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Village Squire, 1978-05, Page 50P.S. Bad language and sex in the media bring out childishness I guess as usual, I must be in a small minority. There seem to be only two sides of the fence these days when .if comes to swearing, cursing and sex in television, movies and plays and I can't see eye to eye with either of them. I was in Toronto recently and stopped over to see one of the most popular plays in the city at that time. The show was called Sexual Perversity in Chicago and satirized the modern singles bar, easy sex r of the young "swingers" of today. The play has some valid points to make and is very funny in many places. The Toronto audience seemed to eat it up but I quivered when I thought of the reaction to the play that would be given by local audiences. There are some who would argue that the Toronto audience was very sophisticat- ed which is a way of saying that those commentors themselves are sophisticated and somehow a little better than the people outside of the city who wouldn't enjoy such a show. Frankly, as I sat through the show I wondered just how sophisticated they were. I figured either the rest of the audience had a lot of hangups or I did. For while, as I say, the show did have some valid points to make, most of the humour seemed to be based on the characters using language and talking about subjects they would normally not talk about on stage. thus a character would use a particularly juicy four-letter word and nearly everyone would roll in the aisle. This is sophistication? It reminds me more of a bunch of public school kids who take delight in using the latest spurious additions to their vocabulary on each other and think it hilarious. It reminded me of kids finding a copy of Lady Chatterly's Lover on the library bookshelf and huddling in the corner snickering at the sexy parts. If the audience . is so sophisticated, so mature, why were they . still acting like children? As a writer 1 can't have much admiration for writers who have to use such language. Sure 1 know all about expressing reality PG. 48. VILLAGE SQUIRE/MAY 1978. and have nothing against the words per se. 1 know it sounds pretty phoney to have a character who is furious at someone say "ah heck" when ninety per cent of the people in the audience would say "oh hell". In context, "bad" language isn't bad at all. But too many writers, directors and actors to my way of thinking resort to easy laughs, or easy tensions with the use of rough language. A certain portion of the audience is going to titter if you use a four letter word, not because it's really funny. but because they haven't grown up enough to have gotten beyond thinking four letter words are funny. Artists talk about any move to clean up their act as a move against artistic integrity. Frankly, I don't think using rough language for cheap laughs or effects has much artistic integrity. It's a crutch. It's a lot easier to use them then it is to work hard to craft a scene that is genuinely -effective. Those who resort to gratuitous foul language or sex are taking the easy way out. There is very little integrity to taking the easy way out. On the other hand, however, you have the people who get too easily offended by such things. A recent performance in the area of the Newfoundland comedy troupe Codco had some people up in arms. Some just complained. Some left at intermission. Some vowed never again to darken the door of the theatre that hosted the group. It's a constant headache for producers in Western Ontario. I know. I've been one. In nearly all the smaller communities in the fall and winter months, theatre means imported touring companies. Often it is impossible to know just what the show is about, especially since most of the companies touring are performing new works, for which no published script is available. I remember one group I was responsible for booking a few years back which I asked b,efore hand if there was anything in the show likely to upset people. They said very confidently that there was not. When the show actually was performed on stage, however, some - regular patrons of the theatre swore they'd never come back after seeing such "filth". And guess who got the blame. Of course while some people complain loudly about such antics on stage, others love it, and so a producer just can't win. You can't win anyway because nearly any show booked is liable to have something objectionable to someone in it. And yet there are surprises. For instance when Theatre Passe Muraille toured its production of Horsburgh, the story of Rev. Russel Horsburgh a couple of years ago with Don Harron as the lead, there was a good deal of apprehension on the part of hosting organizations. After all, it was a touchy subject made more touchy in Western Ontario because Horsburgh was a native of the Wingham area in the northern part of the region and the famous scandal was at Chatham in the southern end of the region. There was even a stylized bit of sex in the show. Yet the verdict from most of the audience seemed to be that the show was well and tastefully handled. People who do not like cursing, swearing and sex on stage or screen have every right to object. They have every right to stay home or go home. Yet they are sometimes as immature as those who giggle at the subjects in their reactions to such things. They may curse and swear at their neighbours, their wives or their dogs. but are scandalized to hear the same words on stage. They may join heartily in the telling of smutty jokes among a small group of friends, but think it horrid on stage. They pretend to be innocent being corrupted by the antics put before them by actors but at the same time many of the things they complain about are obscure double entendres what anyone with a virginal thought process wouldn't see as anything but clean. It seems to me that both sides of this argument put on a "more mature than thou" cloak in the discussion. It seems to me that both sides could stand to grow up a little more. Then if the smug "sophisti- cates" learned they couldn't get a rise out of the "moralists" every time a four letter word was used then the whole problem would soon disappear. It wouldn't be fun anymore. HflYOflE IflTERESTED in starting a weavers and spinners guild Phone 887-9253 or 523-4294 EEEEEEEEEEEEE41