Standing ovations in the theatre are almost meaningless. How can we still show our appreciation?

News Room
By News Room 13 Min Read

There are few things more special in the performing arts than the curtain call, when performers take their bows at the end of a show, basking in a wave of applause. It’s a final breaking of the fourth wall that forges a connection between performers and audiences — an acknowledgment of the shared, ephemeral experience that precedes it. 

It’s also a ritual unique to the performing arts. You don’t applaud at your TV screen after watching your favourite show. And unless someone has found a reliable way to communicate with the dead between the time I’m writing this column and when it’s published, good luck showing your appreciation to van Gogh or Monet when you next visit an art gallery. (Those manufactured “curtain calls” at film festivals don’t count either, with apologies to all you movie buffs.) 

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