“Wicked” Good Time

Date: January 6, 2010

On Stage TDF Stages

By Daniel Gillen

Based on my experience at the musical

Wicked

, audio description may help increase the visually-impaired community's interest in largely visual forms of entertainment.  This is especially true of musical theatre. The music may be pleasing and agreeable to the ears of one with or without vision, but when there is no dialogue, those without vision can only know what is occurring with some form of audio description.

When I attended the audio-described performance of

Wicked

on November 11, 2009, my fellow students at the Lighthouse Music School and I were able to take in nearly as much information (and experience as much enjoyment) as the sighted audience around us.

Compared to the audio description used in movie theatres, the system used at the

Wicked

performance was reliable in terms of the frequent descriptions of the characters' movements on stage, and each audio description receiver was ergonomic for the person using it.  When I experienced audio description in movie theatres, the receivers did not always work, the narration was constantly being drowned out by the sound from the movie, and the descriptions were not reliable.  (Both the movie theatre system and the one used at the performance of

Wicked

, however, were almost equally user friendly.)

I was most pleased with the description that preceded the performance of

Wicked

. The interpretation of how the stage and set were arranged gave a clear idea of how the characters were going to move as the show progressed.  Overall, the descriptions were well thought out, and the techniques could probably be applied to other musicals and plays.

As a person who is totally blind, I have unsurprisingly been to few Broadway shows.  I was never that interested in theatre, so I would only attend performances on school trips or when I had specifically been invited.  My first-ever Broadway theatre experience occurred in the fifth grade, on a class trip to

Fiddler on the Roof

.  I was able to enjoy the music, though I could never make out the actual storyline.  Audio description helped me understand

Wicked

, however, as did reading a synopsis of the story.  When the audio description came, the events being described made sense according to my preliminary familiarization with the plot.

All in all, the experience was wonderfully dramatic and awe-inspiring.

Daniel Gillen

is a sophmore at the Filomen M. D'Agostino Greenberg Music School at Lighthouse International.