We Don’t Need No Stinking Quotes!

May 7th, 2015 § 2 comments

“You know, if we all agreed to stop putting critics’ quotes in our ads, they’d lose their power over us, and we could just sell our shows on what we think is best about them.”

I will confess to having made that statement, or something along those lines, more than once when I was the public relations director at Hartford Stage. Thinking back on it now, I can attribute it to a) youth, b) feistiness and c) naïveté. Remember, of course, that this was the pre-internet era, when reviews didn’t linger forever online, but genuinely became inaccessible 24 hours after they appeared in print. And of course, there was no persuading absolutely every  other theatre in the area that this was viable, and without unanimity, it would fail.

No one took me terribly seriously (though at the time, I certainly did). At the same time that I was attempting to jumpstart my radical approach to arts marketing, I was also guilty of some exceptionally creative “Frankensteining” of words from reviews for the express purpose of trumpeting them in ads. Because that was what was expected, I freely engaged in hypocritical acts because, well…paycheck.

More than two decades later, it seems that Broadway marketers may be moving towards my way of thinking after all. As evidence, I give you three screen captures from video advertising for three current Broadway shows:

Finding Neverland ad on Times Square video screen

Finding Neverland ad on Times Square video screen

Screen grab of Curious Incident ad

Screen grab of Curious Incident tv ad

Screen grab of Something Rotten! tv ad

Screen grab of Something Rotten! tv ad

Look, ma, no quotes! Apparently it’s now enough simply to plaster the logos of media outlets on an ad to suggest that their critics have been positively disposed towards the show being sold. I’d say the truth is more variable.

Without going back and rereading the coverage in every outlet represented in these images, I’m willing to give The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time the benefit of the doubt, because the reviews were, as I recall, pretty terrific, and because the show has given equal weight to each outlet it represents. There’s a certain understatement at work.

I give the Something Rotten! ad credit for some subtle humor, because while it offers up The New York Times logo, a bit of animation that lobs a tomato at it, and obscures it, because the Times wasn’t actually all that keen on the show.

The Finding Neverland logo parade seems fairly disingenuous, because its New York Times review wasn’t positive, yet it dominates to screen. Did the Times write about the show? It certainly did. Does the screen say that they liked the show? In point of fact no. But I suspect that they’re trading on the fact that the presence of the Times logo might fool some people into thinking the show was endorsed by the paper, which may not be an absolute ethical lapse, but it’s certainly willfully misleading.

This isn’t to say that quotes have disappeared from ads, and even the examples above pull out some specific quotes on their own, separate from these logo parades. In the case of Fun Home, their ad is almost entirely glowing and attributed review quotes, with some award nominations thrown in as well. What they’re avoiding is any mention of what the show is actually about, which is a shame, but a sign of our still unenlightened times, in which the content of the show may be perceived as possibly limiting its commercial appeal.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QlpNv60eGyU

I know of critics who will on occasion, when they think their writing has been inaccurately represented in ads, reach out to productions and make their feelings known. In such cases, especially with major critics, I would imagine those concerns receive due attention, since no one wants to be party to a souring relationship with a critic. But in these cases, the question is whether the folks who police trademark usage for each outlet have noticed these examples, and whether they are concerned enough to suggest – or enforce – that, in some cases, their logos may be getting used to imply an endorsement which doesn’t necessarily exist.

For those who decry the shrinking space for arts reviews, or who find star rating systems too reductive, it seems we’re in the process of moving on to the next iteration – exploring how to dispense with opinion entirely, in favor of implied endorsement, warranted or not. My youthful activism has come around to a more mature realism: we need as much writing as possible about the theatre, and that doesn’t mean just feature coverage, but criticism as well. If we work to marginalize critics through marketing, we may boost a show here or there, but at the end of the day we’ll be worse off for having done so.

 

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§ 2 Responses to We Don’t Need No Stinking Quotes!"

  • Heather Cunningham says:

    I agree wholeheartedly that we need more theater writing – but not just any writing – we need educated theater writing. There’s nothing worse then reading an article when the writer clearly has no idea how theater works.

    Especially in the small theater world (specifically I’m talking about New York’s Indie Theater scene where there are sadly few outlets for reviews or other articles) we need educated theater goers who are also good writers. First of all – don’t call it a review – or yourself a reviewer – if it’s not at all critical (and it doesn’t have to be bad to be critical – it just has to critique). I recently did a show where a review came out (three days before closing, no less) that did nothing but retell the plot. That’s not a review, it’s a synopsis. It was barely even a book report. I’m afraid the art of criticism is dying.

    We don’t create art in a vacuum. We will never grow as artists if our work is not critiqued (it’s up to us whether to listen or ignore your opinions). And especially for small theaters – don’t take up a seat for free that would otherwise be sat in by a paying customers and then not write a review. We need those reviews to sell tickets when we are selling shows that have no Hollywood star and no spectacle in them. And we need every dollar we can get from ticket sales as fundraising becomes harder and costs rise.

  • M_B_W says:

    The role of the critic is, in my view, as follows:

    1) To offer insights to the reader about the production in question.

    2) To determine what it is that the show’s producers are attempting to do with the show and then evaluate them on how well they have done what they were setting out to do.

    I also think that the critic can/should be an advocate for the readers and consumers of theatre…..but should avoid saying “Do/Don’t see this show” unless the show is truly exceptional (bad or good),

    A critic should instead offer insights about the style and appeal of the show and help the reader determine if this is a show they would like to see.

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