours straight - without any actor going into overtime . . . )  I would never advocate for any stage manager, young or seasoned, to not follow the rules of their contract, but there is a wall to honor the word and the spirit of the rule without looking like a tyrant. 
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VSM

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Re: End of Day break
« Reply #7 on: Jul 27, 2012, 03:00 am »
Nicely done, Matthew...
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