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Fundamentals of Theatre I Mr. Morris. When the actor bears the responsibility of revealing the soul of a human being caught at a crucial moment and presenting.

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Presentation on theme: "Fundamentals of Theatre I Mr. Morris. When the actor bears the responsibility of revealing the soul of a human being caught at a crucial moment and presenting."— Presentation transcript:

1 Fundamentals of Theatre I Mr. Morris

2 When the actor bears the responsibility of revealing the soul of a human being caught at a crucial moment and presenting it sympathetically to an audience.

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5 1.STUDY YOUR SELECTION 2.DEFINE UNKNOWN WORDS 3.IDENTIFY THE SUBTEXT OF EACH LINE 4.DIVIDE THE SELECTION INTO UNITS (P.O.C) 5.MARK THE SCRIPT FOR VOCAL STRATEGIES

6 1. To Audience 2. Thinking Aloud 3. To Another Character

7 6.PLAN THE MOVEMENT PRESENTATION STYLE 7.BELIEVE WHO YOU ARE AND PRACTICE

8 Procedure

9 1.Set your stage pieces. 2.Stand downstage and wait for audience attention. 3.Perform monologue introduction. 4.Move to your first position for the monologue performance. 5.Pause (1-2-3) 6.Begin monologue in CHARACTER. 7.After the last word of your monologue, pause a beat & lower your head. DON’T CALL SCENE!!!

10 Hello. My name is __________, and I will be performing a monologue from the play __________. I will be playing the part of __________. A one sentence set up is optional.

11 KEEP SET SIMPLE ANGLE SET PIECES WORK YOUR SPACE USE A VARIETY OF MOTIVATED MOVEMENT! DON’T ACT OUT YOUR MONOLOGUE!

12 Acting Techniques

13 1.The Emotional approach: A.Called – The Method B.Created by Stanislavski C.He established the Moscow Art Theater

14 The key is the Magic If: The actor is to imagine that he or she is that character…live the part on and off stage… and always focus on what he or she would do or say as the character in the situation.

15 A technique used by Stanislavski allows actors to give their character feelings and emotions through a recollection of their own life experiences.

16 Emotional Memory requires that an actor recreate an event from the distant past in order to regenerate the ‘feelings’ experienced at that time. These feelings thus regenerated are then used in the current acting situation in order to fill out the role with ‘human depth and personal involvement’.

17 1.My Life in Art (autobiography) 2. An Actor Prepares

18 Sir Tyrone Guthrie developed this. He emphasized technique rather than emotional involvement. He believed the actor should Observe and Imitate, not analyze the character.

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20 What is the theme? What is the conflict? What is the style Why do the characters react the way they do? What is your characters function? What is your characters relationship to others?

21 Social Class Status Occupation Education Home life/situation Religion Community Personal Hobbies Moral Attitudes Ambitions Attitude toward life Mental Health Personality Dress Talents

22 The Character Sketch is used to Analyze the Character.

23 5 keys to finding your character. 1.Playwrights description () 2.Characters words 3.What others say about you 4.Suggested stage business 5.Changes in character’s attitudes

24 WHO AM I ? WHERE AM I ? WHAT DO I WANT ? WHY DO I WANT IT ? WHAT IS PREVENTING ME FROM GETTING IT ? WHAT AM I WILLING TO DO TO GET WHAT I WANT ? WHO DO I WANT IT FROM ? WHEN DO I NEED IT ?

25 *First, Memorize your lines !!! Suggestions 1.Get off script early 2.Use your movement 3.Use flash cards 4.Practice out loud 5.Tape lines on a recorder 6.Know the meaning of the line

26 The actor memorizes by reading the script over and over until he KNOWS & UNDERSTANDS what he is saying. Then he tackles the problem lines. 1.BY ENTIRE PART 2.BY SPECIFIC LINE 3.BY SPECIFIC WORD

27 NEXT, DEVELOP STAGE MOVEMENT: THE PLANNED STAGE MOVEMENT OF AN ACTOR. USE BLOCKING SYMBOLS

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29 Create a Master Gesture A gesture that is created by the actor and used as part of his character. Create a character voice And mark your script with vocal strategies

30 Any action other than stage movement that accompanies a line or works in a situation. Examples 1.Reading a Newspaper 2.Pouring a cup of tea

31 Work & Practice toward Believability!!!! Get off script EARLY Create a character sketch for your character Be creative in your presentation Know the character inside and out

32 Work & Practice toward Believability!!!! Use vocal strategies Know why you are saying what you are saying Find the subtext in every line you present…. Vocal and physical.

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34 1.Principal : A Lead in a Play 2.Ingénue : A young female lead (16 – 30) 3.Juvenile : A young male lead 4.Straight Part : A normal character 5.Character Part : A character that would require extra work from the actor. An unusual part.

35 6.Typecasting : When an actor is cast over and over for the same role. 7.Bit Part : Actor with few lines 8.Walk-on : Actor without lines 9.Internal Qualities : characters background / attitude / mental ability 10.External Qualities : posture / movement / voice / appearance / costume

36 A Form reflecting an intense study of the character by the actor. (the actor must create a history for the character)

37 THE CHARACTER SKETCH Detailed information about the character ? Creation of information unknown ? Every aspect of the character analyzed ? TOTAL : 100 Points THE SUBTEXT IDENTIFICATION Detailed marking of your subtext for EVERY line of your monologue TOTAL : 100 Points THE VOCAL STRATEGIES MARKINGS Detailed vocal strategy markings of EVERY line in your monologue TOTAL : 100 Points

38 THE MONOLOGUE INTRODUCTION Poise / Voice Organization of Introduction. Set up before monologue performance. Monologue performance (2-3 lines) Overall effectiveness TOTAL : 30 Points THE MONOLOGUE PERFORMANCE Vocal Expression 30 Points Blocking of Movement 30 Points Believability of Character 25 Points Monologue Introduction 15 Points TOTAL : 100 Points

39 GOOD LUCK ON YOUR MONOLOGUES !!!!


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