Jason Carmichael,TiMOThY ERiC, Wayne DeHart and Wilbert Williams in Ma Rainey's Black Borrom. Credit: Photo courtesy of The Ensemble Theatre

โ€œOMG, have you read the theater etiquette article yet?โ€ โ€œYou totally need to read this awesome article.โ€ โ€œYAAAASSSS to everything she says in this piece.โ€

These were the messages I was bombarded with via email and social media two weeks ago when TimeOutNew York published writer/performer Amanda Duarteโ€™s article, Sit down, shut up and clap: A guide to theater etiquette.

And folks were right to squeal about how good it is. In the article, Duarte, with her potty-mouthed sass and amusingly straight to the point writing style, lays out her unequivocal ground rules for theater audience behavior. Rules that I can absolutely get behind. โ€œSit the fuck downโ€, she says. Yup, Iโ€™m on board with that. Find your seat and get to it. โ€œSit the Fuck Stillโ€. If that means donโ€™t kick my chair or go to the restroom three times during a show, count me in. โ€œTurn. Off. Your. Cellular. Device.โ€ Hell yes. โ€œWear clothingโ€ฆ.Be Healthyโ€. Check and check.

However, one of Duarteโ€™s rules screetched my full agreement to an abrupt halt.

โ€œShut the fuck up,โ€ she says. And by this, she doesnโ€™t just mean no sidebar conversation about your date last night or whispers back and forth about the show. She means no noise at all. โ€œDo not talk back to the actors. Do not sing along with the singers. Do not emit satisfied hums to let everyone around you know that you really got that James Joyce reference. We all got it. Weโ€™re just not narcissistic goats about it.โ€

Hereโ€™s the thing, anyone in Houston who has spent time at The Ensemble Theatre, one of our nationโ€™s largest African American theaters, knows that audience silence is not golden there. In fact, talking back to the actors, singing with the singers and emitting satisfied hums is the norm. Iโ€™d even say itโ€™s a big part of the experience (and joy) of seeing a show at Ensemble.

So whatโ€™s going on here? Is Duarte saying that the way Ensemble patrons behave is wrong? That they need to alter the way the behave? And why is the experience different at this theater?

โ€œI donโ€™t think itโ€™s just the Ensemble Theater, I think it has to do with culturally specific theater,โ€ says Eileen J. Morris, Ensemble Theatre Artistic Director. โ€œIn the African American tradition, we come from a call and respond community. Thatโ€™s why church is such an important part of what we do in our community. The preacher preaches and stirs emotions that we, the people of African descent, go Amen, and want to respond.โ€

And theater, Morris says is not different than that.

โ€œWhen people come to Ensemble and see that people are doing a โ€œmmm-huhโ€ underneath their breath or โ€œGirl, I donโ€™t know why youโ€™re doing thatโ€, or talking back or saying โ€œStopโ€, I can only say that itโ€™s because human beings have been touched in such a way by what is happening on stage that they canโ€™t help but emote and react. And from our culture, we react by not holding it in, we let it go.โ€

Kelundra Smith, an Atlanta-based theater critic sees performance spaces as places where people come to worship the arts in a way, so itโ€™s only natural that they behave as they do in their religious spaces. โ€œIn communities of color, African American, Latino and native communities in particular, call and response is part of the story telling tradition,โ€ says Smith. โ€œSo the shut the fuck up is never going to be the case for persons of color because their religions donโ€™t require that.โ€

It may be mainly persons of color today who show their theatrical engagement via vocal expression, but letโ€™s not forget that once upon a time, white folks, as well as other ethnic groups, did it too. Ancient Greek audiences were raucously engaged with the performances and would even hiss and throw stones at less than stellar performers. Shakespeareโ€™s audiences behaved more like they were attending a concert than a sacredly silent event, eating, drinking and talking throughout the performance. So, OK, we can be thankful that the hurling objects at actors is no longer acceptable, but in effect, Amanda is upset by a natural human reaction that it seems weโ€™ve all been guilty of having in the theater at one time or another.

Actor/Director TiMOThY ERiC has experienced his fair share of audience talking during his performances and while he admits it can be distracting for an actor at times, heโ€™s disinterested in policing it. โ€œPersonally it can be annoying for a moment hearing someone mouthing off during a performance but by winning the argument you lose something greater,โ€ says Eric. โ€œAmanda may be upset because she’s not accustomed to it, but by saying shut up, you may have just turned somebody off theater and I donโ€™t think losing a patron or denying their experience is worth saying you gotta be silent.โ€

For Smith, itโ€™s all about coming together and getting along. Theater she believes invites people of all different traditions to commune and experience art. โ€œAnd so what has to happen is a little give and take. It is unfair to say no, you canโ€™t experience it that way,โ€ says Smith. โ€œNow, of course, you donโ€™t want people excessively talking and creating their own show during a show. But to respond to what theyโ€™re seeing by giving a sound or a word of affirmation or clapping their hands or singing along or stomping their feet โ€ฆ there has to be space made for that. Especially if a theater is to become what it says it wants to become, which is to be a diverse place where all people are welcome.โ€

Outside of Ensemble or other culturally specific theaters, Morris admits she reins in her reactions somewhat, but doesnโ€™t believe that she has to negate who she is simply because sheโ€™s in a predominantly white theater. โ€˜I am who I am, and if I uh-huh under my breath, Iโ€™m not trying to ruin your experience,โ€ says Morris. โ€œMy life experience and my culture guide me in my expression of my feelings and sometimes it may not be in the traditional format we think theater should be. This is who I am and what Iโ€™m feeling and I will always be respectful to those around me but I also need to be true to the emotional journey Iโ€™m on right now.โ€

But what about the emotional journeys of others in the audience? What if they are disturbed by the noise? Duarte herself claims cheekily that, โ€œif you do not adhere to my fascistic standards for audience behavior, we are at war.โ€

Smith isnโ€™t having it. โ€œI think this is one of those cases where having privilege makes compromise feel like oppressionโ€, she says. โ€œSomebody making noises is not ruining your theater experience. Can you see and hear the performers? If you can see the show, your experience is not being ruined, whatโ€™s happening is that people youโ€™re not used to having to engage with are in the theater and the way they experience culture and the way you experience culture is not the same.โ€ This, Smith says is an opportunity to meet in the middle and create a new norm.

ERiC is more philosophical in his reaction to potentially ruining someone like Duarteโ€™s time at a show. โ€œTheater is about changing lives it about adding something to someoneโ€™s lives that they didnโ€™t have when they walked through the door,โ€ says ERiC. โ€œAnd if itโ€™s not about that, if itโ€™s only about how you want to experience it or how you want everyone else to experience it with you then youโ€™ve lost before you even stepped foot in the theater.โ€

Giving Duarte the benefit of the doubt, itโ€™s a fair guess to say that when she wrote the piece and Time Out published it, that they werenโ€™t actively trying to negate the way certain cultures respond to a theatrical experience. That exclusivity wasnโ€™t the goal in this fashion. And honestly, had this piece been written ten years ago, it would be easy to pass it off as simply a highly entertaining piece of satire.

Smith herself admits that she could have written a piece like this a decade ago. โ€œBut in 2018 to have a legitimate writer for a legitimate publication confer something that could be unwelcoming to diverse people is where the danger lies.โ€

โ€œTo her credit, she calls herself an elitist,โ€ says ERiC. โ€œSo I had to read it tongue in cheek in some respects. But it smacks of someone saying you donโ€™t deserve to be in this theater with me, you donโ€™t deserve to be enlightened or changed and thatโ€™s ridiculous. Everybody that goes to the theater deserves to be there. We all know what is disturbing and distracting and we can manage that, but you canโ€™t tell people how to experience something.โ€

Jessica Goldman was the theater critic for CBC Radio in Calgary prior to joining the Houston Press team. Her work has also appeared in American Theatre Magazine, Globe and Mail and Alberta Views. Jessica...