Friday, 20 December 2013


Evaluation
When we started devising our practical work our teacher showed us clips from the film ‘The Nightmare Before Christmas’, He then showed us a practitioner called Antonin Artaud, He created plays based on Theatre Of Cruelty; This is a surrealist form of theatre. When doing his plays he didn’t like to base them on causing pain but a rather violent, physical determination to shatter a false reality.
Our teacher asked us to twist the stories in the nightmare before Christmas and make them a lot more surreal, just like Artaud did. We had to make the audience feel uncomfortable. When we performed this it was going to be in a style called installation theatre. Installation theatre is about taking over a space and making it able to perform in. The monologues we did would get repeated in the space we had. To do this we took over the flyovers.
When we were getting all our sources together and our characters to do with the nightmare before Christmas we would start our monologues based on our character. When these were done that would be what we would perform on the night. My character was Shock from the trio Lock, Shock, and Barrel, Shock was the most dangerous, cunning out of the three she was the only girl out of the Oogie Boogie mans ‘little henchmen’. During the preparation for this performance we had to change the whole story, we had to create two monologues as half way through the preparation we didn’t have a Barrel. Our first monologue wasn’t very much Artaud style. We then went on to change a few things and ended up just having a ‘Lock and Shock’ the Doctor in the movie, Doctor Finkelstein joined our scene so we had to change our monologues for this to fit in. We did plenty research on the Moors Murders and based the monologue on that. The monologue for Lock and Shock was based on Myra Hindley and the Doctor was based on  Ian Brady. Lock and Shocks monologue were seen from two different perspectives, almost as if Myra had a split personality, one minute she was enjoying what Ian and her did and then the next, she wasn’t. Lock was explaining how much he enjoyed what they were doing. “This was our idea of fun, that’s just the kind of relationship we had”. he was also explaining about how much fun him and the doctor had (this was kind of based on what Myra said in her statement). Then Shock was saying how sick it was and how much she just wanted to escape from it all. “He told me if I showed any sign of backing out, I would have finished up in the same grave as sally”. She was scared, but wasn’t able to show much emotion as to how she felt, because she was scared of how he would react.
The difficult aspects of our work were writing to monologues as we had to change our quite a few times to make it ‘age appropriate’. It took us several times to actually get it right. Our monologues we based on The Moors Murders too much, we kind of went off track with the Artaud style. The other difficulty we had when it came to our work was mainly on the night of the performance and setting up the scene and trying to make it look ‘scary’.
Our audience said that our performance was very interesting to the eye. We were heard very well and to say it was dark we had just enough lighting for them to be able to see us. Our performance was very Artaud style and made our audience very uncomfortable, this is what we were trying to achieve.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



 

 

 

 

Sunday, 1 December 2013

Drama Reflection- Lesson One

As our new production we are doing installation theatre, today we studied a practitioner called Antonin Artaud (1896-1948). Artaud invented a type of theatre called ‘theatre of cruelty’. This launches an attack on the audience’s subconscious in an attempt to release deep-rooted fears and anxieties.
      He wanted the audience to feel something similar to what they have nightmares or how they feel/felt when they had their worst nightmare. It is almost like someone shaking up a bottle of your worst nightmares and that bottle explodes and all of what you fear is let out in the open and it’s all to do with how the mind reacts to what just happened. It’s like putting you into a situation that you have never ever been in before and what you would never want to be out through.
We did little workshops in small groups to try and do exactly what he did and to see how the audience reacted. It’s all about maximising the screams, cries and the symbolic gestures. Also it’s about taking the extremes of human nature and graphically displaying them on stage.
My personal response to this sort of theatre is quite positive I really enjoyed the first session on this as it was something I’d never looked into before nor heard of. You never know how to react to what is happening in front of you or around you as most of the group figured out this morning when sir was showing us. No one knew what was happening and it was quite scary if I’m honest. I wanted it to end, it was strange and it was a situation like that so I guess Mr Leigh was successful in what he was trying to show us.

In conclusion I seem to have learnt something new and it’s actually really interesting. I’m looking forward to what’s to come later on in the topic.