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Hear ye, but you can鈥檛 hear me? Can this program make live theater more accessible?

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Live theater can be difficult to enjoy for those who have difficulty hearing.

Bigger theaters team up with a third party to provide captioning either through an app you have to download or a tablet provided by the theater. Sometimes playhouses will also have giant screens with captioning, too.

Smaller theaters don鈥檛 always have the resources to make that happen, though.

Timothy Kelly, a University of Maryland student working on his master鈥檚 degree saw that firsthand while working at a children鈥檚 theater in New Hampshire. Grandparents attending the shows didn鈥檛 always fare well.

But now he鈥檚 come up with a program called 鈥淐apstr鈥 that aims to remove some of the barriers for smaller venues.

鈥淧eople are really trying to make stuff accessible. The thing that we’re trying to do with Capstr is to make it so that you don’t have to download anything,鈥 said Kelly. 鈥淚t is a single QR code that gets you to a web browser. And as long as you have an internet connection, you’re done.鈥

The captioning comes across your phone via the web browser. Theaters can also color-code the words so the audience knows which character said something. It鈥檚 also possible to differentiate the text between someone who is speaking something versus singing a line. It can also be translated into other languages.

A play running at the school鈥檚 Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center has been translated from Russian into English, but audience members who struggle to hear can read the captioning in either language.

鈥淲e want there to be very little excuse for theaters to not provide captioning services for their audience members, especially when there’s only a couple of shows running that are captioned.”

Kelly described limited captioning services available only on certain days and other hurdles as “little barriers to聽entry that stack up for people.鈥

Capstr closed captioning
Any venue running Capstr still needs someone to follow the script and essentially press a button that pushes the script onto the website. (海角精品黑料/John Domen)

Any venue running Capstr still needs someone to follow the script and essentially press a button that pushes the script onto the website, which people are looking at on their phones. But it鈥檚 as simple as just pressing a button on a laptop.

He admits it鈥檚 not a perfect solution for guests 鈥 looking back and forth from phones to the stage isn鈥檛 ideal for anyone 鈥 but Kelly said his work with deaf and hard of hearing audiences in the past proved to him that they appreciate the effort to be more inclusive.

And in keeping with that theme, he鈥檚 working to make the code for the captioning program free to any theater that wants it.

鈥淲e see no reason that a future can’t exist where every show has captions available for every performance,鈥 he said.

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John Domen

John has been with 海角精品黑料 since 2016 but has spent most of his life living and working in the DMV, covering nearly every kind of story imaginable around the region. He鈥檚 twice been named Best Reporter by the Chesapeake Associated Press Broadcasters Association.聽

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