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Introduction to drama. Important terms (QUIZ ON FEB 10-11). What is a play?. Play: A story acted out live and onstage Major types of plays: Comedy Tragedy Modern (mixture of comedy and tragedy, usually). comedy. Comedy: a play that ends happily
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Introduction to drama Important terms(QUIZ ON FEB 10-11)
What is a play? • Play: A story acted out live and onstage • Major types of plays: • Comedy • Tragedy • Modern(mixture of comedy and tragedy, usually)
comedy • Comedy: a play that ends happily • Characters in Comedy: Central characters can be from any class, including servants. They almost always have flaws, but they usually discover the error of their ways (unlike in tragedies). • Conflicts in Comedy: Conflicts in comedies are almost always romantic in nature—obstacle is always overcome in comedies—obstacles are often ridiculous
TRAGEDY • Tragedy: serious and important actions that end unhappily (topics like fate, life, and death) • Tragic Heroes:Central character usually a noble figure who has a personal failing that leads to downfall • Tragic Flaw:Imperfections that lead otherwise noble hero to make choices leading to tragic end (i.e. pride, ambition, passion, jealousy, etc.)
Dramatic elements (continued) • Script: The text of a play (includes spoken words and stage directions) • Stage Directions: Describe the appearance of the stage, as well as how the characters move and speak on the stage—suggestions rather than demands
SCENE 1- DAY 6 Sound of a bicycle bell: DING DING! DING DING! [Lights up on a man and a woman, riding bicycles, side by side, facing the audience. The woman wears a knee brace and rides a road bike; the man rides a mountain bike. They are equipped for a long ride-- helmets, CamelBaks, water bottles, padded bicycle shorts. They've been on these bikes for a while and it shows. They pedal dutifully withoutinterruption. The woman sucks the life out of her water bottle. The man watches her adoringly.] MAN: How’s your knee? WOMAN: I’m thinking it would hurt less if you just wailed on it with a sledgehammer. MAN: Next pit stop we’ll try that instead of ice. WOMAN: Sounds like a plan. Unless you can’t find a sledgehammer. In that case we’ll just go with the ice. MAN: Agreed. (beat) We’re almost there. It’s almost over. In thirty more miles we’ll be there and we’ll be... WOMAN: Done. The longest thirty miles of my life. I’m in misery. (she looks at him) Now would be a good time to make me laugh. MAN: (beat) Marry me. WOMAN: (beat) That’s not funny. Try again.
Elements of staging • Staging: Includes everything that is part of a play but is not part of the written script • Stage: Grand or small in size. In front of the audience or in the center. • Set: Realistic or minimal—transforms stage into setting
Stages Left: Thrust Stage Right: Black Box
Left: Arena Stage Right: Proscenium Stage
Elements of staging • Lighting: Shakespeare’s plays were in outdoor natural lighting—today, most plays are performed indoors and require artificial lighting (including colored lighting) • Costumes and Props: Elaborate or minimal—work with sets and lights to support the action and create the appropriate mood.
Performance • Plays are meant to be performed • Performance Process Stage DirectionsPlaywright describes setting and actions InterpretationActors, directors, and designers interpret these directions creatively PerformanceAudience experiences the story through the actors’ speech and actions
speaking • Dialogue: Conversation between characters • Monologue: Long speech by one character to another character/ other characters • Soliloquy: Speech by one character alone onstage to himself/herself or to audience "To Be or Not to Be“ • Aside: A comment only the audience is supposed to hear
Reading Shakespeare aloud • End-stopped Line: Has final punctuation at the end of the line • Run-on Line: Has no final punctuation at the end of the line—NO PAUSE! • Archaic: Used to describe words (or particular meanings of words) that have disappeared from common use (examples: “hap,” “anon,” “mark,” etc.).
Application Questions Think of a play you have seen (The Odyssey if you went with us!) • Describe the stage/set. Was the setting realistic? How? Why or why not? • Describe the actors’ costumes. Why do you think they wore these costumes? • Evaluate the dialogue. Was it serious or humorous? Clear? Convincing? ANALYSIS: What was the effect of #1-3 on the audience?
Paraphrase the words into your own words—to help with this, read No Fear Shakespeare to see how others paraphrase
Movies versus plays • Plays—long time watching subtle development of conflicts among small group of people in one setting • Movies—visual medium that whisks us from place to place • Delight the eye rather than the ear • Theater is more a medium of words Zeffirelli Luhrmann
Background to Romeo and Juliet • Written about 1595 • Probably his 13th play • Idea taken from “The Tragical History of Romeo and Juliet,” a poem by Arthur Brooke (1562) • Unlike his other tragedies, Shakespeare allows chance, or fate, to determine the destiny of the hero and heroine (Romeo and Juliet)—and not necessarily their tragic flaws.
Prologue translation activity (paraphrase) • With a partner, you will paraphrase the prologue of Romeo and Juliet. • Read the prologue in Elizabethan English. • Decide with your partner what each line would read like in today’s language. Try your best to maintain the specific meaning! • Decide on the five most important details. Be prepared to share with the class