Bang, Bang You're Dead!

A Play by William Mastrosimone

NOTES FROM THE DIRECTOR

by Michael Fisher, director of the premiere production
Theatre Director, Thurston High School
Updated: June, 2005

I don't usually like director's notes much because they're mostly about a production that I can't relate to because I wasn't there. Also, they tend to be a bit restrictive and prescribe a way rather than helping me find my own way. Hopefully, I can help out rather than get in your way because, ultimately, as long as you are true to the intentions of this play, it's not so important how you do this play, but that you do it.

After the shooting at our school in May, 1998, we wanted desperately to "do something" – to do something that would make it better. And not just for us, but so no one else would have to go through the agony of a school shooting. We wanted to do something that would inspire dialogue before others ended up the way we were. We got involved with this production because of our firm belief that this show does just that. It speaks to kids - especially kids who might have violent tendencies and seeks to put them on the other side of violence. The side that's after the retribution, after the self-indulgence, after the spontaneous combustion and leaves them in the aftermath of regret, pain, and loss.

Now, doesn't this just sound like a "fun" play!? Actually, it should be because teenagers are fun people - they make us laugh and that's what makes the loss so hard to bear. If you follow that thinking, I think the play works even as a staged reading. When we did the play, we dressed it up with light changes, an underscore, wireless mics, and a lot of externals that merely enhance the point, but I don't believe are necessary to make it. The script does much of the work for you, what the director and the actors need to do is to give it a sincere voice, pay attention to the rhythms, and not get so caught up in it that it becomes mawkish. Here are some suggestions that might be helpful: