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Chapter 8

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Title: Chapter 8


1
Chapter 8 Stage Language
  • Theatre is more than words drama is a story that
    is lived and relived with each performance, and
    we can watch it live. The theatre appeals as much
    to the eye as to the ear.
  • Eugène Ionesco

2
Chapter Summary
  • Language for the theatre is special and complex.
  • It organizes our perceptions of what is taking
    place before us, forcing us into self-discovery
    or radical changes of attitude.
  • It communicates meaning and activity to us in
    ways that are verbal and nonverbal.
  • Stage language is a way of seeing that engages
    our eyes, ears, and minds.

3
Words and Gestures
  • In theatre, words connected to gesture
  • Theatrical language selected and controlled
  • Much more must happen in theatrical dialogue than
    in ordinary life.
  • Language carefully arranged by playwright into
    meaningful pattern
  • Drama is language under such high pressure of
    feeling the words carry a necessary and immediate
    connotation of gesture.
  • George Steiner

4
Verbal and Nonverbal Language
  • Verbal and nonverbal signs and symbols used to
    enhance meaning
  • Signs
  • Direct physical relationship to what they
    represent (thunder a sign of rain)
  • Symbols
  • Arbitrary connection to what they represent
    (American flag represents America)

5
Verbal and Nonverbal Language
  • Chekhovs The Cherry Orchard
  • Orchard a verbal symbol for passing of old life,
    arrival of new social order
  • Sound of ax chopping down trees at plays end a
    nonverbal sign representing destruction of
    familys way of life

6
Types of Stage Language
  • Monologue
  • Extended, uninterrupted speech delivered by a
    single character
  • Aside
  • Brief remark by a character spoken directly to
    the audience
  • Not overheard by others onstage
  • Soliloquy
  • A long speech delivered by a character, usually
    alone onstage, for audience to overhear

7
Types of Stage Language Soliloquy in Shakespeare
  • Uses soliloquy to take audience into characters
    mind
  • How all occasions do inform against me
    soliloquy from Hamlet
  • Precise argument reveals Hamlets intelligence.
  • Length of speech reveals tendency toward delay.
  • Soliloquy shows evolution from inactivity to
    activity.

8
Types of Stage Language Sounds in The Cherry
Orchard
  • Stage directions for speech delivered by elderly
    valet at end of play indicate various sounds
  • Sounds of departure
  • Breaking string
  • Stroke of an ax
  • Sound of string subsides into silence before ax
    stroke is heard
  • Illustrates passing of valet, arrival of new,
    aggressive world order

9
Types of Stage Language Brechts Gestic Language
  • Gest refers to characters overall attitudes.
  • Words should follow the gest of the speaker
  • Brecht A language is gestic when it . . .
    conveys particular attitudes adopted by the
    speaker towards other men.
  • Example (from Caucasian Chalk Circle )
  • Grusha reveals humanity by refusing to tug child
    from circle.
  • Governors wife reveals grasping quality by
    twice pulling the child from the circle.

10
Contemporary Trends in American Theatre Artauds
Theatre of Cruelty
  • Antonin Artaud (18961948)
  • French playwright and theorist
  • Strong influence on 1960s American playwrights
  • Rejected conventions of dialogue, plot, character
  • Wanted to purge audience of hatred, violence,
    cruelty
  • Provoked visceral response using nonverbal
    effects
  • Shrill sounds
  • Waves of light
  • Violent physicalizations
  • Unusual theatre spaces and staging

11
Contemporary Trends in American Theatre American
Playwrights of 1960s
  • After Artaud, rejected stage language of
    conversation that furthered plot, defined
    character, explored social themes
  • Set out to assault senses with sounds, violent
    images, nudity, physicalization
  • Intended to protest the political, military,
    industrial, and cultural establishment
  • Avant-garde performance techniques eventually
    appropriated by commercial theatre

12
Contemporary Trends in American Theatre David
Mamet
  • Mamets characters are wordsmiths
  • Speak in fragments
  • Frequently profane
  • Use language creatively to hustle other
    characters
  • Mamet explores myths of American capitalism
  • Characters want to connect, but know only the
    deal.
  • Characters experience failure of business as a
    moral model, become alienated from themselves.

13
Contemporary Trends in American Theatre Sam
Shepard
  • Shows inner workings of modern American family
  • Buried Child (1978)
  • Themes
  • Grown childrens complicated relationships with
    parents
  • Quest for identity
  • Evaporation of cherished values

14
Core Concepts
  • Playwrights are among the most important of the
    theatres image makers.
  • The writing of plays is their medium for
    imitating human behavior and events.
  • Other theatre artists interpret the playwrights
    text in the theatres three-dimensional space,
    giving it shape, sound, color, rhythm, image,
    activity, and human presence.
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