Perhaps you’ve heard about the Broadway ritual of “dimming the lights.”
For over 100 years, and only on very rare occasions, an informal committee of the Broadway League has been marking the passing of members of the acting and directing pantheon by briefly and simultaneously dimming the lights of every Broadway theater.
Robert Simonson, in the September 12, 2010 issue of Playbill, described the ritual:
I’ve thought a lot about his work in the last few days and keep coming back to the idea of peculiarity.
Far too often, rather than relishing uniqueness and idiosyncrasy, we stigmatize difference with words like “peculiar.” We ridicule.
Hoffman, though, could excavate the quintessentially human characteristics in any outsider, revealing that supposedly peculiar characters were actually filled with the same fears and anxieties we all share.
Seeing him work made us more compassionate, more aware of our collective fragility.
Dim the lights.