"We can compare classical chess and rapid chess with theatre and cinema - some actors don't like the latter and prefer to work in the theatre"
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Spassky is doing something sly here: he’s dodging a tedious argument about “real chess” by reframing it as an argument about mediums, not morals. Classical chess, like theatre, rewards endurance, preparation, and a kind of live-wire tension that builds in real time. Rapid chess, like cinema, compresses that experience into something sharper and more reproducible, where pacing is engineered and the margin for improvisation is different. The comparison flatters both forms without pretending they’re the same craft.
The subtext is about identity and legitimacy. In chess culture, faster time controls often get treated as a dilution: spectacle over substance, clicks over craft. Spassky refuses the purity test. Some actors don’t like film; that doesn’t make film fake, it makes preference personal. He’s also implying that skill doesn’t transfer cleanly. A great stage actor can look oversized on camera; a great classical player can look strangely mortal when the clock becomes the main antagonist. Rapid doesn’t merely shorten thinking time; it changes what “thinking” even looks like, turning judgment, intuition, and nerve into the starring roles.
Context matters: Spassky is a classical-era icon, a World Champion shaped by long-form battles and Soviet seriousness, watching the game’s center of gravity shift toward television-friendly speed. His metaphor carries a quiet acceptance: modern audiences will keep buying tickets for cinema. The theatre still matters, but it can’t demand to be the only art in town.
The subtext is about identity and legitimacy. In chess culture, faster time controls often get treated as a dilution: spectacle over substance, clicks over craft. Spassky refuses the purity test. Some actors don’t like film; that doesn’t make film fake, it makes preference personal. He’s also implying that skill doesn’t transfer cleanly. A great stage actor can look oversized on camera; a great classical player can look strangely mortal when the clock becomes the main antagonist. Rapid doesn’t merely shorten thinking time; it changes what “thinking” even looks like, turning judgment, intuition, and nerve into the starring roles.
Context matters: Spassky is a classical-era icon, a World Champion shaped by long-form battles and Soviet seriousness, watching the game’s center of gravity shift toward television-friendly speed. His metaphor carries a quiet acceptance: modern audiences will keep buying tickets for cinema. The theatre still matters, but it can’t demand to be the only art in town.
Quote Details
| Topic | Art |
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