Friday, 3 June 2011

graduation show


So after 2 years of shakespeare, devised theatre, Brecht, Pinter and nick, Michael and Alex being in are ears 24/7 hours a day we finally have come to our final major project , are graduation show. we began looking at scripts, working on class pieces , and improvisations and after audition pieces im fortunate to have two pieces in the grad show. these are 

  • "Sing your heart out for the lads" by Roy Williams Allan - Sam Frenchum  Mark- Kieran Rennie 
  • "The Proposal" by Anton Checkov Mr Chubukov - Dwayne Sewell,  Natasha- Chelsea Worrell, Mr Lomov - Sam Frenchum re-worked By Sam Frenchum 





                                 Sing your hearts out for the lads 2002 national theatre 

Sing your heart out for the lads questions racism from many different angles, and how much people qualify to be english. It combines accessibility with intelligence, raw drama and opens up to multicultural Britain and the racism in Britain which williams shows in a  persuasive and disturbing way. This is a play that devastatingly captures so much that is ugly, and wrong, in Britain today.








                                                              Anton checkov
                                                      


                                                                The proposal
 Lomov, a long-time neighbor of Mr Chubukov, has come to propose marriage to Chubukov's 25-year-old daughter, Natasha. After he has asked and received joyful permission to marry Natasha, she is invited into the room, and he tries to convey to her the proposal. Lomov is a hypochondriac, and, while trying to make clear his reasons for being there, he gets into an argument with Natasha about The Oxpen Meadows, a disputed piece of land between their respective properties, which results in him having "palpitations" and numbness in his leg. Natasha then gives in and pretends that she is wrong. they then start to be a "cute couple" but Natasha and Ivan get into a second big argument, this time about the superiority of their respective hunting dogs, tracker and rover. Ivan collapses from his exhaustion over arguing, and father and daughter fear he's died. However, after a few minutes he regains consciousness, and Mr chubukov all but forces him and his daughter to accept the proposal with a kiss. Immediately following the kiss, the couple get into another argument.

Friday, 6 May 2011

The Resistable Rise Of Arturo Ui Photoshoot

Flake( Dannielle James )
Ui, Roma ( Georgina Daley, Esen Serbetli)
Giri, Givola, Gangster( sam frenchum, alex, milad )
Givola, The trust,Docdaisey, Doctor( alec , jade starr, dwayne, dannielle, mellisa)   
Ui (Georgina Daley)
Gangsters, Docdaisey( kieran rennie, jade starr, oxlem berkir, lina oslodo)
The Trust- Mellisa Myers, Sophie Moy, Esen Serbetli, Dannielle James
The Actor, Ui (Sam Frenchum, Georgina Daley)

Friday, 11 February 2011

Charchter synopsis : Emmanuel Giri

Emmanuel giri, my character is a killer- gangster in the ressistable rise of aruro ui is  brechts interpretation of Hitlers right-hand man Hermann Goring. Goring was a politician, military leader, and a leading member of the nazi party. 1940  saw goring at the peak of his power and influence .  Hitler had promoted him to the rank of Reichsmarschall, making Göring senior to all other commanders then in 1941 Hitler designated him as his successor and deputy in all his offices. Göring left from the military and political scene to enjoy his life as a wealthy and powerful man.

Thursday, 27 January 2011

the resistable rise of arturo ui


It was written in 1941 It shows  the rise of Arturo Ui, a fictional '30s Chicago mobster, and his attempts to control the cauliflower trust by destroying  his rivals and anyone who gets in his way . brecht wrote it with Ui representing Hitler, his henchman Ernesto Roma representing Ernst Röhm, Emanuele Giri representing Göring, the Cauliflower Trust representing the Prussian Junkers, the fate of the town of Cicero standing for the Anschluss in Austria ect.
 It is set  Chicago in the 1930s, business is bad  and the members of The Cauliflower Trust are moaning about  their losses. Nobody, it seems, has any money, let alone any spare cash to buy cauliflower. Into this equation steps Arturo Ui, a local gangster seeking power, and here he sees an opportunity to hold sway over the city. But Ui is a paranoid sociopath, alternately swayed by the advice of his Lieutenant, Ernesto Roma and his partners(gangsters)  giri and givola  . As he begins to take a firm grip by threats and violence, Ui begins to see the possibilities of furthering his takeover  not only on Chicago, but on towns and cities he decides are the best for picking, such as the little town of Cicero. Through political manoeuvring he murders, bombs and machine-guns his way to power - but then his psychosis begins to take hold, the whisperings of his henchmen leading him to think of betrayal in his own ranks..blood,  sweat and tears.

bertolt brecht and epic theatre

Bertolt brecht (February 1898 – August 1956)



Brecht  was a German poet, playwright, and theatre director who influenced  theatre style by becoming  one of the most recognisable practitioners of his century.  
Brecht who discovered and developed the  theory and practice of his 'epic theatre',  was said to analyse and follow the likes of  Erwin Piscator and Vsevolod Meyerhold to explore the theatre as a  form that emphasizes the social/political content of drama, rather than its emotional manipulation of the audience, a style and “image”   that had been around for generations .

Brecht's concerns with modernist  drama  led to his creation  of the 'epic form' of the drama. This dramatic form is related to similar modern innovations in other  parts of the industry , including t
·         the strategy of divergent chapters in James Joyce's novel Ulysses
·         Sergei Eisenstein's evolution of a constructivist 'montage' in the cinema
·          Picasso's introduction of cubist 'collage' in the visual arts.
 However  Brecht had no desire to destroy art as an institution and its styles such as naturalism but  he hoped he could instead 're-function' the theatre to a new social use. Brechts theatre created popular themes and forms with avant-garde formal experimentation to create psychological and socialist varieties.
brechts works
    • Drums in the Night (1922)
    • Baal (1923)
    • In the Jungle of the Cities (1923)
    • Edward II (1924)
    • The Elephant Calf (1925)
    • Man Equals Man (1926)
    • The Threepenny Opera (1928)
    • Happy End (1929)
    • Lindbergh's Flight (1929)
    • He Who Says Yes (1929)
    • Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny (1930)
    • He Who Says No (1930)
    • The Measures Taken (1930)
    • The Mother (1932)
    • The Seven Deadly Sins (1933)
    • The Roundheads and the Peakheads (1936)
    • The Exception and the Rule (1936)
    • Fear and Misery of the Third Reich (1938)
    • Señora Carrara's Rifles (1937)
    • The Trial of Lucullus (1939)
    • Mother Courage and Her Children (1941)
    • Mr Puntila and His Man Matti (1941)
    • Life of Galileo (1943)
    • The Good Person of Sezuan (1943)
    • Schweik in the Second World War (1944)
    • The Visions of Simone Machard (1944)
    • The Caucasian Chalk Circle (1945)
    • The Days of the Commune (1949)
    • The Tutor (1950)
    • The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui (1958)
    • Saint Joan of the Stockyards (1959)
People who have followed  Brechtian legacy withn theatre  include:
·         Dario Fo
·         Augusto Boal,
·         Joan Littlewood,
·         Peter Brook
·          Peter Weiss,
·         Heiner Müller,
·         Pina Bausch
·         Tony Kushner
·          Robert Bolt
·         Caryl Churchill.

Brecht also influenced film writers and TV writers these include:
·         Jean-Luc Godard
·          Lindsay Anderson
·         Rainer Werner Fassbinder
·         Joseph Losey
·          Nagisa Oshima,
·         Ritwik Ghatak

 epic theare


Epic theatre  was a theatrical movement  in the 20th century from a number of theatre practitioners, including Erwin Piscator, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Vsevolod Meyerhold and, most famously, Bertolt Brecht.  However  Brechtian epic theatre had been around for years as Brecht continuously developed the style, and popularized it. Epic theatre incorporates a style acting what bertolt brecht called “gestus” .
Gestus is an acting technique. Its a simple combination of physical gesture and attitude. A Gestus should reveal a specific aspect of a character: rather than his “casual” physicality and  psychological thought process.  A Gestus makes a character's social relations clear through his  behaviour to create  his/her  historical materialist perspective.
Brecht had many definitions to gestus such as....
"An attitude or single aspect of an attitude"   "Expressible in words or actions” “Embodiment of an attitude”
“The uncovering or revealing of the motivations and transactions that underpin a dramatic exchange between the characters and the "epic" narration of that character by the actor (whether explicitly or implicitly”.
Bertolt Brecht
"Every emotion" when treated under the rubric of Gestus, manifests itself as a set of social relations, For it is what happens between people, Brecht insists, that provides them with all the material that they can discuss, criticize, alter” Elizabeth Wright


What should the actor do?
Acting in epic theatre requires actors to play characters believably without convincing either the audience or themselves that they have "become" the characters. Actors in brechts productions often communicate with the audience directly out of character ("breaking the fourth wall") and play multiple roles. Brecht thought it was important that the choices the characters made were explicit, and tried to develop a style of acting wherein it was obvious that the characters were choosing one action over another. For example, a character could say, "I could have stayed at home, but instead I went to the shops." This he called "fixing the Not / But element the actor's attitude should be used as epic narration “the 'showing' that is 'shown' in the 'showing', in Brecht's turn of phrase” Brecht