1 / 9

NRHS – Theatre I Dr. Neighbours

NRHS – Theatre I Dr. Neighbours. Common Theatre Language ~ Let’s all talk the same, and know what one another means ~. Theatre / Theater. Theatre USE THIS TERM (Dr. N’s pet peeve) This means the “entity” of theatre; theatre as art; the job of theatre; the essence of theatre. Theater

emmy
Télécharger la présentation

NRHS – Theatre I Dr. Neighbours

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. NRHS – Theatre IDr. Neighbours Common Theatre Language ~ Let’s all talk the same, and know what one another means ~

  2. Theatre / Theater • Theatre • USE THIS TERM • (Dr. N’s pet peeve) • This means the “entity” of theatre; theatre as art; the job of theatre; the essence of theatre • Theater • A building • Movie theatre • i.e. Harborview • Do not ever misuse this word

  3. Illusion of the First Time- An actor’s tool to make everything new and fresh • Script - The text the playwright gives the actor to work from • Side– A portion of the script; usually used for auditions or when the script is large and the actor only has a bit part. • 16 Bars - In music, this is the usual amount that an actor will sing at the audition Invisible fourth wall This is the imaginary wall between actors and the audience

  4. Counter - A type of blocking move where an actor moves to open a window for other actors • Counter Cross- A blocking move across the stage to another position • Windows - Creating pockets on actors onstage so that every actor can be seen • Open Up - Physically turn your body so the audience can see you

  5. Proscenium-Type of stage that is shaped like a picture frame • Arena or “In the Round” - Type of stage where the audience surrounds the actors and the action taking place onstage • Thrust - Type of stage that juts out from the proscenium arch 3 Main stages

  6. Black Box - Type of theatre (usually used for experimental theatre) where the stage and audience positions can be changed • Prop - Anything the actor picks up with his hands and moves around the stage • Set - The scenery, furniture, etc. that make up what the audience sees onstage; doesn’t move

  7. Upstage - The part of the stage farthest from the audience • Downstage - The part of the stage closest to the audience • Center Stage - The centermost part of the stage • Stage Right - Part of the stage to the actors’ right and the audience’s left • Stage Left - Part of the stage to the actors’ left and the audience’s right Basic stage directions

  8. Improvisation - No set script; make it up as you go along • Motivation - Why your character does what they do • Pantomime- Using the body to tell a story without words • Reacting - What the actor who is not speaking does while other actors are speaking • Exposition- What we know about each character at the beginning of the action • Protagonist- The hero of the show; main character • Antagonist - Whoever is against the hero/main character • Chorus - (Usually in Greek theatre) the characters without names that move and speak together • Ensemble- All the actors that are not principal players • Climax - The highest point of the action – the turning point

  9. ContextThe setting Text The actual language What is given Subtext What is meant The meaning and interpretation

More Related