If the Laurence Olivier Awards are handed out and no one is around to hear them, do they make a noise? That thought kept occurring to me during the 34th annual gong-giving knees-up March 8, a great evening that will remain the largely exclusive preserve of those who were there. Some of those involved were perfectly happy not to have the inevitable tension inbuilt at such occasions broadcast for all to see. “It doesn’t feel like a televised event,” Steven Hoggett, the somewhat surprising winner of best theater choreographer for the night’s big winner, Black Watch, told me in the Great Room of the Grosvenor House, immediately following the ceremony, “so it has its own integrity. As [best actor winner] Derek Jacobi put it, it only happens in this room: we were here; we saw it.”
And that is so. Whereas the Oliviers were once televised to BBC audiences who numbered in the vicinity of seven million, that long ago ceased to be the case, London’s nearest equivalent to the Tonys looking on as the show was alternately truncated, delayed for transmission until a later slot (or even a subsequent night), and, eventually, dropped altogether, viewership by that point having slipped below the psychologically crucial threshold of one million. (more…)