The National Theatre's 50th anniversary gala (televised live and streamed to cinemas - I wasn't there, alas) was a tremendous celebration of a great achievement. A highlight for me (surprisingly so - I certainly wasn't expecting it to be) was the nativity scene from the mediaevil Mystery Plays: really moving in its simplicity and (like everything else) beautifully staged with great economy.
One huge oddity was the TV subtitling. Every instance of the word which perhaps I should render here as f*ck - and there were a lot of them - was transformed, astonishingly, to lock. The result was breathtakingly ludicrous, especially in the extract from Jerry Springer the Opera:
What the lock, what the lock, what the locking, locking lock?
The spoken (and sung) word wasn't shirked in any way: there was no bleeping or blurring. Pathetic: we were allowed to hear it but not read it? Are the deaf and the hearing-impaired so much more sensitive than the rest of the population that they have to be protected from the awful impact of bad language, and in a serious celebration of the power of the theatre and the fought-for freedom of dramatic expression to boot? What the lock is that all about? I can imagine - no, I don't need to imagine, I know - exactly what Kenneth Tynan would have said.
One huge oddity was the TV subtitling. Every instance of the word which perhaps I should render here as f*ck - and there were a lot of them - was transformed, astonishingly, to lock. The result was breathtakingly ludicrous, especially in the extract from Jerry Springer the Opera:
What the lock, what the lock, what the locking, locking lock?
The spoken (and sung) word wasn't shirked in any way: there was no bleeping or blurring. Pathetic: we were allowed to hear it but not read it? Are the deaf and the hearing-impaired so much more sensitive than the rest of the population that they have to be protected from the awful impact of bad language, and in a serious celebration of the power of the theatre and the fought-for freedom of dramatic expression to boot? What the lock is that all about? I can imagine - no, I don't need to imagine, I know - exactly what Kenneth Tynan would have said.
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