Tuesday 20 December 2011

- Theatre 30 final


1.       Konstantin Stanislavski
a.       Method acting: Stanislavski taught his actors to “be” rather than to “act”. For example, if character is experiencing a loss, the actor was to pull from himself the emotions that he himself would have felt in the past, for example the death of a family member, and channel it through his character to evoke the same emotion.
b.      The circle: when actors were nervous on stage, he taught them to focus on a small circle, usually consisting of one prop and one other character. Once the actor became comfortable with the small section on the stage, he could expand to other characters and props, always being able to resort back to the initial two items within the small circle if the nerves were to return.
c.       The magic “if”: Rather than simply having his actors learn their lines and memorize the expected emotions and reactions expected to go with them, Stanislavski used the magic “if” to expand the actors understanding of their characters. He would take the characters out of their scenes and allow the actors to react as their characters in different situations through using “if”. For example, how would your character respond if it was pushed while walking down the street? It allowed them to find the differences between their characters and themselves.
2.       A pre-sketch is what happens immediately before a scene begins or a character enters the stage. Its creating the moment right before the audience sees the character, often explaining where they are coming from and why they’ve come this way. This helps the actors understanding of their characters reasoning for being in the scene.
3.       The role of a director is to portray their vision onto the stage through the different aspects of theatre. They act as a “coach” to the actors, leading them in the direction they want. They tie together all aspects of the stage under one vision, ultimately having final say over all decisions, having the success or failure of the final production falling over them.
4.       The director’s concept refers to objectives. Symbolized by the umbrella, the main overall objective is the one word, the director’s concept, for the full play. Every decision made must fall under that concept. If it doesn’t, no matter how great the idea, the director must not violate the concept. Each scene must have an objective that appropriately falls under the main objective and each aspect within that must fall under it.
5.       Red thread, superobjective, scene objective
a.       Red Thread: the red thread is the constant character that exists throughout the scenes that ties it all together.
b.      The superobjective: relative to the directors’ concept, is the clear and concise concept developed for the play. Everything relative to the production must be directly related to this concept.
c.       Scene Objective: Relative to the super objective, the scene objective is the overall idea that is wished to be achieved throughout the scene. Every event throughout the course of that scene must be directly related to the objective. This objective must fall within the general concept for the entire play, the superobjective.
6.       A creator would use a stimulus as the starting point to get ideas flowing. A stimulus could be anything like an object, a sound, a feeling, a photo, that allows the creator to begin a chain of ideas ultimately leading to the creation of something bigger. The stimulus doesn’t have to be related to the final product in the slightest.
7.        First kiss, ghost sighting
a.       A first kiss: down right, best stage placement to show intimate and tender moments. From this position, you are most relatable to the audience.
b.      Ghost sighting: up left, best stage placement to show unfamiliarity and alien situations. From this position, the audience will be most uncomfortable and frightened.

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