Richard Foreman quotes:

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  • I acted in junior high in the junior high school group, and then when I got into senior high I was, you know, the main actor of the senior high school.

  • I was enchanted by the escape into that meticulous world that seemed real yet not... well, it seemed not real, but very detailed and meticulous, bizarre.

  • From that time through the time I was a New Dramatist, when I was something like twenty-two, I saw absolutely everything in New York. Absolutely everything.

  • So I decided to start writing plays, and went to Yale.

  • I've been trying to figure out for at least the last 10 years how to force myself into something more risky.

  • My play is the ultimate expression of my feeling of the twilight of Western civilization.

  • I'm there to make a kind of theatrical music that is desperately missing in my life. And if other people don't like it, I'm very unhappy, but I can't do anything about that.

  • It's true, I don't like the real world.

  • There is no work of art that has ever been made that is absolutely truthful about life.

  • One does not devote one's life in art to shock an audience.

  • Quite the opposite. I might fall on my face, but I feel born again.

  • As I told you, from the time I was fifteen, I thought the theater was too much involved with actors trying to make the audience love them, being over emotional.

  • All the dialogue on tape, and we'd play the tape in performance. Then I thought it'd be interesting if the actor's repeated what they heard on the tape, but at a slower speed, so we'd get a web of language.

  • If I wasn't in the theater, I would be a hermit.

  • Now, when I started my theater, the modus operandi was having the actors stare right into the audience.

  • You know, actually, I went to Yale because I wanted to stay out of the army.

  • Because even at the age of fifteen, I used to go see all the Broadway shows and feel that they were sentimental, that they were pandering to the audience and trying to manipulate the audience. I had no use for practically any of the shows that were hits.

  • I realized that I had to be honest about where I was, where I was coming from, and what I was trying to do.

  • Which implies that the real issue in art is the audience's response. Now I claim that when I make things, I don't care about the audience's response, I'm making them for myself. But I'm making them for myself as audience, because I want to wake myself up.

  • I come from a tradition of Western culture, in which the ideal (my ideal) was the complex, dense, and 'cathedral-like' structure of the highly educated and articulate personality--a man or woman who carried inside themselves a personally constructed and unique version of the entire heritage of the West. [But now] I see within us all (myself included) there placement of complex inner density with a new kind of self--evolving under the pressure of information overload and the technology of the 'instantly available.'

  • Understand--it ALWAYS makes sense. Sense can't be avoided. If it first seems to be non-sense, wait: roots will reveal themselves.

  • What really happened was one day I decided to write a new kind of play.

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