34 Results for actor

\"Fragments\" is an experimental performance that is not based on a specific plot or theme, so the building up to a major climax throughout the performance was not very clear, however, each scene had a minor climax. People who watched the performance would realize that it had a lot of tempo and rhyt...
Max Reinhardt can be described as one of the greatest theatrical directors in history. A great innovator and a master of spectacle, he staged gigantic productions full of pageantry and color. Reinhardt became one of the first theatrical directors to achieve widespread recognition as a major creativ...
Ballyhoo is a play about a Jewish family in the south around Christmas. The play takes place in a house, mainly in one room, the family room. There are four people who live in the house. A working man who looks to be in his early fifties, his sister who is probably in her late forties, her daughte...
Standing in front of the crowd, all dressed up in their costumes, everything is just clicking. The crowd loves it, and the play comes to an end. You feel the energy building up in the theatre, an energy that you\'ve never felt. The lights go out and the curtain closes, then the actors come out to bo...
1) What was the play about? (brief synopsis) Mr. Kipps, the protagonist, has engaged a professional actor to help him learn to act out and reveal his play onstage to his family and friends. By the second act, a shy, timid, and nervous Kipps transforms into the superior actor. At this point, t...
The fifth-year had seen a theatre production called Noises Off. The production was held in The Piccadilly Theatre on the 17th of September. The play was about the cast of Noises Off performing another play, \'Nothing On.\' We, as the audience saw act one of the play three times but from different a...
I had never been to a theatre setting such as the Goodman Theatre before and it was exciting. The building was enormous. When I first entered I thought I was at an Opera House. The shape of the theatre was huge. It had high ceilings and high seating. Balconies went on for days. The shape of the ...
Brecht was reacting against the theatre of the time; this was because traditional theatre had fantastic sets, elaborate costumes, sentimental music, and sloppy emotion. He thought this type of theatre was aesthetically wrong as he felt a good story had been taken and made sentimental. He also believ...
Account of live performance: Abomination On Friday 24th, I watched a production of the book 'Abomination' in the school assembly room at Bitterne Park School. To perform the play 'abomination' I thought the actors and actresses would have to be good as I had heard from fr...
Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956) a non-conformist German playwright, was the most important single influence in the development of epic theatre. His political beliefs and experiences were his motivation to try to change the world through drama. Through the theatre he created, he made people realise the wr...
Trying to produce a film adaptation from a play or novel is sometimes quite difficult because the result of the film is almost completely based on the director's decisions. While the director may manipulate the film production and guide it towards a certain direction, other people may disagree ...
The play \"Kiss Me Kate\" was a very entertaining musical. I enjoyed the humor and liveliness of the musical. Cole Porter created the musical with great songs that made you want to get up and dance; it was like you never knew what was going to happen next or what was going to be said because there w...
The play was introduced by a woman in brown, who was very informative in letting everyone know what the name of the play was. The play was titled "For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow Is Enuf", and it was presented in the El Camino Auditorium on November 5, 200...
A brief look at the history of dramatic representation shows a long and tumultuous past. I am just going to briefly touch down on medieval times. Because of its pagan associations, early Christians regarded the theater as disgraceful and held it in low esteem. Actors were forbidden to become memb...
The Red Deer College Theatre Studies presentation of Richard III by William Shakespeare was excellent. The production really brought the book to life adding everything from a few different twists and turns than in the original script to Richard being quite comedic but still extremely sinister. Altho...
Arthur Wing Pinero\'s \"Trelawny of the Wells\" was one that I personally was open-minded to when required to see the production at the Ruth Halls Theatre. Because theatre and art interest me, I expected the production of Trelawny to be quite well. When I came to the Wednesday production, I wanted ...
The stylized theatre found in Japan that incorporates drama, dance, and song is known as Kabuki. This traditional theatre has been a part of the Japanese culture since its first performance in 1596 and most active when Japan passed into the modern age (Powell 4). The theatre has inspired all Japa...
As society dives headfirst into the 21st-century, one cannot deny that there are a number of apparently frivolous concepts which are being sacrificed in the name of technology. Peripheral ideals and out-dated innovations such as LP\'s, tie-dying, and the ozone layer are being rightfully pushed asid...
This year\'s showcase production at the Brisbane Festival is a piece of Bertolt Brecht\'s Epic Theatre, \"The Caucasian Chalk Circle,\" directed by renowned director, Jarrad Carroll. The following is a transcript of an interview held with Jarrad Carroll regarding not only his choice of \"The Caucasi...
Twenty-two years ago Jane Martin's first play premiered at the Actors Theater of Louisville in Kentucky, and ever since the controversy has followed. There is so much mystery and so many rumors wrapped up in this one single person that it is hard to find out what exactly is truthful and what is hea...
Peter Brook: Why and How? In modern theater today, the director is ultimately responsible for the artistic effectiveness of the production. He reviews the script and determines how he wants that play to be performed. In his hands rests the future of the play. Lighting, scenery, costumes, and...
Summary of the Introduction Chikamatsu Monzaemon was born in Echizen, Japan in 1653 with the name of "Sugimore Nobumori" and was to become perhaps the greatest dramatist in the history of the Japanese theater. Most of his early history is unknown. His father, a samurai, gave up his feudal respon...
In Jackson\'s Victorian Theatre (1989) he discusses how during the nineteenth century the British theatre was pretty much exclusively commercial and was central to popular culture and to the entertainment industry of an urban industrial society. Its purposes and effectiveness were argued over by cri...
Every now and then an innovative play will come along and astound the theatre world. Sometimes the play will triumph for pleasant or ghastly reasons, but only a chosen few will be earmarked as an immortal classic. The plays that end up being classic are plays that frequently focus on a universal a...
My initial impression of the play started when we walked into the theatre space. The space was small and more intimate than other theatres I had recently visited. The furthest seat from the stage was perhaps only 15 feet away. There was no curtain and the set was fixed with a large apron and the sta...