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The Moscow Art Theatre. By Krystle Mathis and Aaliyah Scoll-Bennett. Who?. Constaintine Sergeyevich Alkseyev and Vladimir Nemirovick-Danchenko were the founders of the M oscow A rt Theatre. What?. The Moscow Art Theatre was 20 th century supporter on theatrical art.
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The Moscow Art Theatre By Krystle Mathis and Aaliyah Scoll-Bennett
Who? • Constaintine Sergeyevich Alkseyevand Vladimir Nemirovick-Danchenko were the founders of the Moscow Art Theatre.
What? • The Moscow Art Theatre was 20th century supporter on theatrical art. • It introduced stage realism to Russia. • It reformed rehearsal procedures
When? • The Moscow Art Theatre was opened was opened in 1898 • In the late 1800’s was the height of Moscow Art Theatre
Where? • This all took place in Moscow Russia. (hence the name Moscow Art Theatre)
How? • The theatre all started by two wealthy dramatic art teachers. • Its main purpose was to establish a new art form with a different approach.
Stanislavski method of acting • Its goal was to have a perfect understanding of the motivations, obstacles, of a character in each moment • Most often used for realistic plays • Starts by having an actress or an actor break down the scenes of the play in beats or bites( short sections that end with each change of objective)
Quiz • How many founders of the Moscow Art theatre were there? • A. 4 • B. 2 • C.3 • D.1 • When was the Moscow theatre opened? A. 1988 B.1898 C.1900 • It introduced the stage to ______ • realism B. meakeup
Quiz continued! • What place did the theatre get its name from? • What profession were the two teachers certified in? • what type of plays were the Stanislavsky method often used for? • What is the term for short sections that end with each change of objective? • Actors break down the scenes in __________? A. bits or beats B. dialogue • What was its main purpose? • The methods’ goal is to have perfect understanding of what?
Works cited • Benedetti, Jean. (1988). Stanislavsky [sic]: A Biography. New York: Routledge. • Carnicke, Sharon Marie. (1998). Stanislavsky in Focus. London: Harwood/Routledge. • Leach, Robert and Borovsky, Victor. (1999). A History of Russian Theatre. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. • Rich, Elizabeth. (2000). "Oleg Yefremov, 1927–2000: A Final Tribute." Slavic and East European Performance 20 (3):17–23. • Worrall, Nick. (1996). The Moscow Art Theatre. New York: Routledge.