Absolute rock performance. On Thursday, December 4th, there was a presentation called Absolute Rock, performed by the Corporate Saturday Rock Band and Absolute Leadership Development,

The Absolute Rock presentation On Thursday, December 4th, there was a presentation called Absolute Rock, performed by the Corporate Saturday Rock Band and Absolute Leadership Development, which was happening in the Gym that afternoon. I personal really like the presentation, and I think it was excellent performed because of the three following reasons: 1/ How it was started. The begging is often one of the most important parts in a presentation, and because of the unique start of this presentation, it became one of the best presentations I ever seen. It started with some great rock music, which many students in our school really like it. So when the grade 7 and 8 students walked into the Gym, we were all really excited about it. And I believe the Rock not only helped the students focused and enjoyed the presentation a lot, but also became the main reason that we participated actively in the presentation. Also, those rock music not only sounded great, but also had some sort of theme and idea about the presentation in it, so I think when people heard them, they can probably figure out a little bit of what the presentation was about. So I think the director really put a lot of time and effort to create this successful beginning for the presentation. 2/ The effective personal experiences from several speakers and some true facts that were given out on the presentation. After

  • Word count: 1383
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Drama
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Ionsecu's Rhinoceros at the Royal Court Theatre. To begin with the staging it was in a shape of a simple square and no staging curtains were covering it.

Rhinoceros 071155368 Although the title of the play was called 'Rhinoceros', I did not initially believe it would be about rhinoceroses. Instead I believed that the word 'rhinoceros' was a mere hidden meaning which would be revealed later on in the play and yet to my surprise the play was about rhinoceroses. Even more intriguing was that people were transforming into rhinoceroses. This gave me a wider range of aspects to look at regarding lighting, sound, staging etc... To begin with the staging it was in a shape of a simple square and no staging curtains were covering it. The side walls were painted white to keep the staging simple and not to distract the audience from the performers. With the walls painted white there was no need to emphasis the scene change by using added back drops to change location of the scene. The far back wall was made up of joint wooden planks which would slowly fall gradually through the performance. This was first shown when the very first rhinoceros appeared to the performers. A sound which gradually became louder in the background, the performers would look to the side of the stage where smoke would appear, this symbolising where the rhinoceros was charging from, causing a couple of wooden planks to fall off. This was the intended effect of a Rhinoceros charging through the town square, causing the walls to shake. Everytime this happened more

  • Word count: 896
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Drama
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The play we went to watch was called The Woman In Black. The playwright was by Stephen Mallatratt in the The New Victoria Theater

Charlie Lewis 4P. Woman in black play review. Plot - 9 Acting -8 Direction -8 Interpretation of script -7 Costume design -8 Lighting -8 Sound -9 Performance space -8 The play we went to watch was called 'The Woman In Black.' The playwright was by Stephen Mallatratt in the The New Victoria Theater and we watched this on the 1st February 2010 I thought that the play was very clever in which they directed the whole play. The play basically is this old man called Kipps who wants to tell people his story about this woman who lost her child and sister in a horse and trap accident in the marshes. The actor and Kipps swap roles, as Kipps dose not understand how to make his three-hour story interesting. She wasted away from the inside out ad became sallowed and pale faced. As they are acting the woman in black mysteriously turns up during the story but coincidentally at just the right time. These happenings keep occurring. During the end scenes the actor is playing `Kipps after everything is sorted out all the deeds of the lady who died he gets married and they go for a walk in the park their son shows interest in the horse and trap that goes around the park. His wife and son go for a ride until suddenly the actor sees the woman in black. Before he knows it the horse and trap gets rammed into a tree the child instantly dies and the wife is seriously injured and soon

  • Word count: 686
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Drama
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GCSE Drama Course Work A03 Response to Live Performance

GCSE Drama Course Work A03 Response to Live Performance '1984' by George Orwell at the Tobacco Factory, Bristol Northern Broadsides Theatre Company 25 November 2010 Pre-Show On entering the Tobacco Factory, the atmosphere felt immediately related to 1984, the performance I was about to see. Through heavy wooden doors, the dim lights glinted off the golden 'HELLO' printed on the glass panels. Although the look about the place was quite modern, I couldn't help but feel like I'd been hurtled into the past. The floors were a hard, cold metal, the ceiling was framed with colored pipes, and inspiring posters of plays yet to come filled the walls. Walking into a short corridor, completely painted black, washed away any biased opinions from the outside world, and then passing through a doorway bought the audience straight onto the stage, the same level as the rows of pews and red plastic chairs to sit on. The whole experience was very austere, stepping right into a rural bombed war zone, everything dim and grey. It really set the mood for the performance. Set The set was a combination of the colors grey, green and brown, all of them dark shades, bleak and lifeless. Sue Condie, the set designer, says, 'using extracts from Winston's diary, I worked to create levels of memory with fixtures, layers and imprints of the people who had lived here before,' which explains the vintage

  • Word count: 2121
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Drama
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Blue Remembered Hills Synopsis

Blue Remembered Hills Synopsis Scene 1 - Willie and Peter are introduced, setting the time the play is set and the age of the characters. They're talking about fighting and parachutes, which suggests it is during World War 2. Scene 2 - They talk about the other characters, giving us a deeper insight about what they're like and what kind of stuff they do to keep themselves entertained. Scene 3 - They discover and chase after the squirrel, expressing their childlikeness even more. Scene 4 - They run into John and Raymond, and then start picking on him, showing that Raymond is a weak character, and that John, Peter and Willie have a higher status in the play. Scene 5 - Angela, Audrey and Donald (Duck) are introduced, playing in a rundown barn. Their characters are portrayed in this scene, Angela as the most girlish character in the play, Audrey as a rather tomboyish person, and Donald as another weak character, as he gets picked on by the two girls. Scene 6 - The squirrel is killed, but as soon as they begin to show a sign of guilt, it shows that they have probably come to realise the seriousness of death, important during the time period which the play is set, but then they soon forget and continue to play around. Scene 7 - is probably one of the scenes with the most emotion portrayed, showing Donald's innocence and vulnerability. A chance to let you grow close to this

  • Word count: 716
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Drama
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The Harder They Come

Courtney Phillip The Harder They Come. This is my introduction on my essay about the issues in the play "The Harder They Come" and the themes it involves. The Harder They Come is a hard story about a young man called Ivan who had left the country and visited the city hoping to get a life of stardom. Ivan's story is a message telling you to go for your dream and never give it up; though Ivan went for his dream he went for it all the wrong way. The Harder they come is a strong story I believe showing that a lot of people will do anything and everything to achieve their dream. In this play Ivan turns to a life of crime to make his dream of becoming a star come true. When Ivan moves to the city he gets struck by reality when he realizes that becoming a star is not as easy as he thought it would be, he realizes that there is a lot of work that goes into becoming a star but he is still determined to carry out his dream. When Ivan is ask to join a choir he meets the love of his life Elsa who is the daughter of the church's preacher but because the preacher didn't agree with their love they keep their relationship secret from everyone until one day when the preacher figured out their relationship and banished them from the church. Elsa being the daughter of the preacher couldn't have been taking this well being banished from the church by her own father. After Ivan and Elsa were

  • Word count: 1905
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Drama
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Theatre Review- The Woman in Black

Theatre Review-The Woman in Black "The Woman in Black" is set in England a play that is meant to scare the audience and have them watching with bated breath. The story centers around a young solicitor, Arthur Kipps (Paul Chapman) who writes a play in order to tell of the terrible events that he survived. The plot involves the solicitor who is summoned to Crythin Gifford, a small market town which is completely cut off from the mainland. The main character has to attend to the funeral of Mrs. Alice Drablow, an elderly widow who lived alone in Eel Marsh House. While situated at this solitary market town he encounters a mysterious woman in black who seems to haunt the whole town. He finds the 'woman in black' haunting the house he has to stay in, Eel Marsh house. He has to deal with the deceased woman's paper work and also encounters this mysterious woman in other areas of the town. Despite his questions, the locals refuse to help him and so Arthur must confront the sense of unease within the house and the appearances of the woman alone. Years on after the scarring event, Arthur Kipps asks a young Actor (Daniel Coonan) to help put on this play and describe the horrors he endured during his brief stay. There are only two actors through out the whole play, Paul Chapman and Daniel Coonan. They both clash as, in the beginning of the play; the Arthur Kipps who, at this point, is

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  • Word count: 1913
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Drama
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Disappering number

Disappearing number Disappearing number is based on maths, culture and the life and death in the world, the play was thought up and directed by Simon McBurney. The play is amazingly abstract in the ways it puts across meaningful concepts that take place around the world. The play was very visually in tune with the audience, adding things to break up large parts of script. For example when al the main character was playing with the over head projector and we could see everything on it made the scene have more of a fun element, I think this also gets the audience to keep focus. Also by adding a random song and dance to the play shocked the audience with the sudden change, I think this worked well because it was another way of showing the number sequences with an audio beat. Other fun and different elements I picked up on were a screen changes the set from India to Cambridge, A bed turns what can be seen from an airplane window. From what I understood about the play I found that it's about two stories involved into one. The first is about an intellectual relationship between a Brahmin math genius and a Cambridge colleague set in the First World War. The other which is the main story is about a modern university teacher and her American and Indian partner Al, who is a futures dealer. While the older mathematic dies early of TB in England

  • Word count: 510
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Drama
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Its not all black and white theatre performance essay

On Thursday, October 23rd 2008, we saw a production of 'It's not all Black and White' written by Hannah Philips at the Birmingham Library Theatre. The play is set in England, in the late 17th century, where a ship had travelled to. On board were black slaves and white masters. It was written in honour of it being black history month and was performed as remembrance. It tracks the passage from captivity to freedom for the slaves. The play shows examples of how the slaves were treated and some of the experiences they may have had in this foreign country to their own. In the first nine minutes of the play there were only two main actors: Neo Mthimkulu and Fabio Balde. Right at the beginning of the performance, Neo played a slave in the dance. The dance at the beginning was choreographed to convey the struggle and the hard times the black slaves went through during the slave trade. When the music started she shuffled forward on each beat with her hands out in front of her crossed over at the wrist. This signified that there were chains around her wrists and ankles and that they were weighing her down. During the dance Neo hand to wear a mask and plain clothing meaning she was unable to use speech and facial expressions to put across her feelings and state of mind. She had to rely totally on her behaviour and actions to communicate her sentiments and emotions to the audience,

  • Word count: 1144
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Drama
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Review: 'The Woman In Black'

Theatre Review On the 3rd of November we travelled to The Churchill Theatre in Bromley where we set out to see a performance of The Woman in Black. The Woman in Black is a thriller, which was taken from the novel by Susan Hill. It was about a solicitor who is sent to look at the legal documents of an old lady who has recently died in a large house. Elements such as a mysterious deaths and large houses in remote locations are often used in the thriller genre. When the man checks the documents he is locked in and haunted by the spectral "woman in black" and slowly uncovers the horrific secrets that lie within the house. The style of performance wasn't naturalistic as the actors talked directly to the audience. It was performed quite originally, in a way that an actor was performing a story as it was told to him, and shockingly as he acts it out the events reoccur. This is a very unusual and effective way of performing a ghost story. The style of performance fit the plot exceedingly well, even making it more interesting and aiding the twist in the conclusion of the play. The acting was extremely convincing. The two actors managed to play several different roles convincingly. A clever device was used: the characters would bump into each other after walking away, and from then on they'd be different characters after that initial moment. They also changed things important for

  • Word count: 1004
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Drama
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