Participate or keep it quiet? Recent sing-alongs tap into larger
discussion on moviegoing etiquette
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[January 09, 2025]
By CURTIS YEE
WASHINGTON (AP) — As movie theaters worked to entice Americans back into
seats after COVID-19 lockdowns and labor strikes, the industry marketed
blockbuster films like " Wicked ” and the dueling releases of “ Barbie ”
and “ Oppenheimer ” as no less than cultural events.
But when certain movies become “events” unto themselves, sometimes
different behavior accompanies them.
During the theatrical run of “ Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour ” last fall,
fans danced and belted lyrics in the theaters, sharing their glee on
social media. Last year, fans at early screenings of “ Wicked ” did the
same, to the chagrin of other moviegoers. One video of a woman dressed
as Glinda the Good Witch racked up over a million views on TikTok and
beyond for announcing to her theater, “I’m here to hear Cynthia and
Ariana sing, not you.”
After a period of growing accustomed to watching movies only from the
comforts of home, Americans have been slowly returning to theaters
following COVID-19 lockdowns. Along the way, as attendance spikes, the
question of how to behave as part of a moviegoing audience has become a
topic of passionate online debate.
When asked whether it’s appropriate for fans to sing in the theater,
“Wicked” star Cynthia Erivo, who plays Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the
West, told NBC that she thinks the practice is “ wonderful ” and that
“it’s time for everyone else to join in.” Dwayne Johnson, who stars as
Maui in “Moana 2,” told the BBC that theatergoers who have spent their
“hard earned money for a ticket” should be able to sing.
Online backlash was swift, with one user retorting, “I paid my
hard-earned money for a ticket too and I don’t wanna hear y’all
attempting to sing so what now.”
It all circles around two questions that, like anything else in the
culture, are constantly evolving: When you’re seeing a movie in a
theater, how should you behave? And when can a viewer become a
participant?
Movie sing-alongs are a theater tradition
Actual in-person disruptions at movie theaters appear minimal.
Representatives from Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, a prominent chain known
for diverse film screenings and food service, and ACX Cinemas, a
family-owned chain based in the Midwest, both say they’ve experienced
nothing major.
The instinct to join in is hardly new. “Sing-along screenings have been
a principal part of moviegoing going back over 100 years," says Ross
Melnick, a professor of film and media studies at the University of
California, Santa Barbara. But singing, he says, typically occurs in
“designated sing-along environments where it is clear that there’s a
collective performance of the audience.”
According to Esther Morgan-Ellis, author of “Everybody Sing!: Community
Singing in the American Picture Palace,” American film screenings in the
late 1920s and early 1930s were often preceded by sing-alongs. An
organist would perform three or four popular songs and audiences were
encouraged to join in, often guided by lyrics projected onto the screen.
In other cases, the sing-along would be coupled with a short film that
included lyrics and a bouncing, on-screen ball that would hop across the
words to help audiences keep tempo.
While singing has long been common, other behaviors were once hotly
debated. When movies were a new medium, Americans quarreled over not
just the content of the films themselves but the venue at which people
viewed them. Was the dark room a hotbed for vice and immoral behavior?
Should films be screened with the lights turned up? Should talking be
allowed or forbidden? And, of course, there was segregation; movie
theaters were not fully integrated until the passage of the 1964 Civil
Rights Act.
“We have never been a monolithic society. Not ever, and increasingly so
now,” Melnick says. “You can tell so much about America by looking at
what’s going on in its movie theaters.”
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A collection bucket and cup for "Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour" film
is sold at Regal Cinemas, Oct. 13, 2023, in Lynchburg, Va. (Paige
Dingler/The News & Advance via AP, File)
In 1944, MGM, the film studio that
had produced "The Wizard of Oz” just five years prior, released a
short film titled “ Movie Pests ” that warned moviegoers against
engaging in disruptive behavior. Some of the film’s concerns —
sticking gum under chairs, removing shoes — are still considered no-gos
today. But the short also showcased etiquette of another era, such
as removing jackets in the lobby and using the hat rack under your
chair.
Today, acts of participation can be more ad hoc.
One Ariana Grande fan account started an online firestorm after
posting on X that users should share photos they’d taken of their
favorite scenes from “Wicked.” While some commented and posted their
own photos, others responded with snarky remarks. One clap-back came
from the Alamo Drafthouse account, which retorted, “Or, don’t do
that.” The theater chain has a no-talking or texting policy, and
violators are ejected after one warning.
Chaya Rosenthal, Alamo Drafthouse's chief marketing officer, said
the policy "is all about respect — respecting the films, the
filmmakers and fellow moviegoers who paid for a ticket who deserve
an immersive experience.”
Theaters experiment with giving viewers what they want
To allow visitors to choose their preferred viewing experience,
theaters have offered special sing-along showings of “Wicked.” The
Main Cinema in Minneapolis declared screenings on Mondays (and
“Mondays only”) as singing-friendly. Universal Pictures, which
produced “Wicked,” began holding special sing-along screenings of
the film starting on Christmas Day.
When fans of Taylor Swift caused a ruckus in 2023 by dancing and
singing along during screenings of “ Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour,”
Michael Barstow, the executive vice president of ACX Cinemas, saw
the hoopla not as a nuisance but part of the draw.
“The reason why they paid money and went and saw that inside movie
theaters was to have a dance party with other people,” Barstow says.
“That’s something we should lean into and embrace and try not to be
too much of the fun police in those auditoriums.”
To draw people back to the theater, movie distributors and theater
owners have expanded the types of experiences they offer. ACX
Cinemas hired actors to dress as characters from “Wicked” and
“Moana” to take photos with visitors and hosted a themed brunch at
its affiliate restaurant. Theaters have begun offering slates of
themed popcorn buckets to accompany tentpole films — sandworm-shaped
buckets for “Dune 2” and gothic coffins for “Nosferatu.”
Even before pandemic lockdowns, theaters were upgrading sturdy
plastic chairs to comfy leather recliners, and waiters at bespoke
theaters began offering seat-side dining service (often at the cost
of interrupting viewers to hand them the bill).
Alamo Drafthouse hosts “movie party” events where interaction is
encouraged and its strict no-phone policy is void. Attendees at a
special “ Magic Mike XXL ” screening were given fake money to throw
at the screen, and visitors were encouraged to dress in regency garb
for tea party screenings of movies like “ Pride and Prejudice ” and
“ Emma. "
And though unique theater experiences may be rising in notoriety,
decades of late-night screenings of “ The Room ” and “ The Rocky
Horror Picture Show ” have enticed devotees to adopt unorthodox
viewing practices. Longtime viewers gather at regular screenings to
shout synchronized snark, toss items at the screen and even act out
the movie.
“It’s really hard, what we all do, especially coming out of the last
four years,” Barstow says. “The fun part is, all gloves are off as
far as being creative and trying things. And that’s exciting.”
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