Saturday, 20 September 2014

Objectives- week 3

Super objectives 
The Super objective of a character is the objective they follow throughout the whole play, the most important objective. In Romeo and Juliet the super objective is that the two families come together, this is seen throughout the whole play. 

First objective 
We started an exercise where we had to carry out particular objectives. The super objective was to keep moving and the first objective was to walk around the room picking a particular point in the room wether it be a chair or a crack in the wall and once we got there, to pick another point and move towards it, repeating and following this pattern. 

Second objective 
The second objective was to be aware of the whereabouts of one person: person A while moving around the room and doing the first objective which was picking a point in the room and moving towards it. 

Third objective 
While completing objective 1 & 2 we then had to pick another person to be aware of: person B this could mean that your person one and two could be on completely different sides of the room and you would have to know where they were while completely focusing on your point and moving to it with pace. This became hard as you are trying to focus on so many things, while moving with pace and being aware of surroundings. 


Fourth objective 
The fourth objective was that person A was your enemy and you had to stay away from them. This turned the class into a whirlpool effect as everyone was running around in circles and this meant that you had to be really aware of the people around you and your surroundings. 


Fifth objective 
The fifth objective was that person B was your sheild and the only thing that could protect you from person A. This meant a lot of change is pace as I had to run fast at times to stay with person B but at times I had to walk slowly or pivot slightly as they weren't moving that much. 

Sixth objective 
The last objective was to form an equilateral triangle using person A and B. This was challenging as your person A could constantly be moving to the opposite side of the room and your person B could be hardly moving around at all and vice versa. The fact that the traingle was equilateral was also challenging as the other two people had to be the exact same distance away from you at the right angle and the fact that they were constantly were moving around meant this became almost impossible. 

Stopping and Starting 
This excersize consisted of us all walking around the room together and when we felt the group was ready to stop we all had to stop together at the sametime. When we felt ready to start walking again we had to start altogether without corresponding or anyone leading it. This took a lot of tries to get right as there where leaders but slowly they began to realise how to work together collectively in a group, we also got better as we developed a pace so when we where nearly ready to stop, the pace would slow down and we would bunch in together this meant we could see others more easily and feel others relaxed and  ready to stop. 

We developed this starting and stopping into more complex things like stopping, sitting, lying down, sitting back up, standing back up and then walking again. This was very challenging and complicated as when we all started lying down we couldn't see anyone or feel anyone getting up therefore it took about 15 minutes to get to the stage of sitting up again. Simon told us that we should listen to eachothers breathing and that helped us know when it was time to get up. This exercise was difficult but an amazing way to become aware and used to working in a large group and together. I found that it built our confidence in eachother which is important as we are going to be working with eachother for the next 2 years. 





Saturday, 13 September 2014

Stanislavski- week 4




Imagination 
We did an exercise where we had to imagine an object that we disliked and then describe it without using the items name. I picked a spider and when describing it to the rest of the class said it was light, about the size of my hand, it lived in homes mainly, and had eight legs and eyes I also described it's appearance and what it felt moving on my hand and when receiving feedback after my describtion i was told that everyone new it was a spider because of different ways, one was because of how they related to what I was saying and they saw spiders the same way I did and another was because of a particular physical description such as the eight legs and many eyes. Later when we were descussing the exercise we found that the reason we didn't say the name of the object was because everyone has there own ideas of how a particular object looks such as the spider but by describing it you create a personal picture for the audience that is shared with everyone listening. 


Given circumstance 
3 chairs where placed in the centre of the room and we where asked what they could be, after a couple of comments such as a doctors waiting room, airoplane and van we decided that the most realistic answer was the doctors waiting room as in a doctors waiting room there are just ordinary chairs placed together. We then discussed what would be around a doctors waiting room such as a desk, a receptionist and a board reading patients names, we also spoke about what day it would be ( a day in the week not weekend) and what time it would probably be ( the morning ) these were the given circumstances. Ella was then picked to come into the doctors waiting room and just act as she would if she was waiting at the doctors, two other people from my class then joined her and sat in the other chairs and acted as they would at a doctors waiting room. When we had a descussion about it after watching them for around 5 minutes we descovered that what made it so successful was the realistic and genuine approach to the scenario, it was so believable and almost hypnotising to watch as you really felt like you where just peering into a doctors waiting room. In this excersize the 4th wall applied as this was vital to making the peice believable when hearing the 3 class members speak it came apparent that what helped them become so believable was having a back story and after hearing the back stories that they each had we all agreed that it came across. We also annalysed body language such as there leg position or how they were holding their arms this all added to the supposed character they had in their head. 




Relaxation
We did an exercise where we stood in neutral and slowly imagined each part of our body starting from the feet turning to ice/ freezing. This involved us tensing up every part of our body such as locking knees and scrunching the bum. Once we where completely tense and in freeze mode we slowly began to melt from head to toe un tensing each body part. This was a zipping feeling as we felt trapped and restricted when freezing and free and loose when melted. This excersize was designed to completely free the body and to realise the difference between being tence and loose and how this can affect an actor. 

Tempo-Rhythm 
The Tempo or Rhythm of a scene makes you feel a certain way and get a certain feeling from the scene. For instance if there was a murder about to take place the tempo would be going quite slow giving the audience more time to build fear making the audience member feel on edge and tense but if a character was just doing a normal everyday thing the tempo would be quite relaxed and normal making the audience member feel calm. The tempo is used as a dramatic tool it can heighten tension and dissipate it.

Magic if/ What if 
We did an exercise where we walked around the space with a purpose, which was to get to school. As we where walking we where shouted out things such as 'What if there was a £50 note on the floor' and we had to react as we personally would if this where to happen. I found that in this excersize everyone acted completely differently although some may have not been as truthful as expected. I personally found it hard to envisage some of the 'what if' questions but I tried to act as truthfully as I possibly could putting myself in the position of the scenario. This exercise was particularly advantageous to me as it helped me with my improvisational skills and naturalism which are key in the particular area we are studying at the moment. 






Saturday, 6 September 2014

Melodrama and Naturalism- week 2

We started the lesson by walking around the space neutrally, Simon and Sarah then began to talk about melodrama and how this type of theatre was popular in Chekhov times and was a key reason why Stanislavsky introduced his form of naturalism. We then where told to freeze and make an image of the particular popular characters used in melodrama; the damsel in distress, the hero, the prince, the villain, the sidekick and the henchman. When doing so we would pause to look at a particular person who embodied the character well and we would explain why we thought their still image was so successful. I found in this exercise that bigger was better and to times my character by at least 3. 

After we had done this exercise we got into groups of 5 and devised our own short piece of melodrama. My group decided to make our piece have a simple story line so that we could really focus on our melodramatic physicality's and voice. Later when we showed our pieces, positive feedback was that we all had identifiable roles, we all faced the audience and kept that interaction strong and that we had a clear storyline all points we tried to incorporate inour piece    so I was happy that the feedback picked up on that and was successful.

We started to look more into Stanislavsky and his theatre form of naturalism. We discussed what we thought naturalism was and decided that it was finding qualities in a character similar to yourself and using that to make your character as truthful as possible. A naturalistic play or performance has to be truthful and believable, after establishing this we got into small groups to create a small piece of naturalistic theatre. My group decided we would set our piece in a lift as it was one of the most simple places we could have picked where no interaction takes place so you can really just focus on people being natural. I found this quite challenging as with naturalistic theatre it is so easy to overreact or do things you wouldn't normally do, I found it quite hard to just relax and feel as if I was just simply standing in a life but I found a way of overcoming this by thinking of a time I'd been a lift and just rein acting that time and putting myself in that mindset. We watched a few different groups performances and then where told to edit it down to around half the time, for my group this wasn't hard at all but other groups found that they would cut out the beginning and the end and just get to the real content, whereas others found that this meant they would cut out more of the pauses or the umms or errs. 

To conclude the lesson we did a short group peice on a synopsis of the cherry orchard. My group picked 4 major points in the story, the arrival, the descussion of selling the house, the announcement of the cherry orchard being sold and the ending. We did this by using freeze frames and physical theatre there was an element of comedy in all the group pieces as they where so quick and a lot of them didn't make much sense. I enjoyed this lesson as we got to improve our understanding of melodrama and naturalism by exploring them through short pieces of theatre made by ourselves.