1 / 21

Skits and Puppet shows

Skits and Puppet shows. Skits. Heather Bowen Mulvihill. Types of Plays:. Role-playing Pantomime Charades Traditional plays and skits Puppet shows. Why do we have plays?. Entertainment and Creative expression Recognition Practicing public speaking

rowdy
Télécharger la présentation

Skits and Puppet shows

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Skits and Puppet shows Skits Heather Bowen Mulvihill

  2. Types of Plays: • Role-playing • Pantomime • Charades • Traditional plays and skits • Puppet shows

  3. Why do we have plays? • Entertainment and Creative expression • Recognition • Practicing public speaking • Self-confidence and Personal satisfaction • Relate information • Importance of team work and cooperation • Develops powers of observation, coordination, and timing, listening skills • Achievements and Electives

  4. Achievement and Electives: • Tiger • what to do if lost? • How to react in house fire. • Elective 20-Public Service Announcement • Elective 21-Puppet show • Wolf • elective 1e, mask for a skit • Disability awareness • story of Akela • Bear • achievement 4, Tall tales • achievement 8, local history • achievement 11, Be ready • elective 10, masks • elective 13, magic

  5. Achievements and Electives: • WEBS • Showman • Puppetry • Music • Drama • Cub Scout Academics Belt Loop and Pin • Music • Disabilities Awareness • Good Manners • Nutrition • Heritage • Languages

  6. choosing a play: • Age of Scouts acting • Target audience • Avoid: • Racism • Divorce • Love Stories • Sexuality and Profanity • Unpatriotic themes • Gruesomeness and Disrespect • Physical Disabilities • Nationalities • Physical characteristics • Religious beliefs “If it isn’t fun for everyone, it isn’t fun.”

  7. Choosing a play cont’d • Don’t be afraid to alter to fit your needs • Add characters • Rewrite lines • Add props • Add sound effects • Reassure the actors that the audience is laughing with them not at them

  8. Sound effects • Add appeal • Give a spark • Give a shy scout the roll of soundman • Pre-record sounds • How-to Book, page. 5-14, 5-29 • Coconut shells--horse hooves • Paper crumples--fire • Beans in cans--rain and hail • Metal cookie sheets--thunder • Fan for wind • Spray bottle for mist or rain

  9. Scenery: • Create your mood • Set the scene • Bed sheet back drop • Corrugated cardboard • Science project tri-folds • Look for patterns in coloring books • Have the scouts fill in with paint what you have sketched • Keep in mind the audience view • Keep perspective and size in mind

  10. Costumes: • Plastic garbage bags • Paper bags • Cardboard boxes • Wigs & Masks • Halloween Costumes • Dad’s closet • Goodwill • Salvation Army • Yard sales • No cross-dressing!

  11. Make-up: • Halloween make-up • Mom’s make-up • Cornstarch for hair powder • DO NOT USE: • Latex paint • Sharpies • Tempura paint • Mr. Clean erasers • Strong odors

  12. Resources: • usscouts.org • Cub Scout Leader “How-To” book • Cub Scout song book • Group Meeting *Sparklers* • Cub Scout *Magic*

  13. Write Your own Play: • Consider your available space • Consider the boys in your den • Number of actors • Give every boy a part • Kind of actors (scouts or puppet, or both) • Pick a subject or end goal • What’s your title (either serious or funny) • Play length • Keep it simple, keep it short • Your stage

  14. Write your own Play Part 2: • let the boys help write the skit • avoid long dialogues • scenery props should be simple • give stage direction • stimulate interest by walk-ons • be sure the audience can hear, • coach the boys to speak loudly, clearly, slowly • Use your Den Chief

  15. Puppets Shows

  16. Puppets, a history • No one knows • Egypt, China, India • Middle ages • Royalty • Scholars, poets, artists

  17. Tips for puppeteers: • Let the boys decide on type of play and types of puppets used • Use informal lines • Keep puppets and theaters in proper scale • Give puppeteers room • Frequent exits and entrances of puppets • Keep actions clear, simple and exaggerated

  18. Stages: • Hand puppet stages • Table with cloth over front • Cardboard box • A doorway • With a table or hanging twin sheets

  19. Lighting: • Darken the room • Illuminate the puppets • Goose neck lamps • Flashlights • Small spot lights • Christmas lights • Black lights • Dimmer switches • Don’t set lights where they shine in the audience’s eyes • Use tin cans as house lights

  20. Types of puppets:

  21. And Finally: • Practice, practice, practice • Don’t wait till the last minute, it’s not fair to the scouts……or the audience!

More Related