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Andrew Scott Halted Hamlet Soliloquy After Theatergoer Used Laptop To Email (theguardian.com) 91

David Batty reports via The Guardian: [Andrew Scott], best known as Fleabag's "hot priest," has revealed he halted the renowned soliloquy in Shakespeare's play when an audience member took out a laptop to send emails. The actor decided not to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous theatre etiquette during his run in the 2017 production of Hamlet at London's Almeida theatre, for which he earned an Olivier nomination. Speaking to the Happy Sad Confused film podcast, Scott said there was "no way" he could continue with the speech, and refused to resume until the man put his laptop away.

"When I was playing Hamlet, a guy took out his laptop -- not his phone, his laptop -- while I was in the middle of 'To be or not to fucking be'" said the actor, who said he thought the offending audience member was sending emails. "I was pausing and [the stage team] were like, 'Get on with it' and I was like, 'There's no way.' I stopped for ages." A woman next to the laptop user appeared to alert him to the situation and he finally stopped. "He had absolutely no doubts," added Scott, who was on the podcast to promote his current film All of Us Strangers.

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Andrew Scott Halted Hamlet Soliloquy After Theatergoer Used Laptop To Email

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  • by Toad-san ( 64810 ) on Tuesday January 02, 2024 @08:37PM (#64126423)

    with a professional actor protesting such rude behavior. Good for him.

    • Agreed. Good for him. Who the hell brings a laptop to a Shakespeare play?

      Though we shouldn't be surprised at this rudeness. It's now becoming part of every day life. No consideration for others. It's all about me.

      • Yes, some people's behaviour in theatres is appalling but his response is arguably just as bad. What about the other people in the audience, many of whom were probably too far from the idiot with the laptop to know why everything stopped? You can't stop rude, inconsiderate behaviour by being just as rude and inconsiderate yourself to others by indulging in a temper tantrum - that just adds to the problem.
        • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
          Eh, I tend to agree that the actor's actions weren't warranted. But I also guarantee the dickhead that thought it was acceptable to bust out a laptop during a performance won't do it again. Honestly, if I was at a movie/play/whatever and they stopped the show, brought up the house lights, made an announcement as to what was going on, and paraded the douchebag out I'd happily give them a standing ovation.
          • Exactly! That's where the theatre management needs to step in and enforce their rules. Simply removing the guy would be disruptive, so if you're going to intrude into the performance anyway, might as well go all in and do what you suggest, then let the cast pick up where they left off...or maybe a minute earlier in the play.

          • But I also guarantee the dickhead that thought it was acceptable to bust out a laptop during a performance won't do it again.

            Possibly true but sadly knowing some people it is far from guaranteed, but how many of the audience also thought that it was no longer worth going to expensive performances that could be easily disrupted for everyone in the theatre in this way? People using laptops and phones during performances need to be stopped but there are better, less disruptive ways to do this - like removing the audience member - that don't spoil the performance for everyone else and that should be the primary concern of a _profess

        • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Tuesday January 02, 2024 @09:38PM (#64126549)

          See my longer response about other actors and actresses stopping performances.

          I was at a showing of A Christmas Carol at Ford's Theater many years ago, and there are signs explicitly saying you are not allowed to record the performance. The playbill has a warning not to record the performance. There is an announcement before the opening not to record the performance. There is an announcement at intermission not to record the performance.

          As the play is coming to an end, guess what happens. The guy two rows in front of us pulls out his camera and starts recording. One of the ushers rushed down and told him to turn his camera off, that he wasn't allowed to record the show. He argued with her. Fortunately her being there interrupted his recording so whatever he was trying to get was ruined.

          As to stopping the show, why not? Call out the person. There are a multitude of notices about turning off phones or not recording. If you can't, as an adult, follow basic courtesies, you deserve to be called out.

          • There are a multitude of notices about turning off phones or not recording.

            There are better, technical ways to prevent casual phone recordings by idiots. CCD devices are quite sensitive to near-visible IR wavelengths that our eyes cannot see. Put a few bright sources of those around the stage pointing at the audience and no casual phone recordings will work.

            It's always better to outwit the idiots than to stoop to their level.

            • That way I can enjoy dozens of bright rectangles in my field of view while I try to watch the show. Great idea.
              • How do you figure that? If people are recording you already have exactly this problem but if they find they can't record it they are far more likely to turn their phone off thus making things better.
            • There are better, technical ways to prevent casual phone recordings by idiots.

              There are no better ways to change antisocial behavior than making people who engage in antisocial acts feel uncomfortable in society until they stop. Your solution solves it for one venue, temporarily. Ours solves it across the board, eventually.

              • There are no better ways to change antisocial behavior than making people who engage in antisocial acts feel uncomfortable in society until they stop.

                Yes, if you can do that without making the disruption worse then I'd agree. However, if you can't do that without making the situation much worse by magnifying the disruption hugely then no.

                Ours solves it across the board, eventually.

                Not really. Firstly, some people are immune to this sort of pressure which is why prisons exist. Secondly, if you disrupt things for the rest of the audience enough many may decide that it is not worth paying to attend a live performance. True, this is a solution of sorts since if there are no theatres there will be no

                • Secondly, if you disrupt things for the rest of the audience enough many may decide that it is not worth paying to attend a live performance.

                  Eventually they will start doing their civic duty and ejecting those people who disrupt the show with their selfishness for you.

                  • The problem is that removing an idiot like this is no longer regarded as a civic duty and indeed is likely regarded as illegal, ending up with you being sued for assault. Fifty years ago you might have been able to do that, and it's perhaps no surprise that this sort of behaviour was not a problem 50 years ago, but it is hard to see this happening in today's litigious society.
            • sounds like a way to get sued for eye damage
    • The people around said idiot probably appreciated not having to listen to his *clickety click* typing during the play too.

  • [Andrew Scott], best known as Fleabag's "hot priest," ...

    The fox is still looking for him.

  • Mightier! (Score:5, Funny)

    by YetAnotherDrew ( 664604 ) on Tuesday January 02, 2024 @09:28PM (#64126521)

    Behold the keyboard, mightier than the pen.

  • ...thanks you for your service.

    https://www.theguardian.com/st... [theguardian.com]

  • by Miles_O'Toole ( 5152533 ) on Tuesday January 02, 2024 @09:38PM (#64126543)

    At least the guy with his laptop out wasn't jacking off some dude in the next seat.

    • At least the guy with his laptop out wasn't jacking off some dude in the next seat.

      Maybe that sort of behavior is reserved for Beetlejuice.

      • Maybe that sort of behavior is reserved for Beetlejuice.

        Somehow I actually managed to miss this bit of political news and got some decidedly NSFW search results attempting to find it. So, to anyone who is scratching their heads on the reference and doesn't want their own little "rule 34" adventure, here's what that was about. [newsweek.com]

      • Maybe that sort of behavior is reserved for Beetlejuice.

        Congresscritter-juice? Oh that works in so many ways.

  • I saw someone answer a phone call in the middle of a movie once and start having a loud conversation, and "someone" threw a bottle at their head. Was funny as fuck. There's so little light in there that they didn't see it coming. Plus, what are they going to do? Keep talking and wait for a second bottle? Go around and ask everyone who threw it? They shut up pretty quickly.

  • That's great (Score:4, Interesting)

    by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Tuesday January 02, 2024 @11:04PM (#64126703)

    while I was in the middle of 'To be or not to fucking be'

    He should say it exactly like that. I bet Shakespeare would approve.

    • Although it was handled with displeasure, it would've been cooler to teach the transgressor a lesson with a bit of humor and attitude:

      "Hey you, in the back with the fucking laptop, I'm right here in the middle of 'to be or not to fucking be'. So can you please take your glowing magic box outside or do it later? I'm trying to emphasize opportunity life costs through Elizabethan existentialism right fucking here. And although I don't mock untreated mental illness, rudeness makes me want to kill myself in a

  • by sinkskinkshrieks ( 6952954 ) on Wednesday January 03, 2024 @12:45AM (#64126839)

    Considering how rude most people are, you can't even exit an elevator anymore without some young twat glued to their phone trying rush in and creating a traffic jam. Oh and you're the "rude" one trying to pass someone on an escalator who takes up the whole thing with their suitcase or body rather than standing to the right like normal, stationary people.

    The implicit social contract of being an audience member is respecting the talent, risk of criticism, time, and person of the performer. Busting out distraction devices or leaving across the stage mid song is just damn rude. Either be present or go elsewhere.

  • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Wednesday January 03, 2024 @12:47AM (#64126847) Journal

    Rather than "the hot priest", I suspect more /. readers would recognize him from his role as Moriarty in Sherlock.

  • This violin player stops his performance and improvises around the Nokia ringtone tune [youtu.be]

    Now that's a class act compared to the actor stopping mid-sentence and sulking.

    • by pahles ( 701275 )
      Yes, that is a class act. However, why bother going to the theater when you don't have the decency to look at the performance? Just don't.
      • Yeah, I totally agree: the guy with the laptop was utterly crass.

        However, the actor stopping and waiting for the dude to stop being an asshole wasn't a great response I reckon. I mean he was totally in his right to do it, but it would have been so much better if he had voiced his protest with a witty remark - like for example saying "To be or not to be in an Excel sheet, that is the question!" The guy would have been annihilated with shame.

        A bit like Jacob Collier regularly does [youtu.be] in his concerts.

    • While I would also like to see the actor deliver an impromptu "to be an asshole or to not be an asshole" speech, about how whether 'tis nobler to pull out your laptop in the middle of a pivotal moment in a play or to provide a handjob to your date, I don't require that they do so.

      What I want most is for anyone who does anything so rude as emailing during a play to be yeeted with prejudice, but we don't always get what we want.

    • by Jerrry ( 43027 )

      This violin player stops his performance and improvises around the Nokia ringtone tune [youtu.be]

      Or how about the French pianist in the 1920s who was getting heckled by the audience during his performances? At his next performance, he pulled a pistol out of his pocket and laid it on top of the piano as he sat down to perform. Strangely, no one heckled him during that performance.

  • He interrupted his playing to let the man finish writing his mail and not miss a moment of it. So thoughtful, I wish more actors were as accommodating.

  • Apparently the guy was not that interested in the performance. I can certainly relate to that.
    But did he disturb the performance in any way, e.g. did his laptop or he imself make noises or block the view of other visitors?

    If not, why care?

    Would he have reacted in a simliar way if the guy had removed his hearing aid and closed his eyes?

    • by DarenN ( 411219 )

      If the actor, on stage in a theatre, could see the laptop then it was guaranteed to be disturbing others.

    • by Pieroxy ( 222434 )

      A laptop has a fucking screen. Every people sitting behind him and on the sides had the giant white rectangle in their field of vision. You bet it is distracting for everyone.

      Would he have reacted in a simliar way if the guy had removed his hearing aid and closed his eyes?

      If he slept through the play I could not care less. Unless he snored like hell. If you're in a theater, please make sure you do not disturb everyone.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • That's when I would enter a theater with a laptop to begin with,

    • Perhaps so.

      The least disruptive thing to do, and the thing you would do if you cared about other people, is to not go to the theater when you're on call, and you're at risk of disrupting a live public performance for others.

      The second-least disruptive thing would have been to slink out and do your email someplace at the back, in the hall, whatever.

      If you're on call, don't get a seat where you will disrupt others, that's just being selfish.

      "But what about that person getting to see the show?", you might ask.

  • Was announced, at the beginning, that anyone using their phones, etc during the performance will be ejected with no refund.

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