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Scenario:

I recently moved over to a new Plex server capable of hardware transcoding h265 HDR 4K files. As part of the migration, I consolidated my libraries - instead of separate 1080 and 4K libraries, I combined them. This works well for Plex and my external users, as Plex automatically picks the 1080 copy for remote playback and/or transcoding, but the user can choose the 4K version if they want and my server has the horsepower and bandwidth to deliver it.

I have several media in different versions. These will be different codecs, different cuts of movies etc. All I currently see when clicking play version is bitrate and resolution. It would be great to see other things such as duration, codec, languages included, etc.

Hey, as the title says I am wondering how I reset the version I have selected for a movie in infuse? When I have multiple versions of a movie in my library and I press play infuse will ask which version I want to play. When I want to rewatch the movie, perhaps now in 4K I no longer get offered to select a version and I cannot find anywhere on the movie details page to select a version. Am I missing where this is and is there anyway to reset it? Marking the movie as unwatched does not do anything.

Greetings everyone! I hope you are all enjoying your summer. I'm looking for any information you have on scripts for A Christmas Carol. I'm thinking about producing it this year at the high school I work at but it seems like there are HUNDREDS of options when it comes to scripts/versions of the show! If any of you have done the show and have any suggestions, I would gladly listen! Scripts seem to range from 5 actors to 50 or more, there are musical versions, radio versions, hokey takes on the story. I'm looking for a play (possibly with singing but not a full musical) for maybe around 12-20 people. Any help is appreciated!

The Doris Baisley (Dramatists Play Service) version (which I have done twice), is a lot of fun. Has about 20 - 25 people and doable for HS and MS. It starts out as a troop of actors deciding to produce a play. The stage manager become Scrooge. You can go minimal or over the top! We built a raked stage on top of our stage (leaving the apron level) with a large box up center. The actors (a motley crew to be sure) poured out of the box, changed into their character for the play right on stage, and at the end, went back in the box! The box doubled as scrooge's bed (we added four poles as bedposts, when needed). For the ghost flying, we had a 2 sided ladder painted black which Scrooge climbed up (the ghost above him on the other side), and on a black stage (follow spot on ghost and scrooge), the stage crew, dressed in black, pulled the ladder (on wheels) around the apron. It was an amazing "flying" effect, getting us to the next location.

I love the Brian Way version--very close to Dickens' novel and easy to stage. Flexible casting also. You might also consider creating your own with your students. I did it this past year with Alice in Wonderland for the sesquicentennial. Like Dickens--no copyright issues--both in public domain. We read the novel together--listened to an unabridged audio version read by Jim Dale-- and then I broke the cast up into groups of three and gave them each a chapter to dramatize. They were not allowed to use any of their own words--just what Carroll had written for the characters to say. They were limited to four pages maximum in order to keep the play within manageable time limits, but they could "negotiate" with other groups if they didn't need the full four pages. Didn't know how it would work, but it was amazingly easy and the resulting scrip was amazing! We then came up with staging ideas together. It really was a wonderfully exciting artistic experience for everyone. 


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Ron Parker

Appleton WI

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  Original Message Original Message:

Sent: 07-05-2015 09:01

From: Shane Valle

Subject: A Christmas Carol - Which Script/Version?



The big stage musical version is from MTI. But I have done Carol many times with a script adaptation I did myself. You can use as many people as you want. My version begins with three students who are studying the book in school and one of them is a bah hum bug and hasn't read the material. They explain some of the circumstances about the scenes as the play progresses. The scenes from the Book take over and are unfurled on stage. I have used traditional Christmas Carols interspersed in the work. I have done it with an entire live choir to the actors on stage singing to the use of canned music. that decision is based on the number of students and their talent level. I have also done dancing and again that is talent and cast driven. Carol is a very easy script to adapt as it is written with much dialogue and clear divisions of scenes. ff782bc1db

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