Showing posts with label Concert Hall Etiquette. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Concert Hall Etiquette. Show all posts

Friday, April 10, 2020

Music Hall Etiquette

Don’t allow an uninterested or very young child to create an ongoing audible or visible distraction... — photo source, Pinterest 


Dos and Don’ts
Here’s how novice concertgoers can enjoy a concert without disturbing others’ enjoyment:
  • Do bring cough drops or lozenges if you anticipate an onslaught of throat-clearing, but 
  • DON'T bring the kind that are wrapped in cellophane, or paper that has to be ripped. 
  • Do bring a quiet timepiece or none at all but 
  • DON'T bring a watch that beeps unless you are absolutely certain it won't.
  • Do bring children to events in the arts: They are its future, but 
  • DON'T allow an uninterested or very young child to create an ongoing audible or visible distraction. 
  • Do react: You have every right to express your feelings about a concert at the appropriate interval. Applause at the end of a complete work or a set of short pieces is the norm. (Reaction between movements of a symphony may raise a few eyebrows; however, honest responses are fine at any time when they won't lessen enjoyment of others or interrupt the continuity of the performance.) 
  • Don't feel that silence or even honest expressions of displeasure are unreasonable when they are deserved, but 
  • DON'T talk during the show. Do read program notes before the concert or play. You can follow texts to vocal works during a performance, but 
  • DON'T shuffle the pages. And don't worry so much about applauding or laughing at the theater. Both are expected during a play. – By Robert V. Palmer, Gannett News Service, 1989


Etiquette  Enthusiast, Maura J Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiqipedia©️ Etiquette Encyclopedia