Title: Theatre Appreciation
1Theatre Appreciation
- Main Entry appreciate Function verb1 a
to grasp the nature, worth, quality, or
significance of - b to value or admire highly
- c to judge with heightened perception or
understanding be fully aware of - d to recognize with gratitude
- 2 to increase the value of
2What is Drama?
- Main Entry drama Function nounEtymology
Late Latin dramat-, drama, from Greek, deed,
drama, from dran to do, actDate 15151 a
composition in verse or prose intended to portray
life or character or to tell a story usually
involving conflicts and emotions through action
and dialogue and typically designed for
theatrical performance
3What is Theatre?
- The artistic practice of live performance with a
live audience - Theatre is a story that comes alive.
- Theatre shows us lives like our own and speaking
our language as well as shows us a world that
never was. - Theatre is an unique art that calls for an
audience to react to a lifelike experience.
4What is Theatre?
- At its fullest power, theatre provides a shared
experience that calls upon all our senses. - It is a sensational medium that offers an
audience an image of life possessing unusual
excitement and, at times, a great and strong
simplicity. - When fully mobilized, the power of theatre is
almost irresistible.
5SCRIPT PERFORMANCE
AUDIENCE
6What is Performed
- Many types of activities may be considered
Theatre - What is the essence of theatrical performance?
- Possibilities
- The staged performance of a text
- Storytelling
- Entertainment such as juggling or improvisation
- Since Theatre has a broad range of possibilities,
the essence of What is Performed is difficult to
define - Therefore Theatre, as a performing art, is
difficult to define
7The Performance
The Performance translates the potential of a
script, scenario, or plan into actuality.
- Key Components of the Performance include
- Performance Space
- where the performance takes place and what the
relationship is between the performers and the
audience - Artistic Collaboration
- how the playwright, director, designers and
others work together to create the Performance - Theatrical Elements
- Scenery, Costumes, Music, Lighting and other
effects that contribute to the Performance
8The Audience
The only thing that all forms of theatre have in
common is the need for an audience. Peter Brook
- The Audience
- Completes the cycle of Creation/Communication
- Provides Immediate Feedback to the Performers
- 3-Way Interaction
- Performers Audience
- Audience Performers
- Audience Audience
9Theatre in YOUR Life
- List the events in your life fit the SCRIPT,
PERFORMANCE, AUDIENCE model?
10Forms of Dramatic Presentation
MOVIES
11TV
12THEATRE
13Live Theatre vs Movies TV
- Live performance
- 3-Dimensional, real depth of performance
- Ephemeral each performance is unique, existing
now and never again - Audience is a part of the performance
- Wide focus audience chooses what to look at
- Handcrafted product any particular production
is only available at a certain time
- Recorded performnace
- 2-Dimensional all depth is an illusion
- Static each viewing of the film is exactly the
same - Audience doesnt effect the performance
- Camera has tight control of focus and controls
audience P.O.V. - Mass produced product available anytime
14Is theatre Art?What is Art?
15Types of Art
- Useful
- Health Medicine
- Engineering
- Agriculture
- Home Economics
- Management
- Chemical Engineering
- Manufacturing
- Manufacturing for Specific Uses
- Buildings
- Fine
- Civic Landscape Art
- Architecture
- Sculpture
- Drawing Decorative Arts
- Painting
- Graphic Arts
- Photography
- Music
- Recreational Performing Arts
16Aesthetics
- Main Entry aestheticFunction noun1 a branch
of philosophy dealing with the nature of beauty,
art, and taste and with the creation and
appreciation of beauty
17World TheatreIndia
18Japan
19China
20Purposes of Art
- Art as a means to understand ones world
- Like other disciplines, such as history, Art
seeks to discover and record patterns in human
experience. - While historians, scientists and other scholars
appeal to the mind/intellect, Artists appeal to
the senses.
21Value of Art
- Art has the capacity to improve the quality of
life by - Bringing pleasure
- Sharpening our perceptions
- Increasing are sensitivity to others
- Suggesting that moral and societal concerns
should take precedence over materialistic goals
22Theatre as an art form
- Theatre has great potential as a humanizing force
because it allows - Audience enters lives of others so as to
understand their aspirations and motivations - Helps us to see who and what we are.
- See ourselves in relation to others.
- Understand and feel for others as human beings
23Elements of Theatre Spectatorship
- Willing Suspension of Disbelief
- Term from Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- We know that the events of the play are not real.
- However, we agree, during the experience of the
performance, not to disbelieve the events of the
play. - Example
- When a character kills another character onstage,
we do not rush to the stage to help the victim,
yet we may still weep or feel an emotional
response to the action.
24Elements of Theatre Spectatorship
Willing Suspension of Disbelief enables
Esthetic Distance We are detached enough from the
performance to view it with some objectivity
Empathy Feeling of involvement with the
performance
Esthetic Distance and Empathy seem to be
contradictory concepts, but they balance each
other in Performance through the Audiences
Willing Suspension of Disbelief.
25Special Qualities of Theatre
Lifelikeness Theatre recreates everyday
experiences. Ephemerality Theatre is live
performance, and becomes a part of the past
immediately after it occurs. Objectivity Theatre
presents both outer and inner experience through
speech and action.
26Special Qualities of Theatre
Complexity Theatre combines varied elements such
as movement, lighting and sound while also
drawing from all of the other Arts. Immediacy Thea
tre is psychologically immediate, because it
transpires in the simultaneous presence of live
actors and spectators in the same room.
27How Many Plays
- Make a list of the plays you have seen including
- Title
- Producing organization