Wednesday, 27 November 2013

Woking on Group Pieces

At the beginning of the lesson we split into our separate groups and worked on a new piece to add to our promenade theatre . We began by splitting into girls and boys. The boys began to devise a piece based around soldiers mannerisms, so they began to think about what type of clothes they would be wearing, how they would put them items on, how where they feeling ?

The girls split into groups, Me, Isabella, Rosie and Tsion worked together and created a short scene based around four women all dealing with men in their lives being in the war: Libby, Madeline, Agnes and Alison. Agnes (played by me) knows that her husband Henry has died in war and hasn't told Libby, Madeline or Alison yet, she is bitter, cold and cannot seem to sympathise with Libby, Madeline or Alison who are all missing their husbands/son. We wrote up the script and created a  small scene just to start to get an idea of the staging of the piece which will be improved as we research into the 19th century more especially on women.

We then performed our peice to the others and gained feedback. The most useful feedback was from  Ellis who said that we should research into the way women spoke in that period. I thought this was a good piece of feedback as I'm not sure how my character should speak, so this will help develop my character into a realistic woman of the time period.
We then watched the boys pieces, I liked Daniel's piece but felt there was too much in it, Isabella suggested to him to keep it minimal and just shave which was a great improvement once he began to put the suggestions made into practice. I learnt from this week that simpler is
 better because doing something over complicated can look messy and confusing, whereas doing something simpler enables you to define it and make a small idea, something big.

Working on Promenade




In today's lesson we prepared more ensemble pieces for the promenade performance. We spent the first half of the lesson learning how to waltz, we will use the waltz to set the scene of WW1 to the audience at the beginning of the peice. We created a waltz scene in which the people who where most confident to do the waltz where partnered up and put in the middle, I was partnered up with Skye to dance with and we all began to dance in a circular motion in the middle whilst others would surround us drinking tea and entertaining the audience. The boys ( all boys) would then gradually leave to signify the men going of to war, when they had done so Isabella would start to sing "pack up your troubles" in a gloomy way, after the first line, the rest of the girls joined in. By doing this small peice we show the audience the effect on women of the leaving of husbands, sons and friends (men). After this we split off into 2 different groups, one experimenting with showing the conflict of the war through dance, and the other experimenting with a physical theatre repetitive sequence of movement. I paired up with Elle and we came up with 4 main movements; holding hands, pointing into the distance, saying goodbye, sitting alone that in twined and where repeated. 



Monday, 4 November 2013

Solo and Duet work

This lesson was mainly focused on working on our solo and duet performances to do with WW1 and show at least 20 seconds of our pieces at the end of the lesson.
I'm doing a solo performance because i was unable and to get a partner but on the other hand i prefer working by myself because i don't have to rely on someone to help me make and complete the performance.
Watching some on the performances yesterday my favourite one out the ones i saw was sashelle's and Tiarn's .By all means it needs some work but i was able to see form what they showed that there performance could develop into something good.
I like the connection between them as a couple and the small uses on physical theatre but to make this better they could use the staging better this can be done by using the front of the stage more so the audience would
feel more involved and could connect better with how the characters are feeling.