Showing posts with label Stanislavski and Our Country's Good. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stanislavski and Our Country's Good. Show all posts

Wednesday, 7 January 2015

Drama: Weeks Eleven and Twelve

Monday 8th December 2014 


Today most people performed their assesments while the rest of us observed, but Elvina, Katy and I were not able to, because unfortunately Katy was unwell. 

Tuesday 9th December 2014


Today we did our poems assessment in the recording studio, and we also watched The Tempest.

Wednesday 10th - Thursday 11th December 2014 


On these days, I worked tech on the musical theatre second year's pantomime. 
My job was to control the follow spot. 

I worked four performances in total.
It was actually pretty fun to do the follow spot, and although I thought it would be difficult to manoeuvre, it was fine really.
I had three characters I had to follow. For act one, I had the follow spot set to red, and it had to focus on the pantomime villain, the wolf.
After the interval, I changed it to pink and followed Dame Robin through a dance number, and finally I changed it to blue, and it followed the ghost in the woods.
That was it, really!
It was nice to get used to working backstage, even if it wasn't the most fascinating job to do.
I think I was being assessed on this job, and I feel that it went well.

This is the formative feedback I was given on my work for the pantomime:

You came into the role late in the production process, but you learnt the skills quickly and the director felt that you needed little guidance or direction during shows. You were confident enough to ask questions if you were unsure of what you were doing and this helped you to learn how to operate the follow spot quickly.

This is my action plan: 

My plan of action now is to continue to build on the skills I learnt from this experience, and use the knowledge it has given me for other productions that I take part in. Now I have learnt these skills once, I'd like to be able to be a bit more confident when using them again in the future.

Monday 15th December 2014


Today Katy, Elvina and I performed our assessment. I feel that it went quite well, however I was not thoroughly satisfied. I was not able to get into this particular assignment as much as our previous one, as personally I found the Greek Theatre more compelling than Our Country's Good. 
But, it was enjoyable working with Elvina and Katy, and it did all come together nicely, I think. 

Prior to performing our piece, the entire class did voice work in the morning. 
In the afternoon we sat down and discussed the Tempest, and the different parts we would all like to play. I said that I would like to play Ariel. 

Drama: Week Ten

Monday 1st December 2014 


Today we had a day off. 

Tuesday 2nd December 2014


Today we spent all of the day taking turns in our groups to do one on one blocking with Rob, to put the final touches to our scenes. 
I found this extremely helpful, and I believe Elvina and Katy did too. Before this there were a few things we weren't quite sure how we were doing, but getting pointers and direction from Rob helped us to make sure our whole scene was choreographed fluently. This meant that we felt much more confident about doing our assessment, and after we had worked with Rob on it we went over the things we had just altered until we all knew exactly what we were doing. 

Wednesday 3rd December: 


Today we played the memory game "shopping list" to help with our listening, concentration and memorising techniques. It was fun to just have a chill time and play a laid back game, and it was also actually helpful, I found. 
We also started to look at writing letters, which we will later perform as monologues, as part of our war stories assignment. 

Thursday 4th December:


Unfortunately, I did not make any notes on this day! Oops. 

Sunday, 7 December 2014

Our Country's Good and Stanislavski Theories

At the moment we are working on Stanislavski theories and putting them into practice in class and in the scenes we're doing from "Our Country's Good".

Our Country's Good: 


As someone who had no prior knowledge of this play, I had some quite extensive research to do in terms of understanding not only what it is about basely, but also in understanding the more complex sides of the play such as its themes, sub-textural qualities and historical context.
We were provided with a lot of sources of information about the play to look at, which helped me greatly in my exploration of this play. I have listed my sources of research at the bottom of this post.

This is some of the information about the play which has helped me develop my own interpretation and understanding of the scene we have been working on.
Our Country's Good is a play by Timberlake Wertenbaker, which is based on real events and set in the 1700s. The play explores the story of the people who were on the British Prison ships which deported convicts to Australia, and the different things that happen to them, including them all putting on a play. 
This which features heavily the themes of oppression and freedom, crime and punishment, justice and mercy, and quite predominantly, levels of "authority". 
Actually, there is a very interesting social dynamic in this play because of the way it centres around the different levels of authority, and even levels of class. Although the characters in the play are quite set apart by constructs such as these, some of them being convicts, some of them Captains and lieutenants, they all still find themselves mixed up in a mess of relationships which ultimately go against the boundaries put in place by their different "titles", if you like. 
For me as an actor, I find it fun to play about with themes such as these social constructs, as for me personally, it adds a lot of texture to my interpretation of the role I play. I also find it quite thrilling that this play explores the value of theatre, using the construct of a "play within a play", and this is another aspect of Wertenbaker's work which I find compelling.  


The Stanislavski theories we have been looking at so far:


Constantin Stanislavski 
  • Given Circumstances: The facts you have about your character and the rest of the play, literally the circumstances in which everything is happening within the play.
  • Emotional recall: Searching your own past for emotional triggers and sensations which can help to bring your character to life for you. .
  • Through line: All the different aspects of your character's role and life, including everything that happens to them/that they do offstage.  
  • Objectives: What your character is trying to achieve, what their goal is, what do they want or what are they trying to do?
  • Magic if: What would I do if I was in this situation? 
  • Actions: Quite simply how you achieve what you are trying to do. 
  • Circles of Attention: Your awareness of the world around you, which starts with you onstage, and builds outwards. 
  • Subtext: The real meaning beneath the words in the text, the actual motivation behind what the character is saying.  

Applying these theories to our work: 


So, after we were taught about the different theories, we were taught how to apply them to the work we are doing in class, and especially how to use and develop our own interpretation of these theories in the scenes we are doing from Our Country's Good.
The theories have shown me new ways to break down my personal barriers and new ways to work on pieces of drama, as I'm going to explore below!

Over the weeks we have been rehearsing our pieces, we've put these different theories into practise in numerous exercises, which I have found very helpful for developing my role in the play, Mary Brenham.
For example, we did one exercise which worked on the concept of emotional recall:
We sat with our eyes closed and were told to imagine as vividly as we could different senses; a pleasant smell and an unpleasant smell, a nice sight and a bad sight, something nice to touch and something not nice to touch. a positive sound and a negative sound, and a taste we like and a taste we don't. We had to think about how imagining these different sensations and using our own triggers to convey our emotions could help us in our scenes. I found this helped me a lot personally, because it can be easy for acting to look stunted if you are unable to empathise with the feelings of your character, and if you can use emotional recall onstage, it could be much more convincing and honest.

We looked at our objectives and actions in the scenes from pretty much the first moment we were given our scripts. 
I am in a group with Katy and Elvina. The three of us spent some time analysing our scene together, annotating our script and discussing what we believe our characters were trying to achieve and how they were going about achieving it.

Laura Dos Santos as Mary Brenham and Helen Bradbury
as Dabby Byrant in Octagon Theatre Bolton and
Out Of Joint's "Our Country's Good", 2012.
Photo by Robert Workman
My character Mary's objective in the scene is to get everyone to learn the lines for the play they are in, but she also wants desperately to keep the peace between Liz and Dabby, who are constantly bickering and fighting. 
I wrote underneath each of my lines an action, which all put together would ultimately make Mary's objective clear. For example, every time Liz makes an advance on Dabby, or Dabby tries to provoke Liz, I pull them apart, or perhaps shoot Dabby a look to signal she should stop. 
My character is somewhat caught inbetween the other two in the scene, and I found that quite fun to play around with. 

An exercise we did a few weeks ago really helped me to develop my understanding of the subtext in our scene, particularly in regard to the position that my character is in. 
In our groups, we were given about fifteen minutes to improvise a scene which could happen prior to the actual scene we are working on from the play. 
Katy, Elvina and I thought it would be productive for us to do a scene which centres around a similar social situation to the one in our piece. So, we decided that we would focus on the friction between Liz and Dabby, and the way that Mary is stuck in between them, trying her hardest to prevent arguments and bad feeling. 
I actually thought the process of making up our own scene between the characters did immense good for me in thinking in a more in-depth way about how Mary feels, and why her objective is what it is. 
Putting things into my own words and looking at an interpretation of a role which is more relatable to me made our scene much more accessible to me.

To further add to the clarity of the relationships between the three women, there is an actual physical fight in our scene. This was great to work on, and we spent one session choreographing it to precision so that it would run smoothly in the flow of the scene. 

As you can see clearly, a lot of Stanislavski's techniques were exceptionally interesting for me and helped me a lot, although I didn't find that I could apply some to my work as easily as others.
Something we are constantly told by Rob is to not "throw the baby out with the bath water", and I think this definitely applies here. The Stanislavski theories we have explored have given me a great insight into my own development as an actor, and my role in Our Country's Good, and I'll no doubt find myself using these techniques on numerous occasions in the future. 

Further work on our scene: 


As well as exploring Stanislavski's techniques and using them in our piece, there was additional work to be done on improving the cohesion of our scene. 
As much as we can rehearse in our group, there's only so much we can see from being onstage, and it's also important to hear what it looks like to an audience. This is one of the reasons I like the way our drama class give feedback to one another, and try to be as constructive as possible in our critiquing. 
Over the course of our rehearsals, we received a lot of feedback from our peers. 
Some of the feedback I was given personally was this: 
  • Good physicality 
  • Good diction 
  • Work on projection 
  • Add more "oomph" or sass to role
  • Good at staying grounded 
  • Work on emotions and facial expressions
  • Put more energy into it 
  • Perhaps play Mary a bit more annoying
Tips like this were really good to keep in mind when trying to improve my portrayal of Mary. 

Altogether, a combination of Stanislavski techniques, research into "Our Country's Good", and a lot of rehearsing, has come together to give me a well rounded understanding of the work that we have been doing for this last assignment. 


Sunday, 30 November 2014

Drama: Week Nine

Monday 24th November 2014 


Today we spent more time rehearsing our scenes from Our Country's Good. 
We performed for one another in the theatre, and each received feedback from Shauna, who used to do the course which we're on. 
This is the feedback she gave me: 
  • Good physicality 
  • Good diction 
  • Work on projection 
  • Add more "oomph" or sass to role
  • Good at staying grounded 
We also gave one another feedback, and this is the feedback I received from other students: 
  • Work on emotions and facial expressions
  • Put more energy into it 
  • Work on projection, as Shauna said
  • Perhaps play Mary a bit more annoying? 

Tuesday 25th November 2014 


Today we worked with the second years all day, it was cool. 
We did some improvisation, working in small groups and all starting out with the line "I need to change this lightbulb". It was interesting to see the different ways everyone went with just that one line. 

In the afternoon we rehearsed our scenes, and those who wanted to could perform for Rob and be critiqued and and given further direction from him. 

Wednesday 26th November 2014 


Today Sharon wasn't in so we had self directed learning time. We played some improvisational games as well as rehearsing our scenes. 

Thursday 27th November 2014 


Today we did more voice work. 
We did a warm up as usual and did some tongue twisters for our articulation. 
We also practised doing sight reading, and looked at the principles of it and tips on how to do it successfully. We also did an exercise where people could volunteer to go up and read out a short piece of writing for the rest of the group, having never seen it before. 
Before we finished and went to self directed learning to rehearse our scenes, we were each given the chance to read out the first two lines of our chosen poem, and Rob gave us as much feedback as it's possible to from only hearing two lines! 

Drama: Week Eight

Monday 17th - Tuesday 18th November 2014


On these days we worked further in our groups, rehearsing the "Our Country's Good" scenes. 
We started each day with a warm up and some tongue twisters before getting to work.
I worked in my group with Elvina and Katy and we rehearsed over and over again, trying to improve our piece however we could, and Rob also spent some time with us choreographing the small fight which happens in our scene.

We also all worked on the concept of emotional recall.
We did an exercise where we sat with our eyes closed and were told to imagine as vividly as we could different senses; a pleasant smell and an unpleasant smell, a nice sight and a bad sight, something nice to touch and something not nice to touch. a positive sound and a negative sound, and a taste we like and a taste we don't. 

Wednesday 19th November 2014 


Today we started looking at our next storytelling assignment, which is about stories from World War one. We looked at the whole concept of war and shared our ideas and opinions on it. 
We started by standing in a circle and going around it one by one, saying one word we associated with war. After we had done this for a while, we split into pairs. 
We had to, as quickly as we could, do the same exercise, but one on one. 
Then we did it where we added an action with the word we said, and we did it in several different pairs. 
Next, we formed groups of about four, playing the "Yes, let's!" game, but with war theme. 
We would go around the circle in our fours and each say a word along with an action about war, then everyone else would do the same. 
We continued to do this, joining other groups, until eventually the class was split into two large groups doing this exercise, and then we directed our words and actions at the other group as a whole, and it became very like a battle itself, with opposing sides. 

Then, we split into groups of only about four, and worked on short improvisations based around just one word we associated with war. 
I worked in a group with Amber, Mara and Didi. The word we chose was dictator, and we did an improvisation about how one girl who wanted to be in the Hitler Youth turned on her two friends who were against it, and how that conflict led to their demise, and resulted in one of the friends actually killing another. 
It was an intense story even though it was short. 
Everyone performed their improvisations for the group and we all gave feedback to one another. 

Thursday 20th November 2014 


Today we continued to do voice work and work on our poem assignment. 

Drama: Week Seven

Monday 10th - Tuesday 11th November 2014


On these days we were officially put into our groups for our "Our Country's Good" assignment and were given our scenes.
I am in a group with Katy and Elvina. I play Mary, Katy plays Dabby, and Elvina plays Liz.
We started to get familiar with our scene and to rehearse it over these two days. 

Wednesday 12th November 2014 


Today it was time to perform our fairytale or myth for our storytelling module. 
We were given the first class to add the final touches to our stories, rehearse them, and work with one another to perfect and get them down to that one minute time limit. 
For the rest of the day, we each performed our pieces to the rest of the class and Sharon, and they were also all filmed. 

Thursday 13th November 2014 


Today we continued doing voice work. 
As usual we did a warm up and practised our articulation, as well as doing vowels, consonants and tongue twisters. 

We also worked in pairs on Shakespeare's "Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day" sonnet. 
I was in a pair with Didi. We were given some time to rehearse our sonnet, taking a line each, and were then to perform it for the rest of the class in the style of stand up comedy. 
Some people's pieces were hilarious, it was a fun exercise. 

Drama: Week Six

Monday 3rd - Tuesday 4th November 2014


These were our first two days back at college after half term, so we started looking at the work we were going to be doing over the next several weeks. Rob showed us that we would be doing work on Stanislavski techniques, as well as working in groups and working towards short assessed performances, which would be scenes from the play "Our Country's Good".

We worked in pairs or groups using example scenes and looking at Stanislavski tehcniques that could be applied in them. 
I was in a pair with Amber, and we rehearsed the scene we were given as well as looking at the characters' objectives in the scene and thinking more deeply than we might otherwise about the actions of the characters. 

Wednesday 5th November 2014 


Today we started working towards a storytelling assignment with Sharon. 
Once we had spent some time warming up, we were told to find a space in the room. We then had to think for a while and choose our favourite fairytale or myth, or one we knew the story of very clearly. Then we got into pairs, and were given the task of first telling our partner the story which we had chosen, and then telling it in the space of about one minute, using all the different storytelling techniques we knew of. 
I was in a pair with Nuray. The story she chose was Peter Pan, and the story I chose was Cinderella. 
We had to fill out some sheets which asked questions such as what is the brief synopsis of our story, and what are three key moments in it. Once we had filled those out and had a clearer idea of what we needed to include in our storytelling and how we were going to structure it, we started to rehearse, telling our stories to one another. 

Once we had spent some time rehearsing our stories and giving direction to one another, it was time for the class to all come together again. About half of the class got the chance to practice performing their story for everyone else, so we could get tips and feedback from the group, and get more used to doing it in just that one minute. 
I got the chance to practice performing it for everyone, it was fun and I got some helpful and very positive feedback.

Thursday 6th November 2014


Today we started to properly work on our voice module of our course. We were told what our next voice assignment was; reading out a poem of our choice and having it recorded. 
We started to do some voice work then, keeping in mind what we were working towards. 

We did a warm up, and then did work on sounding out different vowels and consonants.
We practised the different sounds such as "Oo Oh Or", at first all together, and then individually so we could work on our own voice more specifically. 
I was told that I should allow myself to loosen up a bit, and also to make sure that my northern glottal doesn't sound prominent! 
We also did some tongue twisters such as "I flew through the air without a care" to work further on our articulation. 

Next we did some work with an actual poem. We paired up and were given a poem by Brian Patten called "A Blade of Grass". I worked in a pair with Mara. 
We had to do half of the poem each, but work together to make its overall effect. We had to start thinking about the given circumstances of the poem, the meaning behind it, the subtext and anything else that we found helpful when working on it, and we had to write our ideas about it on the back of the poem. 
Then we rehearsed reading it out, and once we had been given a while to work on it, we all sat around in a circle, and we all took it in turns to read it out in our pairs. 
A few pairs were asked to go up and read out the poem, having been given different emotions and sensations to imagine whilst reading it out, and it was interesting to see what a difference it could make if they put different emotions behind the same words. 

The homework Rob gave us today was to look at some information on Our Country's Good on Moodle, and to watch the National Theatre's voice classes on Youtube, as well as choosing a poem we wanted to use for our assignment.