Elements of Drama - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Elements of Drama

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Elements of Drama – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Elements of Drama


1
Elements of Drama
2
PLOT or story line
  • Every story must have a
  • Beginning
  • Middle
  • End
  • Dont forget the conflict!!!

3
Whats in that story?
  • Monologue
  • (speech by one character to another)
  • Soliloquy
  • (character, alone, reveals inner thoughts and
    feelings)
  • Dialogue
  • (characters speaking to each other)

4
elements of production
  • Set or scenery -
  • the background built on stage to establish time
    place for the audience
  • (may be literal or symbolic)

5
Costumes makeup
  • These can be used to change an actors posture,
    age, physical build, etc.
  • (change can be real or artistic)

6
Props
  • The smaller things actors move on stage that add
    detail authenticity to a show
  • School bag
  • books

7
Sound Lights
  • These can be used to establish setting, mood,
    period and build plot character

8
Roles
  • The various characters in the play that the
    actors play

9
The elements of performance
  • character
  • movement
  • vocal expression
  • speaking style
  • listening
  • acting
  • storytelling

10
The script
  • Title
  • Character List
  • Scene Description ( sometimes a set description)
  • Scene or Act
  • Dialogue
  • All CAPS Character name
  • Italics Stage Directions
  • Regular type spoken words
  • JAMES (softly) Tracy? (clears throat) Tracy?
    (louder, getting braver) Tracy? Wake up, I need
    to tell you something

11
Theatre Spaces
  • Arena Stage Proscenium Stage
  • Thrust stage

12
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13
Basic Theatre Terms
  • ad-lib creating dialogue or actions to cover a
    mistake
  • an act (n.) a smaller section of a play (like a
    chapter)
  • antagonist the person, thing, or idea that
    causes conflict for the protagonist
  • aside line(s) delivered to the audience
  • at rise the moment the curtain rises, whats on
    stage
  • audition an actors job interview
  • a beat (n.)- a change in topic or feeling in a
    scene
  • blackout the end of a scene, act, play
  • blocking the planned movement of actors onstage
  • breaking character becoming yourself onstage
    rather than your character
  • to cast (n.) to place actors in specific roles
    in a play
  • character list the list at the start of a play
    naming describing all the characters
  • climax the high point of the plot where the
    protagonist must make a choice that determines
    the outcome of the play
  • cold reading (part of an audition) when an
    actor is asked to perform a script he has not
    been able to prepare ahead of time
  • comedy a play with a happy ending
  • conventions practices characteristic of a
    particular time period or region
  • to cross (v.) to move from one place to another
    on stage
  • cue a signal for an actor or crew member to do
    something in a play

14
Basic Theatre Terms
  • cue line line of dialogue that tells an actor
    or crew member some action must be taken
  • denouement the resolution or falling action in
    a play (plot)
  • dialogue lines spoken in a play between 2
    characters
  • diction the specific words chosen, on purpose,
    by a playwright
  • discovered already on stage when the scene
    begins
  • down-stage turn turning so your body passes
    through the full-front position (blocking)
  • drama a play of serious nature
  • epilogue a bit tagged on to the end of a play
    to explain or excuse
  • exposition the beginning of a play used to
    provide background information (plot)
  • falling action the resolution or denouement of
    a play (plot)
  • focus the intended point of interest on stage
  • fourth wall the imaginary wall between actors
    onstage and the audience like a TV screen
  • gesture an action performed with the hands,
    arms or head (nod)
  • holding for a laugh allowing the audiences
    response to begin dying away before continuing
  • intention what your character wants in a scene
  • interior monologue the stream of thoughts a
    character thinks while he/she is onstage
  • monologue a long speech by 1 character
  • motivation the characters reason for doing or
    saying something

15
Basic Theatre Terms
  • objective a characters goal in a specific
    scene
  • observation studying others as sources for your
    characters voice or movement
  • off book not using a script, memorized
  • on book using a script, not memorized
  • plot what happens in a play
  • to project (v.) to make your performance
    audible and visible to every audience member
  • protagonist the main character
  • rising action the development of the conflict
    in a play (plot)
  • scene a smaller division of a play
  • scene description a detailed description of the
    set and situation at the start of an act or scene
  • stage business activities performed onstage as
    part of your character
  • stage directions the instructions for what and
    how to do things in a script (these are not spoke
    out loud!)
  • stage crew those members of the show who are
    not actors
  • strike to take down, clean up, and put away all
    materials used for a performance when it is
    complete
  • subtext the thoughts/meanings that underlie the
    actual spoken words
  • theme what the play is about (an idea)
  • tragedy a play that ends unhappily for
    many/most of the characters
  • to upstage (v.) to draw the attention from the
    indented focus in a scene

16
Types of plays broken down
  • Farce
  • Parody
  • Sentimental Comedy
  • Musical Comedy
  • Comedy of Manners
  • Satire
  • Theatre of the Absurd
  • Sentimental Drama
  • Melodrama
  • Social Drama
  • Morality Play
  • Drama
  • Tragedy

17
Styles of Plays- how the type of play is done
  • Looks like the real thing
  • Naturalism slice of life, it is the real
    thing
  • Realism theatrical representation of the real
    thing
  • Reality with meaning
  • Expressionism resembles the real thing but
    colors, shapes, etc may be exaggerated or used
    symbolically to help develop character or theme
  • Not even trying to be real
  • Theatricalism pure theatre, not pretending to
    be anything other than a play
  • Historical Period styles
  • Classic or Neo-Classic a style consciously
    imitating the Greek or Roman classics
  • Romanticism projects the idea of the
    perfectibility of mankind, optimistic, hopeful,
    focus on nature
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