Reduce the lag time between acts for a fast-paced show.
Eliminate every second that is unnecessary or boring. The other night, our international student from Korea asked us, his host parents to attend his event. He is the student planner of a talent show at his college. As responsible, caring, host parents, we attended. This is a two hour talent show with ten musical acts and a comedian emcee.
Scene:
- Room 100′ across and 70′ deep with a wide built in stage.
- Stage doesn’t have curtains to open and close, just a backdrop, no side wings or backstage
- 20 par can lights mounted on the ceiling on a large “U shaped” track
- Theatre style seating with 10 chairs in a row, five rows deep and 2 sets of them, 100 people
This is a huge room for an audience of 100.
What are talent shows, auditions and auctions notorious for? Guesses? Getting behind schedule. Well, I don’t know the schedule for this event, but if you took out all the wasted time in between acts, then sold this time to a busy person, you would be rich.
We were impressed with the talent. I just don’t understand the hairdos, but then again I am an 80’s child from the land of a million hair products.

Eliminate the wasted time – Identify the unnecessary and boring bits.
The emcee announced the next act, then steps off the stage. Meanwhile the audience stares at an empty stage. The acts take a long walk and gathered their items, then eventually got on to the stage. As an entertainer, you need the enthusiasm of the crowd to hype you up, not the silence of the library scene. Your introduction has already been said and bored eyes are glazing waiting for the act to start. You are setting up your set, such as arranging the chairs, music stand, microphone placement, and get settled. The audience sits another 1-3 minutes. You can feel that the audience is getting ancy. You are a bit stressed and you are not thinking straight because you are under a microscope as you set up. You usually are behind the stage, but this time everyone is staring. The paid emcee, says your acts name again from off stage and you are on.
How interesting is it to see a band get set up? Not interesting, unless they are famous. By the tenth time of setting up, the musician better be worth it. Because the set up is boring this also puts more pressure on the audience to be better because the audience has to wait.
This is a wasted 4 minutes of our lives multiplied by 6 acts, 24 minutes. I could have updated Twitter, sent 11 texts, read facebook updates, booked a flight, downloaded and audio book, referred 2 linkedins, and had extra time to be bored. We left after wasting the almost half an hour on noting. Multiply this ten times (40 minutes) and then add the judges tallied time, which is always painstakingly long, so long, that we left.
Banish Boredom
Entry and Exit
Even though this is an amateur show, you still want to make the most of it.
- Orientation/dress rehearsal – make sure every knows the process to get on and off the stage
- Decide the official entrance and exit of the stage, for example, enter on the left side of the stage , exit on the right side of the stage
- Tell your talent to be “on deck” ready to step on to stage the moment they are announced
- Define “deck” (since you don’t have a stage curtains or a backstage) make sure this location is the closest area to get on stage without being a distraction to the current act
Emcee
The role of the emcee is to warm up the crowd, guide the crowd, choral their attention and to keep the show moving, eliminate drag and make your talent look good.
The comedian emcee was relatively appropriate for the college age crowd and had his stories and bits. However, I think the placement for his monologues should have been delivered while waiting for the acts to show up on stage and set up. Extra time was inserted for him to mess around with the crowd adding more time to the program. His entertainment value, in my opinion was not worth the extra time. These bits would have been great while serving the purpose of stalling while the act gets ready.
Emcee Solution
To give the acts more attention, a bigger entrance and more energy, the emcee should remain on the stage while the acts are setting up and until they are ready to perform. The emcee should take the attention of the crowd away from the behind the scenes set up.
While the act walks on, the emcee can give background on the act.
- How did they get started?
- How did they meet?
- Tell the story behind their name
- Why they chose this particular act?
This is all background the audience may find interesting and builds the credibility of the talent. When the act is just about ready, they can signal the emcee to do the official introduction and pull up the momentum.
Your emcee should be prepared to improv when…
- Technical difficulties occur
- Set -up takes a long time
- The next act can’t be found
- The act was awful, but you need to say something to make them look good
- The show is behind schedule and need to get back on track
- You need to ease the tension of the crowd is something made them upset
The emcee should have an arsenal of 30 sec, 1-10 minute bits to fill, transition and or energize the crowd. He/she should do research on the acts so he/she can be prepared to add interest to each act.
Floor Plan
I would have put the stage in the center of the room and the chairs in a u-shape. The room was twice as big as it needed to be. The audience was 5 rows deep and set 10′ back from the stage. The last row was about 30′ from the action. A front row seat for a concert can be much more interactive and engaging. Here is an alternative plan, I would have done.

- Take the stage to the ground. The stage is important for large crowds, unlike this one. They knew ahead of time the ball park of attendance. We can give better visibility and front seats to more people. The worst seat in the house is 3rd row and about 15′.
- The seats are 2 and 3 rows deep. This U-shape format will provide more energy for the performers and the audience. The audience can see each other, which can also be entertaining.
- The up-close seating allows the audience to see the sweat roll off the forehead, to see the intense passion in the singers eyes, and be in earshot of the band cues.
- The lights are already positioned to highlight this area and make this community college talent show feel like a high ticket price, theatre in the round performance.
All and all, the talent was impressive. The lighting and sound was great. The seating was fine. But making these changes would take this community college talent night run by students, seem like a funky, professional, off-broadway, interactive, night club lounge feel. None of these changes would take any money to do and would not take any more labor.
These modifications are a win-win for all.










Feeding the reindeer
Cool Factoid
If you look at this senior dude here with the pink mushroom looking globs around his antlers, he is sporting last years new color palette of chocolate and pink colors. He would not tell me how he grew this unique fashion statement, perhaps like a magician he doesn’t want to share his secrets.
Santa’s Lady Crew


