Chapter 440
Life, Once Again!
Letâs tear down the fourth wall - Ganghwan said before they began practice. The stage and the audience seats - although these two were physically correlated in space, there was an unspoken wall between the two. The wall that was put up in order to create a reality within reality; to turn a play into another truth - that was the fourth wall.
The actors were able to see the audience. The audience was also able to see the actors. However, there was an invisible wall put up between them. One that allowed both parties to see each other, yet not see each other.
That wall acted like a TV screen. The audience in the audience seats used that wall to separate themselves emotionally since they couldnât separate themselves physically. They forget about their own reality while watching through that wall, and the actors created their own reality on the other side of that impermeable wall.
âOriginally, I thought about doing comedy, but I wanted to hear a more diverse range of stories. A story about all of us, I mean. Thatâs why I decided to focus on the individuals.â
A black line was drawn on top of the whiteboard. Ganghwan drew a pretty realistic-looking stage. His drawing skills were pretty decent.
âI threw away the topic. This stage will become the audienceâs in its entirety.â
Ganghwan put a pointy crown on top of the word âaudienceâ.
âThe topic of that day will be decided by the member of the audience that comes up on stage. It might be a celebratory story, and it might be a sad story. We just need to follow along and do a short skit and then call someone from the audience to the stage.â
âWhat if no one volunteers because of embarrassment?â Sooil asked.
âWe should prepare safety measures for every play. Weâll scout one person beforehand to come up if no one in the audience is willing to come. That person will be a spy of sorts.â
âItâs all a scheme then!â
âLetâs call it an inevitable part of the play, shall we? A scheme sounds too evil.â
Ganghwan wrote âaudience firstâ on the board.
âYou have read the scripts, right? Thatâs the basic outline. However, this has more elements of improvisation so youâll need to improve your reflexes. It wonât be good for any of us if we canât follow along even after a member of the audience comes up.â
After hearing that, Maru asked,
âHow are we going to practice then?â
âWeâre going to practice the main flow together and then split into different situational contexts. For now, weâll split it into two big parts, one happy and one sad. The happy part isnât that difficult, but the problem is the sad part.â
Ganghwan told them to open the script. The three people sitting in front of the whiteboard opened the scripts on their laps.
âI think whatâs important in this play is to find out just how far we and the audience can share a pathos together. A play always appeals its strong pathos to the audience. Although people say that the actors communicate with the audience, objectively speaking, the transfer of emotions in a play is one-directional: From the actors to the audience. It is possible for the actors to be influenced by the reactions of the audience, but that does not change the roots of the play. However, itâs a completely different matter for a communicating play like the one weâre doing. Itâs bi-directional. We receive the feelings of the audience, and we transfer the emotions back in the form of a play.â
Ganghwan wrote âsadnessâ in big letters.
âBut when it comes to âsadnessâ, there is too much variation. When it comes to happiness, we can just tie everything together and express it. Even if you tie the happiness of winning the lottery and the happiness of having a fulfilling meal, it doesnât really matter. Thatâs because, from the perspective of the audience, who are the ones receiving our emotions, they donât feel much rejection. However, sadness is very picky.â
While Maru nodded, Ganghwan was writing something on the whiteboard. When the marker stopped moving, a new set of words were written on the board.
The death of a lover.
Then he put some space below and wrote: a child that lost 100 won.
After writing the two sentences, Ganghwan turned around.
âBoth of these can be classified as âsadnessâ, right? The sadness of losing a lover, and likewise, the sadness of losing money.â
âYes, I guess we can,â Sooil replied. Ganghwan pointed at Sooil.
âThatâs it. Thatâs the answer. Thatâs the nuance. âI guess we canâ. Sooil, what did you mean by that?â
âThe intensity of sadness is different between losing a loved one and losing 100 won.â
âRight. Thatâs whatâs picky about sadness. Changing examples, finding someone you love, and picking up a 100 won coin. Both of these can be classified as âhappinessâ, right?â
âYes.â
âWhen expressing both of them, would it be strange if I said âlaughing loudlyâ?â
âNo, itâs not that strange.â
âBut thatâs not the case with sadness, isnât it?â
âYes.â
Hanna, who was sitting next to the whiteboard, stood up and walked towards the fridge.
âWe should get something to drink. Oppa, catch.â
After receiving a drink thrown by Hanna, Maru looked at the board and Ganghwan again. Ganghwan took a sip before speaking,
âSadness is both inclusive and individualistic. You feel like thereâs a clear boundary, but itâs not actually like that. The death of a person and the loss of materials. Putting it like that, the two seem like different kinds of sadness since theyâre on the opposite ends of the spectrum. Well, then, from here.â
Ganghwan erased the âdeath of a loverâ and wrote âdeath of a family memberâ, and then âdeath of a company colleagueâ below that.
âWhichâs more sad between these two? Ordinarily speaking.â
âIt has to be the death of a family member.â
âItâs natural to be more sad about the death of someone comparatively closer to you, right?â
âYes,â Sooil replied as he put his empty can beside him.
âThen what about this? The death of a company colleague versus the death of a nearby supermarket owner. What if you compare these two?â
âThen I guess the death of a company colleague will feel more sad.â
âBecause youâre closer to that person?â
âYes.â
âThen what about the death of a supermarket owner and the death of a fruit market owner? Under the assumption that you are close to them equally.â
âI donât know. Shouldnât it be difficult to say which oneâs more sad?â
Ganghwan nodded.
âThe farther away the person is from your own fences, the less intense the sadness gets. To use an extreme case, think about the death of a man in some country you donât know the name of. You wouldnât even feel anything. Itâs always like that. Even if you turn on the TV right now, youâll see death tolls rising due to something. Some traffic accident killed someone, some fire caused N deaths, someone committed suicide, et cetera. Although they are all âdeathsâ in context, the sadness we receive isâ¦.â
Maru, who received Ganghwanâs gaze, spoke,
âNot that sad at all, actually. You donât even care.â
âRight. The death of a complete stranger might impact you even less than losing a 100 won coin.â
Ganghwan wrote one word on top of the words he wrote.
âSympathy. The objective of the play weâre planning to do now is to have the audience sympathize with each otherâs sadness. Of course, if the audience decides to tell a story about something good that happened to them, weâll follow along. Weâll make it sound more cheerful. However, what Iâve always been thinking about when preparing this play is the sadness of each individual.â
âThis time, youâre shooting towards the extreme minority again. Well, I guess all youâre interested in is the honest side of mankind and their taboos,â Hanna spoke while sighing.
Maru understood why Hanna sighed. When he didnât have any money in hand, Ganghwan did all sorts of plays. The story of a man who won the lottery, the story of a dad who suddenly got a child. The story of a jobless man who fell in love.
After filling his wallet with the romantic comedies that work really well in Daehak-ro, he would leave and do really depressing plays as though they were the ones that he really wanted to do. Maru still felt the chills from when he watched a video of Ganghwanâs âHuman Repaymentâ. The contents of the play were one thing, but the last scene left an incredibly bad taste in his mouth. It showed the end of a laborer who threw himself off a bridge without any signs of making a comeback, without going through any filters.
The reason that play left a bad taste was not because the main character died, but because it wasnât even sad, or worth being remembered by someone. That emptiness that didnât even become a tragedy made him think about a lot of things.
âSo thatâs why the background is a doctorâs office,â Maru said as he closed the script.
Ganghwan smiled and started erasing the board.
âIf it goes well, I think it will become quite controversial for sure, but will it go well?â Sooil asked.
He wasnât asking whether the play would be good or bad, but whether it would be successful or not. Maru wanted to know that as well. Whatever the play was going to be, this project was started in order to tell the mass public about acting just like the amateur acting class. Although he said that they were going to do happy plays as well, he was practically setting everything up so that the participating audience would tell a sad story, so he wondered if the audience would participate at all. Standing in front of complete strangers and talking about their own honest stories on stage? It might be easier if it was something that everyone could laugh about, but if it was a sad-enough story that that person would have to bite their lips just to talk about it, it wouldnât be so easy.
Also, acting in tandem with such an audience wouldnât be so easy either.
âDonât worry about the results. What matters is doing it.â
At that moment, Hanna muttered from the side.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âHey, we donât have a large budget to work with. The people from the association donât have a huge interest either. The reason we scouted you two was because oppa belongs to JA. Otherwise, he would have handed out pamphlets and be done with it. Thatâs the reason this play contains all of his desires. He can think with his dick because no one fucking cares.â
Sooil chuckled when Hanna said those words.
Normally he would be shocked when a woman said a word related to a manâs genitals, but Hanna was an exception. He was so used to it that it didnât feel weird at all.
âHanna, watch your words. Also, this will work. People these days donât have a place to talk about their worries. But weâre setting up the stage for them. Weâre urging them to talk. People will talk about what they think on the inside. In any case, letâs finish talking about the overall format and talk about the details now.â
* * *
Junmin read some news regarding the entertainment industry on a web portal while drinking some red tea. The top news was about the disbanding of the girl idol group Blue. So it was finally happening.
âLooks like Yellow Star must be having a hard time. It would be good if their agency creaks and they spit out Ahn Joohyun.â
One of the actresses he wanted to recruit for a long time was Ahn Joohyun. He regretted it so much when Yellow Star took her while he was distracted.
Next to that was an article about the president of a production company who disappeared with more than 10 billion won. He sighed when he read about this news. This had brought tremendous losses to him. Leaving aside Geunsoo, Jiseok, who was supposed to climb the ranks, had suffered a setback thanks to that. He had picked that movie after rejecting everything else, yet that went up in flames. No one could find the location of the president that committed the scam, so everyone thought that he wasnât in the country.
Junmin clicked his tongue as he scrolled down. At that moment, an article at the bottom of the screen caught his eyes. It was a short article by a nameless internet journalist. When he clicked on it, there was a familiar face, and a short article was written about it.
-Dramaâs renewal of viewing rates. Brought by a young actor?
Han Maruâs face was among the other child actors of other series. The journalist wrote that the moment of Maruâs interrogation was the moment that set the record.
âSo heâs doing his worth by himself, huh.â
Junmin faintly smiled as he drank his tea.