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11 marzo 2010
Un bel pezzo del Wall
Street Journal sul ritorno del radiodramma in salsa Web. Oggi
si parla più volentieri di "audio drama"
o addirittura di "mind movie" e invece della radio
la piattaforma di distribuzione favorita è il podacasting.
Il WSJ racconta la storia di una piccola società di
produzione, FinalRune, e delle sue tecniche di registrazione
dal vero degli effetti speciali normalmente creati dai rumoristi.
Secondo una docente della New York University che organizza
dei seminari per formare gli addetti a questo lavoro, negli
Stati Uniti ci sono trecento audio-drammaturgi. L'economia
di questo affascinante mestiere non è però quello
degli anni d'oro del radiodramma, quelli di Orson Welles per
intenderci.
In confronto, la BBC britannica investe molte più risorse
in questa forma d'arte, ben 15 milioni di dollari per 750
ore di produzione annua.
A tirare per davvero, negli Stati Uniti, ci sono gli audiolibri
che come scrive il quotidiano finanziario, hanno colmato il
vuoto non coperto dalla radio generando un discreto valore
di 400 milioni di dollari all'anno.
Return With Us to the Thrilling
Days Of Yesteryear—Via the Internet
Fred Greenhalgh's Audio Dramas Hark Back To Radio Golden Era;
It Sounds Like Snow By BARRY NEWMAN
SOUTH PORTLAND, Maine—The script
called for snow, and it was snowing. "I wanted light
and fluffy," said the director, Fred Greenhalgh. He was
talking about the cozily muffled acoustics, not the pretty
view. "This is perfect," he said. "Roll 'em!"
Windshield wipers slapping, a car wooshed to a stop at an
old schoolhouse in this coastal city, now home to a theater
company. Letting the car door slam as he got out, Bill Dufris,
playing a cop in Brattleboro, Vt., said, "I'll do my
best," and crunched up the wooden steps to a make-believe
crime scene. Overhead, a sea gull screamed. "I could
hear that," Mr. Greenhalgh interrupted. "This is
supposed to be Vermont." Thinking that inland Brattleboro
shouldn't have sea gulls, he called for another take. Mr.
Dufris got back in the car, drove around, slammed the door,
and delivered his line again: "I'll do my best."
Somewhere in the harbor, a foghorn blew. "Cut!"
said Mr. Greenhalgh. His sound man turned off his digital
recorder. "The joys of recording on location," Mr.
Greenhalgh said. "OK, one more time."
A 26-year-old with blond bangs and a goatee, the director
was busy dramatizing a detective story. Not for the screen.
For the iPod. The book it was based on—"Open Season"
by Archer Mayor—begins with an image: "The snow
lay before our headlights like a freshly placed sheet…"
But Mr. Greenhalgh had no camera. His job was to translate
the book into sound. Radio drama, ranging from "Captain
Midnight" to the high art of Orson Welles, thrived for
40 years in America. It was all but gone by the 1960s, killed
off by television. Yet now that TV must contend with the Internet,
the Internet has given radio drama a whisper of new life.
It can't be called "radio drama" anymore, since
hardly any of it gets on the radio. Mr. Greenhalgh settles
for "audio drama," but the catchiest name for it
is "mind movie."
Sue Zizza, a sound-effects artist who teaches at New York
University, figures there are about 300 "true, quality
audio dramatists" active in the U.S. She helps put on
a one-week "audio theater" summer workshop that
has lately been attracting 100 trainees. In 2006, one was
Fred Greenhalgh. "What amazes me is that audio drama
just won't go away," Ms. Zizza says. "It's so primal
in us. No matter how much we ignore it, there are still people
out there like Fred." He grew up on the Maine coast writing
short stories. At the University of Southern Maine, unpublished,
he rewrote one of them as a radio script, replacing sights
with sounds, as in: "Storm increases with violent intensity
until it unleashes a mighty burst of lightning."
Mighty bursts were produced in radio's golden age by shaking
tin sheets in a studio. Now, mighty bursts are downloadable.
But Mr. Greenhalgh can't afford studio rent and prefers not
to buy (or steal) anyone else's thunder. He harvests lightning
by walking out into a storm with a recorder and a microphone.
"Sonically, it's more interesting," he says. Add
some editing software, and that's his kit. Cost: $1,000. In
the three years since Mr. Greenhalgh started making audio
dramas, the Mad Horse Theater Company's actors, all pros,
have performed without pay—in bars, on beaches, in lighthouses—just
for the voice experience. And the food. On this day, it was
lasagna.
"I thought we'd be behind glass, and there'd be a machine
with buttons," Martin Cohn said as he joined a few actors
in a bare hallway to record crime-scene mumbling. Mr. Cohn,
a Vermont public-relations man, had come with Mr. Mayor, who
has written 20 well-reviewed mysteries, not one of which has
been made into a movie. They decided to try the audio-drama
route and hired Mr. Greenhalgh to produce a pilot. The script,
the theater, the actors, the sound man and the lasagna are
setting Mr. Cohn and Mr. Mayor back $1,500. "It's the
first time anybody's talked money," Mr. Greenhalgh confided
earlier.
Now, Mr. Greenhalgh was asking everybody to mumble, and they
did. "In a crime scene, there's more laughter,"
Mr. Mayor said when it stopped. Mr. Greenhalgh ordered another
take. The cost of this production is more than most programmers
will pay, but it's still peanuts. The British Broadcasting
Corp. spends $15 million a year on 750 hours of radio plays.
One of them, "A British Subject," made it to a New
York stage last year. "It's extravagant radio,"
says Alison Hindell, who runs the operation, "but it's
very, very cheap drama." On American radio, talk is a
lot cheaper.
A few of radio drama's old hands still fight for outlets.
Yuri Rasovsky still produces his "Hollywood Theater of
the Ear" for satellite radio. L.A. Theatre Works, a not-for-profit
outfit, records classic stage plays with sound effects and
distributes them to public radio. But its head, Susan Loewenberg,
won't touch plays written for radio. "The best time to
listen to radio drama is 1937," she says. Old-time radio
and its fans aren't her idea of the next big thing. Public
radio's energy goes mainly into nonfiction now, not original
fiction. On commercial radio, drama's last toehold is in the
miniskits of commercials. Meanwhile, audio books have piled
into the void and grown into a $400 million business.
Now comes podcasting. It has allowed a small number of audio
auteurs—from a group called Bay Area Radio Drama to
the Cape Cod Radio Mystery Theater—to build up a substantial
cache of mind movies in easily uploadable episodes. The product,
as Ms. Loewenberg sees it, often combines "21st-century
technology and eighth-grade content." Fred Greenhalgh
has higher-grade ambitions. On his FinalRune Productions Web
site, he podcasts his own episodes, plus 156 more, culled
from around the U.S. "Our work is more like what you'll
read in a literary rag," he writes on the site, which
gets 1,500 downloads a week. He sees it becoming an "audio-drama
warehouse." If that is ever to happen, he'll need a smash
hit first, one that crosses over into the iPod mainstream.
His backers from Vermont want an Archer Mayor mystery series
to be the big one—made on location, in Maine, with Mr.
Greenhalgh's no-budget ring of authenticity. "This is
the body," the director was saying as he lay a coat onto
the snow in the theater's backyard. Mr. Mayor's book set the
scene at night in "a dazzling white circle of flood lamps."
Mr. Greenhalgh intended to mention that later, in narration.
"OK, crouch over the body," he told his actors.
Mr. Dufris (the detective) and Chris Price (a forensics man)
crouched. "Crunch the snow," said Mr. Greenhalgh.
They crunched.
Script in hand, Mr. Dufris began his line: "Were there
any footprints…?" A dog barked and a door slammed.
Somebody in the next house yelled, "Now you come here!"
None of that belonged in the play. Mr. Dufris started over.
But then an airplane passed. And another. The scripts were
getting wet. Mr. Greenhalgh said, "Let's just do it."
"Were there any footprints before this all happened?"
asked Mr. Dufris. Mr. Price said, "Nope," and crunched
out of microphone range with his exit line: "Hit the
lights when you're through, OK?"
"You got it," said Mr. Dufris.
Mr. Greenhalgh said, "That's a wrap."
(radiopassioni.it)
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