THTR 201H - Highly Derivative

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8-22-06

Thursday:

18-27 in Enjoyment of theater

8-24-06

Keyword: Ephemeral lasting for a short period of time existing for only one day, as with some plants and insects

“Metaphor makes us human”-Augusto Boal

Pictures in cave

What is art?

Monet-Woman with Parasol

Urinal: DuchapFountain , 1917

Art is about context

What is theatre:

Event-art-space-idea-system

Need:

Actor

Audience

Space

Time

“Three boards, two actors, and a passion”

Theatre vs. Life

Theatre is a heightened and compressed version of life

It’s moment by moment

Involves problems with life

There’s life after theater, but no coffee after life

Optional ingredients:

Story, words, writer, director, designer, costumes, lights, sets, sound

Other arts in theatre:

Music, dance, visual art

Music artists:

They’re creating a character for themselves

Performing Arts:

Theatre, Dance, Music, Opera

-Ephemeral

-Ephemeral=fleeting (here once moment, gone the next, never the same twice)

-occupy time and space

-need an audience

Performer vs. Actor

Why go to theatre

History of humanity

Live

-like life

-real people, not images

More than words

Local

“to hold, as ‘twere, the mirror up to nature”

Summary:

No definitive definition

8-29-06

Seeing and Reading Plays keywords

Audience

Casual (Linear) Plot

Episodic Plot

Protagonist

Antagonist

Foil

Raisoneur

Confidante

Idea

Language

Genre

Quiz on Thursday over A Doll’s House

How to Watch a Play

Before the play:

First thing you see:

Stage

Audience

Set

Program

-director’s notes

-cast

Scenic Design:

More doors, funnier the show’s supposed to be

Today’s Audiences: upper middle class

Spare time, money

Ticket prices are a lot

Avg. B’way theatergoer: $100,000+ income

Alternative- smaller theatres! Cheap!

Audience Behavior

Elizabethan: much more involved, react more, diverse audience, groundlings broke 4 th wall. Actors addressed audience directly

Cradle Will Rock

Negative behaviors:

Audience size

Preparation

Willingness

Waiting for Lefty (cast member calls for a strike, audience rioted)

Different from reading a book

Use Imagination

Title

Characters

Stage Directions

Other notes

Place, time, season, historical, era

Aristotle:

Plot, Character, Idea, Language, Music, Spectacle

Plot- arrangement of the incidents; casual (linear, a-b-c), episodic

Causal:

Exposition-inciting incident-rising action, point of no return, climax, resolution

Episodic Plot

Multiple plots centered around an idea

Character:

Functions:

Protagonist: main character

Antagonist: bad guy

Foil: shows off the facets of the protagonist

Confidante: protagonist confides in

Raissoneur: voice of the author

Idea:

Meaning

Central theme

Language:

Style, modern, old-fashioned, reflections on world of play

Genre:

Type of play

Things that affect audience:

Size, willingness, preparation, demographic

8-31-06

A Doll’s House

Plot:

Linear plot

Multi-linear (other characters taking their own journey)

Climax- when she yells at him and leaves

Character:

Protagonist: Nora

Antagonist: Torvald

Confidante: Kristine

Foil: Kristine, Dr. Rank, Krogstag

Child

Doll

Stubborn

Frightened singing-bird

Fool

Bewildered

Helpless

Happy

Fritter bird

How has she changed in the end?

More confidant. Independence, no blind trust, selfish and bold, wants to be her own person, not the doll in the dollhouse

Macaroons hint that Nora will develop independent frame of mind, conversation with

Kristine, she swears, when she talks about how she made her money

What’s Nora’s overall goal or SUPEROBJECTIVE

Beginning- money, end-freedom

Torvald-banker-hates debt

Language of Kristine compared to Nora:

Older, more mature, more independent, life experience

Rank has syphilis

Ibsen:

Father of modern drama

Realism

Norwegian folklore

Doll’s House based on true story

“problem play” retrospective plot

-like greek tragedy

-most major events before play starts

Europe, mid-1800s

Doll’s House-revolutionary for the time

Theatres refused to produce it

Actresses refused to play Nora

-Germany-another ending

-Nora stays for her children’s sakes

“The slam heard ‘round the world”

Norway:

Winter, 3-4 hours of sun per day.

Seasonal Depression

Isben says it’s not about women’s rights

It’s about transformation

Everyone changes

9-5-06

Show Business

Broadway

Regional

LORT: League of Resident Theatres

-Goodman theater-Chicago

-Guthrie theatre- Minneapolis

-Indiana Repertory Theatre- Indianapolis

-Cincinnati Playhouse- Cincinnati goal of commercial theatre: make a profit goal of nonprofit theatre art, break even

Broadway-commercial, professional

Regional- nonprofit, professional

Academic- nonprofit, amateur

Community- nonprofit, amateur

Who’s in charge:

Nonprofit: artistic director:

-ticket sales, grants

-Picks seasons (with help)

-Hires personnel (directors, designers)

-Oversees quality of productions

Commercial Theatre:

Producer:

-picks show

-finds investors

-hires personnel

-coordinates publicity

-negotiates for use of performance space

Finding People:

Producer/artistic director---casting director---talent agent---actors

Trade Papers:

Back Stage- NYC

Back Stage West- LA

PerformINK-Chicago

Actors read notices, call theatre for appt. to audition

Unions: Actor’s Equity Association (1913) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Actor%27s_Equity_Association

Pros:

Salary standards

Housing

Transportation

Insurance

Cons:

Hard to get into union

Must pay dues, even when not working

Can only work at union theatres

AEA: Actor’s Equity Association

Actors and Stage Managers

40,000+ members in USA

Negotiates wages, working conditions, contracts, etc

Recent Controversy:

Protest by Equity members

National tour of The Music Man:

-starring Purdue grad Gerritt VanderMeer

-non-equity

-“Broadway show”-Susan Stroman’s choreography and direction

-salaries below Equity minimum, no benefits

Other Unions:

USA-United Scenic Artists

SSD&C-Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers

Creating a show:

Rehearsals:

-stage manager duties

Scenery

Costumes

Lights, Sound

Publicity:

Advertising

100k for full page color ad in NY Times

Nonprofit theatre-what would you do?

Sponsors, flyers

Publicist-press kit

David Merrick-publicity stunts

Moon over Broadway

About Moon Over Buffalo

Carol Burnett, Philip Brosco

Directed by Tom Moore, Purdue grad

Critics:

Press Night:

-press kit

-reviews

Critics at big papers can make or break a show

What it is:

Selfish, dependent, shallow, childish, stubborn,

What it isn’t:

Childish: obnoxious, annoying, ignorant, way too happy, baby, easily stressed out

Stubborn: thickheaded, won’t listen, ignorant, not a very hard life,

Shallow-ignorant

Don’t possess a lot of knowledge or experience.

Simple minded.

Emotional about little things.

Selfish-obnoxious:

Self-centered

Controlling

Phrases:

Ignorance is bliss.

9-7-06

Playwright:

Dionysus: ancient Greece, god of wine and orgies and theatre

Dythoram: homage to Dionysus, 50 men singing and dancing around statue

Aeschylus:

First playwright, 500 bc. Added a second character, 80-90plays. 7 still exist

Thespus is first actor.

Ben Johnson (1573-1637)

Read best authors

Observe best speakers

Exercise own style

Write what you know

O’Neill was the first to put working class on stage, sad plays on Broadway, complex black characters

Formatting is important

Full length play=90 manuscript plays

Formatted plays are easier for actors to read

Helps get a literary agent

Literary manager

Optioning:

Standard agreement=10% of the purchase price of the script and option it for x years, usually renewable

Samuel French:

Established playwrights

Licensed rights to publish acting editions of plays (used to only get your lines)

By late 1800s, represented most major playwrights

Biggest two publishing houses:

Samuel French

Dramatists

New Playwright:

Small stipends ($50-$100)

Royalties for small theatres, world premiere play, 5-10% of total ticket sales

Theatre companies take % of future royalties if they present world premiere

Dramatists Guild:

Professional association for playwrights, composers, lyricists

Membership is open

Helps with contracts

Copyright

Work is protected moment hits the paper

Safe side: certificate from US copyright office: $20

Getting your work seen:

Theatres and contests

Dramatists Sourcebook

What to send:

Cover letter

Resume

Synopsis

Script

S.A.S.E

Produce it Yourself

How?

Volunteer, find a director and space, set up your own development process

9-12-06

The Director

Newest facets in terms of theatre mid-late 1800s, director comes

Stanislovsky’s directing of Chekov’s Seagul

A guide

A midwife

Love what you are directing

Read the script without stopping the first time

7 is considered the perfect number casting is 80% of your work-William Ball

1.

tablework

2.

on our feet reading

3.

Blocking a.

Pictureization b.

Composition

4.

Workthroughs

5.

Walkthrough

6.

Runthrough

7.

Tech (director is not as important after this)

8.

Dress rehersals

9.

Previews

Lecture:

Before director:

Choregs: financed plau

Didaskalos: “teacher” of the chrorus

Medieval Theatre:

Master of Secrets

Actor-Managers:

Head of acting company

Leading actor

David Garrick: 1717-1779, no audience on stage (first star)

Ibsen hired as a manager, organized sets, costumes entrances and exits

What changed?

1859-Origin of Species from Darwin

1900-Interp of Dreams from Freud

1879-A Doll’s house, 11 rehersals

1883-An Enemy of the People, 32 rehersals

Duke of Saxemeiningen; Georg II, 1826-1914

First true director

Peter Brook’s white box production of Midsummer Night’s Dream

Director does:

Select play (maybe)

Interprets a play

Casts, rehearses

Guides designers

Liaison

Coordinates into finished performance

Auteur Director:

Author, idea comes from director, not playwright

Txt serves director

Good director: knows purpose of script, knows spine, develops concept, communicates well

9-14-06

I start at Elliott, in lobby

What to look for:

Color

Intense or washed out?

Why did the designer choose them?

What do they signify?

Line:

Jagged? Smooth? Short? Long?

What does that signify?

Size

Genre

Period

Julie Taymor

Director/Designer

The Lion King: How does she use costume and set design

9-21-06

Tuesday: Exam 1, study guide on WebCT

Multiple choice

Ch 8: The Actors

Stanislavsky:

Russian actor, director, theorist

Father of modern acting

Founded Moscow Art Theatre

Strasberg, Adler, Meisner

Stan says being truthful on stage and “live the part”

Stan’s System

Given Circumstances: who, what, where, when why, who is the other person

“Magic If” put yourself in the role

Objective: character’s goal

Obstacle

Character Analysis

Actor’s Training

Voice: pitch, volume, dialects, etc

Body: use to characterize

Mind: access emotion

External vs. Internal Acting:

External Acting- physical life (how we walk, etc)

Internal Acting: inner life (thoughts, feelings, opinions, points of view)

Auditioning:

Job interview for actors, show talent and versatility

99% of the time you won’t get cast

Types of Auditions:

Regional (big theatres who aren’t in NYC or LA) or national (broadway or touring)

Theatre Companies, audition to become a member of the company

Open Auditions

Cattle Calls: American Idol

Headshots

Resumes: don’t list weight on resume, or age

Prepared Monologues/songs

Where to fine auditions:

Regional papers, trade papers, agents, internet

Who Watches:

Director, casting director, producer, artistic director, playwright

After Audition:

Waiting, callbacks, cold reading,

What’re they looking for:

Hold an audience, professionalism, taking big risks, handling direction, how you look

Hints: they’re not the enemy, be prepared, do your best, be professional

9-28-06

Ancient Greece: Sex, Wine, and Theatre

Philosophy: Socrates, Plato

Math: Pythagoras

Medicine: Hippocrates

Architecture: the Parthenon

Art: statue from 450 bc

Democracy

Today:

Advertising

Entertainment:

Athens Population: 140,000

Democracy: demos (people) + (kratein) (rule)

Attica: 10 tribes

The Beginning-Dionysus

Cult

Alcohol, orgies, sacrifices

Wild dancing-ecstatis

Creativity

Satyrs-half men half goat

Dithyramb:

Ode to Dionysus

50 men, dressed as satyrs evolved to story/drama

Thespis (first actor according to legend)

Important Date to Know:

534 BC: Festival changed to include drama

Athens

City Dionysia:

Religious festival

Choragus-producer appointed 1 year before festival, paid for everything

Tragedies

Satyr Play

All male actors who wear masks

Shoes-kothornos

Chiton- costume

Center of theatre: orchestra

Skene, or scene house

Parodos, or entrance

Deus ex Machina: god from the machine, fly in a god to say stop fighting

Ekkyklema: platform on wheel to bring characters out of a building

Why Tragedy?

Gods, Humans, Fate

Pathos (Pitiful people), Hubris (excessive pride)

Format of Tragedy:

Tragos (goat) and ODE (song)

Prologue-parados (chorus enters)-five scenes (each followed by chorus)-exodus (big finish)

Aeschylus:

First playwright

Added 2 nd

actor

Reduced chorus from 50 to 12

Great trilogies

-Orestia

Sophocles:

Great plot construction

Added 3 rd

actor

Oedipus Rex, Antigone (sister/daughter of Oedipus)

Euripedes

Fewer gods, more regular people

Deus Ex Machina

Made fun of in other plays, satires

The Trojan Women

Comedy:

Two types:

-old comedy-mocks social, political, and cultural

-new comedy-comedy for the sake of comedy, led to Roman comedy only one of each remains

Decline:

404BC: Athens defeated by Sparta, annexed into Roman Empire in 146 BC

City Dionysia theatre

10-3-06 adinkra symbols

Lloyd Wilson-director, “acting is falling into darkness backwards”

Richard III not due until 12 th

No ticket stubs for 7 guitars

10-5-06

Richard III quiz due 10/17

Roman Theatre

55BC

Roman Theatre:

Borrowed from Greece

1 st

play-translation from freek

Livius Andronicus (Greek: Andronikos)

Ludi Romani (oart of games)

All actors were men dressed in greek costumes, comedies called Fabula Palliata

Masks

Comic Actor:

Slave?

Low professions, “Infami” w/o honor

Costumes very important, masks, phallus, pallium

Minerva-Roman Goddess of Crafts

Plautus (254-184 BC)

Palliatae

Copied Greeks

Farce

Stock Characters (Miles Gloriosus-“The Boastful Soldier”, The Menaechmi Twins-

Shakespeare stole it-Comedy of Errors)

Terence (185-159 bc)

6 plays, more refined born a slave

wooden stages

Audience:

Everyone could go, VIPs in orchestra

Plautus’ The Little Cathiginian

Theatres and Stages:

Gree influence, some with roof (Odeon)

55 BC- first stone theatre, 17,000 seats

Pompey the Great, dedicated to Venus

Roman architecture more elaborate, theatres freestanding, Greek theatres built into hills

Seneca (4 bc-65 ad)

Only survving tragedies, closet drama

Based on Greek tragedies

Philosopher

Nero’s tutor

Influenced Shakespeare

Atellan Farce

From Atella, Stock Characters (fool, babbler, grandfather, glutton, or doctor)

Masks, improvised

Pantomimus:

Dance, Poetic text-chorus, popuar

Decline

Fall of Rome 476 AD

Christianity

Constantinople-eastern Roman capital, founded by Constantine

Saint Genesius

10-17-06

Italian Renaissance

Verasmilitude: life like

Perspective

Gutenberg’s press, Galileo proves sun is center of universe

Humanism: focus on humanities, individual dignity, reason/logic

Neoclassical Ideals:

Verisimilitude: life like

Unities (from Aristotle):

Time-24 hours

Place-One Locale

Action-One central story

Tragedy and Comedy rules: no violence, chorum, supernatural characters, solilquies

Purpose: teach moral lessons

Teatro Olimpico: theatre (looks just like an ancient Roman theatre-painted sky on ceiling)

Teatro Farnese: procenium stage, greater realism

Pole and Chariot System: Giacomo Torelli (1608-1678):

Ropes and pullies to put things on stage

Wing and Groove: scenery on flat board in groove, drag on and off

Sabbattini: invented way to dig lights

Periactoi: big overhead triangle stages

Commedia dell’ Arte: form of improv comedy

Lazzi-little bits of action

Known for scenic designs and special effects

Renaissance England:

Elizabeth I: 1558-1603, colonization of New World

Shakespeare:

Stratford-upon-Avon

Lord Chamberlain’s Men (his company)

Christopher Marlowe

Dr. Faustus

Iambic pentameter

Stabbed in eye in bar fight at 29 (1593)

Edward de Vere, 17 th

Earl of Oxford

1550-1604 minor artists, Queen paid him 1000 pounds a year, dunno why

William Shakespeare:

10 plays written after 1604, too much conspiracy, many writer knew Shakespeare, his company published works, crediting him

Major Players:

Queen Elizabeth, Lord Chamberlin’s Men

James Burbage-opens Red Lion, firs theatre in London

Globe Theatre

Jacobean Period:

James 1, son of Mary Queen of Scots

Melodramatic plays, violence, spectacle\

Masques

Ben Jonson:

Known for fighting, killed an actor, thumb branded

Wrote court masques

Inigo Jones:

Designer, architect (Covent garden), Court Masques, costumes

Decline:

Civial War, Charles 1 deposed, beheaded

William Cromwell takes over

1642-Puritans outlaw all heater

10-19-06

Exam 10-31

All Shakespeare’s plays had 5 acts (like greeks)

Romantcism & Realism

Romanticism: 1750-1859

Revolution: American (1776) French (1789)

Industrialization, cities

Beauty, art, truth

Social revolutions (abolitionism, suffrage)

Melodrama:

The Girl of the Golden West

David Belasco

Good v Evil

Stock characters (hero, villain, young lovers)

Clear moral world

Stereotypes

Stage directions, music, special effects

Language

Moral reason

Charles Darwin:

Origin of Species-1859

Marx-Das Kapital-1867

Edison-lamp-1879

Frued-Interpretation of Dreams-1900

Einstein-Theory of Relativity-1905

Ibsen (1828-1906)

Realistic and non-realistic

Ordinary people

Deep psychological portrait of characters

August Strindberg (1849-1912)

Individual v himself or v each other

Hated “Emancipatied Women”

Naturalism:

Lower classes, sordid aspects of life, social problems, reform

Emile Zola (1840-1902)

Novelist, theorist, playwright

David Belasco (1853-1931)

Extreme naturalist

Girl of the Golden West: 20 minute sunrise-1905

Richard Wagner

Beyreuth Theatre-1876

Continental seating

Scene design

Limitations of Realism:

Confining, excludes: music, dance, symbolism, poetry, fantasy, supernatural

Reaction/decline (WW1, depression, mass production, industrialization)

10-24-06

Exam 2-10/31

Avant garde: ahead of their times, on the front lines

Early 20 th

century:

Freud-“Thoughts for the Times on War and Death”

Oliver Messiaen-Quartet for the end of time-german prison camp

Inspired by book of revelation

Timeline-pg 359

Non-mainstream movements

Adolphe Appia

1862-1928 very simple, living space, focus on action

3d space spotlights lighting plot

Bayreuth theatre

Expressionism

Metropolis- Fritz Lang

Dadaism: most abstract, non-literal, deliberately irrational, “Art is shit”, no form, meaning?

Dadaist Manifesto-Tristan Tzara (Gas Heart, “nothing is more enjoyable than baffling people.”)

Absurdism:

Post ww2, existentialist, God is Dead, world w/o meaning, Familiar/Strange, circular plot, Samuel Beckett (Happy Days, Waiting for Godot)

10-26-06

American Theatre

Melodrama:

Kid actors amazingly popular

19 th

century: museums, music halls, circuses (PT Barnum-1810-1891)

American Museum

Feejee mermaid

Tom thumb

Booth family big

Wild West Shows:

Huge shows, native Americans, cowboys (Buffalo Bill Cody, Annie Oakley, Sitting Bull)

Buffalo Bill was a women’s rights advocate

Vaudeville

Minstrel Shows

Eugene O’Neil: first serious American playwright

Long Day’s Journey into Night

Federal Theatre Project:

Part of WPA, 1935-1939

Purpose: create work!

Controversial

Clifford Odets-playwright from group theatre

Waiting for lefty

Show Boat-first true Broadway show

Outdoor Drama

Review

Be familiar with the parts of an ancient Greek theatre.

Orchestra (playing area), parodoi (entrances), skene (scene house),

What is an eccyclema? What is a mechane? What were they used for?

Platform/crane used to bring actors on and off stage, usually dead

In class, Andrew and Lisa performed a scene from Lysistrata, an ancient Greek comedy. What was the scene about?

Women withholding sex from their soldier husbands

What is a dithyramb?

Ode to Dionysus

50 men, dressed as satyrs evolved to story/drama

What is a satyr play?

A short, rustic, and often obscene play included in the Dionysian festivals of Greece at the conclusion of tragedies

Who were Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides?

Writers, Aes introduced second actor, trilogies. Soph introduced 3 rd

actor, Euri was mocked in life, examined human relationships

Be familiar with the traits of Greek theatre described in the textbook.

Polytheism, special occasions, competitive,

In what year was drama added to the festivals in ancient Greece? What actor, by legend the first actor in ancient Greece, is said to have won the competition that year?

534 bc, Thespis

Be familiar with the parts of an ancient Roman theatre.

Outside, semi-circle, on a street, roofed stage, architecurlal connection,

What year was the first stone theatre built in ancient Rome?

55 bc

In class we watched a video of Plautus’ The Braggart Warrior. What was it about?

Slaves getting freedom through tricking the boastful, but cowardly master

To what deity was ancient Roman theatre dedicated?

Minerva

What were ancient Roman theatre audiences like?

Theatre for all, vips in orchestra, commoners, slaves

Scenic designer Russ Jones said that the ring above the stage in Seven Guitars had symbols inspired by what culture?

African, adrinka symbols from Ghana

Be familiar with the scenic design and costume design of Seven Guitars and of The Importance

of Being Earnest. (If you have seen the show you will be able to answer any questions on the exam)

What are the Unities observed in Italian Renaissance theatre? Where did the unities originate?

Unities (from Aristotle):

Time-24 hours

Place-One Locale

Action-One central story

What is verisimilitude? truth seeming, no gods

What does the Teatro Olimpico look like?

Roman but inside, sky on ceiling, midgets for perspective

What innovation is the Teatro Farnese known for?

Proscenium stage, designed sets (not all on street)

What was Italian Renaissance scenic design like?

Perspective, overdone, not real

What is the pole-and-chariot system used for?

Bringindg sets and props on stage

What are periaktoi?

Three-sided triangles with scenes on them

What was Commedia dell’Arte like?

Imrpov, professional playing

Who was Christopher Marlowe? In what type of meter (rhythm) did he write his plays?

Playwright, stabbed in eye, Iambic pentameter, queen gave him cash

Who was Edward de Vere?

Earl of Oxford, thought to be shakespeare

What were Court Masques, and what were they like? What did designer Inigo Jones have to do with Court Masques?

Big royal parties, Indigo Jones, designer/architect of huge sets, Covent Garden, Italian stages to

English audiences

What were Elizabethan English theatres like?

Outdoor public, loud, interaction, rich people in boxes

What are groundlings?

Poor people in front of the stage, on ground

What does Hamlet’s “advice to the players” tell us about acting in Shakespeare’s time?

Good acting is natural, don’t over do it

Who is David Belasco? How did he once create a scenic design for a boarding room?

Extreme naturalist, found a real boarding room and took it apart

What is melodrama?

Overdone drama, sometimes with swelling music

Why were the seats in Richard Wagner’s Beyreuth Theatre revolutionary? What else about his theatre was revolutionary?

Got rid of boxes, continental seating (everyone was equal), orchestra in the pit

What were the Duke of Saxe-Meiningen’s theatre company and productions like?

Accuracy of costumes/sets, first true director, influenced realists

What is the “Fourth Wall?”

Magic wall between audience and actors

What genre of theatre is Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House?”

Realism

What form of theatre and art says “art is shit, but we want to shit in different colors?” dada

In Samuel Beckett’s Happy Days, what is unusual about the main character, Winnie?

She’s buried

What artistic and theatrical movement is characterized by a nightmarish, distorted world view? expressionism

What caused artists to react against realism?

Wwi, depression, mass production, industrialization

What major world events are surrounded by anti-realistic artistic and theatrical movements?

Who was Adolphe Appia? What type of design element did he feel was best able to fuse all other theatrical elements into an artistic whole?

Scenic designer, did first lighting plot and used sptotlights

What type of acts could be seen in Vaudeville? How was Vaudeville different from Burlesque?

Variety, family vs strip shows

What was PT Barnum famous for?

Freaks, American Museum

What types of melodramas did PT Barnum show in his American Museum?

Circuses and temperance shows

What were Wild West Shows like?

Huge, live, animals

Who were Buffalo Bill Cody, Annie Oakley, and Sitting Bull?

Members of the buffalo bill wild west show

What, according to a video shown in class, is considered to be the first real American musical? (Hint: written by Kern and Hammerstein, it dealt with racism, miscegenation, domestic violence, and show business) showboat

What was the Federal Theatre Project?

Part of the WPA, paid actors to perform during the great depressions

In what show written by Clifford Odets did actors sit in the audience and yell “strike” until the audience rioted?

Waiting for Lefty

What was a Living Newspaper? style of theatre, documentaries

11-2-06

Black Theatre in America

Bert Williams-popular minstrel performer

Minstrel show: white performers in black face…then black performers in black face

TD Rice

The Escape (1858) first black play, written by Brown

In Da Homey, Abyssina (operettas)

Rachel (first black play performed, 1916, popoganda for NAACP)

Lafayette Players 1919 (Harlem, Anita Bush)

Harlem Renaissance, 1920-1930

African Americans being regular African Americans, not playing a part

Alain Locke, integrationist

Famous writers: Zora Neale Hurston, Langston Hughes

All Black Musicals

Shuffle Along (music: Eubie Blake, 1921)

Porgy & Bess (Gershwins, 1935)

Richard Wright (1930-60)

FTP Negro Theatre Unit

Wright’s Essay, “The blueprint for negro writing” (1936)

Native Son

Lorraine Hansberry’s

A Raisin in the Sun (1959)

Black Theatre movement: 1960s

The Negro Ensemble Co (Sam Jackson, Denzel)

National Black Theatre

LeRoi Jones/Amiri Baraka

Duthman movie

Modern Playwrights/Plays

Ntozake Shange (For Colored Girls) choreopoem

August Wilson (The Piano Lesson) (90s)

Anna Deveare Smith (Twilight Los Angeles: 1992)

Suzan-Lori Parks (Topdog/Underdog)

11-7-06

Blackface

Minstrel shows:

19 th century, mostly white in blackface, popular well into 20 th century fundraisers/community entertainment

Minstrel Line:

1. Semi-circle

Mr. interlocutor (center)

Bruder Tambo (tambourine)

Bruder Bones (castanets)

Birth of the rimshot

2. Olio songs and skits, evolved into Vaudeville

3. One-act musical (spoof of novel or play)

Jim Crow (ignorant country bumpkin)

Zip Coon (city slicker)

Most hits of the 1800s are from Minstrel Shows

Abolitionism:

Minstrel shows coincide with N awareness of slavery

Portraits of Blacks as childlike, happy-go-lucky, always singing=safe, non-threatening

20 th

century:

NAACP founded in 1909

WW1 galvanized African-American community (soldiers return, protest racial injustice)

Migrations from rural S to N cities

Harlem Renaissance c. 1920-1930s (after WW1) explosion of artistic activity

“new Negro movement”

“two-ness”-WEB DuBois

Langston Hughes

Aaron Douglas: Into Bondage (1936)

Noble Sissle and Eubie Blake (write Shuffle Along-1941)

“I’m just Wild about Harry”

Ziegfeld hired dancers from this show to teach his Follies

Lorraine Hansberry: Raisin in the Sun

Directed by Lloyd Richards:

First black b’way director

Mentor to August Wilson

Head of Yale School of Drama

7 Guitars:

7 men with 7 guitars, anthology play, 10-minute scenes, men argue on which will play on what corner

Future play planned, never completed: Seven Guitars Too

Inspired by decades of listening, blues

11-9-06

Latin-American Theatre

Medieval Theatre (ca 1350-1550)

Mystery Plays (biblical events)

Miracle Plays (lives of saints)

Morality Plays (religious themes, moral lesson)

Spanish Golden Age:

1550-1650: leading world power (exploration/conquest of New World)

Devoutly Catholic nation (Norther Europe: Protestant Reformation, Inquisition)

Theatre Thrives

Lope de Vega (1562-1653) (b 2 years before S’peare)

Priest, loved ladies

More than 2200 plays, 1800 comedies, 400 autos sacramentales

“…three boards, two actors, and one passion”

Spanish Conquest of Mexico

Cortez landed in 1519

25 million Aztecs die (war/disease) spain imposes gov’t and religion

Origins of Theatre in Mexico:

Native Mexican/Aztec rituals, Spanish drama combine

Mascaradas:

Dramatic religious allegories

Developed into posadas of today

The Last Judgement

First play written in New World

Friar Olmos, 1533

Carpas:

Mexico and border states

Traveling tent shows, 1800s-1900s

Family-run

Influenced by Euro circuses, Aztec acrobatics, vaudeville

La Carpa Garcia:

1920s-1940s

Garcia family

Traveled through SW US and Mexico

Pilar Garcia

Carpas: vaudeville and burlesque

Dances: traditional Mexican, Japan, Germany, Holland, Modern (Charleston, Jitterbug)

Luis Valdez:

El Teatro Campesino (founder)

Zoot Suit: first latin-american play produced on Broadway

Influenced by Commedia dell’Arte, Mexican Folklore, modern social issues

Theatre founded during farm worker’s strike in 1965

John Leguizamo…the king of one-man shows

Explores Stereotypes

Dozens of characters

Spic-O-Rama

Mamba Mouth

Freak

Sexaholix

11-14-06

Lisa Loomer:

Other plays: Expecting Isabel, The Waiting Room, wrote Girl, Interupted

Mother who has employed nannies, nanny characters based on interviews

11-16-06

Hroswitha von Gandersheim

10 th century germany, first recorded female playwright in Europe, Imitated Terence

Puritans:

1642, England Parliament, Puritan majority, outlaws theatre

Charles I loses Civil War

Charles II:

Opened theatres, allowed women on stage, REALLY liked actresses

Mary “Moll” Davis: mistress, actor, singer, dancer, comedienne, had one child

Fanny Kemble (1809-1893)

Born in London, toured US, married plantation owner, abolitionist, helped persuade Britain to support Union

Sarah Bernhardt (1844-1923)

Divine Sarah, greatest actress in the world, many us tours, managed theatres and owned one,

“silver” voice, athletic acting style, silent film star, big celebrity

Eva Le Gallienne (1899-1991)

Actress, producer, director

Translated Ibsen

Most prominent and acclaimed actress in US

Pioneered repertory theatre movement

Lillian Hellman (1905-1984)

The Children’s Hour

House committee on Un-American Activities

Margaret Edson:

Kindergarten teacher

First and only play

Pulitzer Prize

Theatre in high school

John Donne (1572-1631)

Catholic, charming, witty, Elizabeth’s court, eventually became Anglican chaplain

Married woman in secret

11-21-06

Francis Gumm---Judy Garland

Marx Bros

1964: Hello, Dolly! Based on Thornton Wilder’s

The Matchmaker

Hair:

1967, book and lyrics by James Rado and Gerome Ragni

Ga;t McDermott, composer

Public Theatre, Central park

Spoke to 60s generation

Jesus Christ Superstat-1971

ALW-composer

Tim Rice-lyricist

Video:

First written as an album

Linear plot: book musical

Episodic plot: revue

Godspell-1971, Stephen Schwartz

Grease: 1972, directed by Tom Moore (PU alum)

The Wiz, 1975, all African-American

Little Shop of Horrors: 1982

Jonathan Larson:

1996, La Boheme, corporate backing, modern Oklahoma?

11-28-06

Post Modernism/Eclecticism:

Theatre for a New Millennium

1960s-Present

Broadway & non-profit theatre

1.

What other movements influence the theatre of the present. What connections can you make?

2.

What is the difference between performance art and theatre

3.

Can theatre/art create change in society

Eclectic: made up of or combining elements from a variety of sources; a reflection of our diverse society

Postmodernism (changes since 1960)

-loss of belief in objectivity and truth

-loss of belief in meaning

-deconstruction of societal constructs

-questioning of language

-differences in shades of meaning; not black and white opposites

Broadway Theatre:

-prices skyrocket

-“safe” moneymakers

-musicals/entertainment

-corporate takeover (Disney-Lion King)

Non-profit theatre:

1960s/70s: experimentation and improvisational ritualistic

(street) theatre/confronting the audience

Poor theatre movement: everything stripped down to it’s essence

The Open Theatre-Van Itallie and The Serpent

Performance art; making personal political statements; Karen Finley

Experiments with visual images & times; fragmentation, juxtaposition and recombination

Today’s eclectic theatre:

Diversity of stiles, often intermingled to produce “departures from realism”

Encompasses a variety of plot structures: linear, circular, other (M. Butterfly, Metamorphoses)

May mix genre and media

Diversity of voices: gender, ethnicity, age, religion, sexuality, etc

World Theatre: globalization

International festivals and conferences

Cross-cultural performances

Theatre of the Oppressed: political/community based theatre

Cultural (PC) sensitivity

Antonin Artaud

Changing Stages

Spurt of Blood

Theatre of cruelty

11-30-06

Review session on Tuesday in class

12-12 is the alternate final war machine imagery set design: turn of the century forgery costume design: used color and silhouette key word for women is restriction bi-colored capes so they can switch lighting design: clear soft work lights pull all color from light on “now is the winter” use shadows to help contort Richard sketches in chalk on black paper lights above stage light up when someone dies sound: fun, rockin lord of the rings stuff

some transitions were weird circus music no underscoring, don’t interfere with the dialogue actors: text is a challenge counting the pantameter using the language instead of acting against it family connections

1 st

pholio text

“dropping in” method playing multiple characters no scripts on stage, fed lines spent 1 hour every rehearsal stripping away tension in your speech

12-5-06

Review:

2 nd

floor of PAO hall for alternate final

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