Chapter 5 The Director. Why the director? Because the product of the director's art is not directly visible, audible, or sensed, it is perhaps the most.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
+ The Directors Impact Chapter 8. + Evolution of the Director Relatively new position in theatre. Theatre functioned for centuries without a director.
Advertisements

What is Art????. Is This Art???? What about this? Art????
The Saxe-Meingen Company
EXPLORATION: DIRECTING AND PRODUCING Drama I – Unit 2.
Theatre thru the Ages From how theatre began to theatre today.
The Renaissance: Literary Background Writers no longer believed in fixed ideas of truth and morality (imposed by the Church) but wanted to enquire about.
Module 2: Assessment in Creative Arts © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training.
IB MYP at Chatsworth 1. IB and MYP Overview at Chatsworth 2. Student assessment and steps 3. Assessment examples.
Realism Seek the truth. Dance… … in America Not an artistic form (no time, no $$) Used primarily for social interaction BIG difference between.
Literacy & Drama Opening the door to Literacy through Drama.
Beginning Theatre Standards. 1.0 ARTISTIC PERCEPTION Processing, Analyzing, and Responding to Sensory Information Through the Language and Skills Unique.
Chapter 10 – Image Maker: The Director
Drama Projects for Schools Worldwide Experience the magic of theatre and improve your English through our tailor-made projects, led by our team of professional.
Introduction to Course of Study in Drama Stages 5 and 6.
COSTUME DESIGN Emma Rice. A costume designer is a person who designs costumes for a stage production. Three types of Costume designers: Freelance designer.
Chapter 8 The Art of Directing. Directors Turn the script into a production Coordinate the efforts of a team of collaborators Represent the intentions.
The BVSD Curriculum Essentials Document. Drama & Theatre Arts Essential Questions: 1.How were the Drama & Theater Arts Curriculum Essentials Documents.
Constantine Stanislavski
Chapter 9 – Image Maker: The Actor For it is not a game of charades, this acting world of ours; it is an everlasting search for truth. —Laurence Olivier.
Realism and the Modern Theatre
BBL 3208 SHAKESPEARE AND RENAISSANCE DRAMA WEEK 3
The Renaissance Drama. What information have you to know about Renaissance drama ? When it flourished Its themes Its language The companies of actors.
Be prepared for the future Bulgaria 7 th -14 th May 2014 Birmingham.
WHAT IS THEATRE?.  Theatre is a complex art at least 2500 years old.  Our experience of theatregoing varies depending on the time  Greeks would have.
Jeopardy Theatricalism Existentialism/ Epic Theatre RomanticismTheatre of the Absurd Symbolism $100100$100100$100100$100100$ $200200$200200$200200$200200$
STANISLAVSKI “The System”. I know you don’t want to… but you should probably take some notes now.
Theatrical Design and Production Chapter 1: Production Organization & Management © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights reserved. Great art.
Director’s Notes The Art of Directing: Style, Staging, and Technique.
Globe Theatre and Theatre Conventions Julia Zirkelbach and Jordan Ledyard.
Mr. French – Theatre I.  An author of plays, a dramatist.
Review Chapter 1. The word "theatre" comes from this Greek word which means seeing place...
劇場表演藝術 Theater Performing Arts 授課教授 : 段馨君 Ph.D. in Theater from UCLA Associate Professor Department of Humanities and Social Sciences National Chiao Tung.
20 th Century Theatre An Overview – The Rise of the Director.
Lesson Plans, Pacing Guide, Essential Standards & Literacy.
Theatre professions Part 1
Realism and the Modern Theatre. Beliefs A call to return the theatre to “serious” pursuits as opposed to the commercial interests of melodrama and comedy.
Chapter 1: The Nature of Theatre Origins in ritual practices Theatre as a form is at least 2500 years old It has been as varied as the cultures in which.
Chapter 8 The Art of Directing.
“Shakespeare’s plays”
THE DIRECTOR Chapter 6. Directing Directing is an art whose product is the most ambiguous, perhaps the most mysterious, in the theatre. The person who.
TH 101: Intro to Theatre DIRECTING. Why the director? Because the product of the director's art is not directly visible, audible, or sensed, it is perhaps.
THE DIRECTOR. WHAT WOULD YOU SAY YOU ACTUALLY DO HERE?
Roles in Theatrical Production. Producer: The person responsible for resource management of a stage production.
Production Team  The director and producer work closely with the design team.  Design Team-those who will design and coordinate the production’s set,
 Born in New York, Ms. Perkins has spent most of her life in South Florida, where she has taught English and Drama for over ten years. Ms. Perkins holds.
Drama. A drama is a story enacted onstage for a live audience. What Is Drama?
Directing FOR STAGE, FILM AND TV. Film vs. Live Performance  Directing for film is Visual Medium  The director controls where the audience is focusing.
Fundamentals of Theatre I Mr. Morris. When the actor bears the responsibility of revealing the soul of a human being caught at a crucial moment and presenting.
Fundamentals of Play Production
Conventions in Theatre The Rules by Which the Play is Performed.
Robert Wilson  Born in 1941 in Waco, TX  Avant-garde/experimental director, playwright, designer, and artist  Often collaborates with musicians to create.
The Beginnings of Modern Realism (Some Historical Context)
Directors..
Introduction to Theatre
Achievement Summary You will be expected to;
Original Monologue – Rehearsal Practice: The Art of Directing
The Beginnings of Modern Realism (Saxe-Meiningen: The Duke)
HISTORY OF THEATRE: The Rise of Modern Theatre
Greek Directors Playwrights used to automatically direct plays
“A candid presentation of the natural world” Eric Bentley
Realism and the Modern Theatre
Developing a Musical The musical can start in several ways. It may be inspired by an original work such as a book or a movie . . .
The BVSD Curriculum Essentials Document
Theatre, Art, and Entertainment
Theatre, Art, and Entertainment
“Beyond Sacred: Voices of Muslim Identity” & Understanding Islam
Theatre professions. Theatre professions Director Job Description: A Theatrical Production Director visually interprets the script; guiding the actors.
STANISLAVSKI “The System”.
Introduction to Theatre
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 5 The Director

Why the director? Because the product of the director's art is not directly visible, audible, or sensed, it is perhaps the most ambiguous and mysterious in the theatre. ROBERT COHEN

Greek διδάσκαλος (Didaskalos) Although the development of the director as an independent theatre artist has occurred in the past century, directing has been going on since theatre began. Greek – teacher Medeival – master Task was to pass along the accumulated wisdom and techniques of “correct” performance

This evolution can be divided into three phases. Teacher-directors Realistic directors Stylizing directors

Playwrights served as directors The French playwright, Actor and “director” Moliere

Actors served as directors David Garrick Edwin Booth Henry Irving English Actor-ManagerAmerican Actor-Manager English Actor-Manager

Teacher-directors They occupied the first phase, transmitted knowledge of the accumulated wisdom of the "correct" performance within a particular convention to others. Richard Burbage, The Globe Theatre Moliere and The Comedie Francaise

Realistic directors…...sought to organize and rehearse a company toward a complex and aesthetically comprehensive theatrical presentation that reflected the diversity and minutia of life. The Meiningen Players in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar

The first Modern Director Georg II, Duke of Saxe-Meiningen

Plays were vigorously rehearsed and inspired other “new” directors They also opened the theatre to the myriad possibilities of psychological interpretation, thus making the individual crucial to the analysis and interpretation of plays and increasing the director's creative function substantially.

Andre Antoine in France “The Earth” at Theatre Antoine, 1900

Konstantin Stanislavski in Russia The Seagull at the Moscow Art Theatre

Directors who allied themselves with nonrealistic playwrights, however, soon began a third phase, that of the Stylizing directors who aim at the creation of originality, theatricality, and style. Their numbers are still growing.

Unrestrained by verisimilitude, such directors introduced a lyricism and symbolism, an expressive and abstract use of design, explosive theatricality, and intentionally contrived methods of acting that continue to affect drama and theatre profoundly.

Today, the answer to no question is self-evident, no style obligatory, and not interpretation definitive. The director has nearly limitless possibilities.

Functions of the Director When an independent producer is not involved, the director accepts responsibility for the financial support of the production as THE PRODUCER.

VISION Fundamentally, the director envisions the primary lines of the productions and provides the leadership to realize that vision. The steps necessary to do so divide into two phases.

In the preparatory phase (Before rehearsals begin) THE DIRECTOR... selects the play, formulates the concept for the production, selects designers, guides collaborators in designing the look and sound of the show, and casts the actors.

During the implementation phase much of the director's focus turns to the actors, as he or she stages the movement and positioning of actors and objects, coaches the actors toward effective performances, conducts the pacing of each section of the play, coordinates the designs with the acting and general staging in the final rehearsals, and gives the performance over to those that will present it.

Where do directors come from? Directors come to the craft of directing in a number of different ways. Mike Nichols was an actor and a comedian

Susan Stroman was a choreographer

David Mamet is a playwright

Directors entering the profession today have in most cases trained as directors in a conservatory or dramatic graduate program... The Julliard School, NYC

University of Washington School of Drama

Where they have developed...

a strong literary and visual imagination

a strength of intellectual conceptualization Spring Awakening, Eugene O’Neill Theatre, 2006

a sound knowledge of theatre history's developments, styles, and masterworks

familiarity with the potentials of technology, design, and theatrical space.

The Director’s Role Communicate a vision for the production

Collaborate with designers

Working with actors Casting Staging Rehearsing Coaching Pacing Laurie Metcalf and Joe Mantello Joe Mantello working on WICKED

Prepare for opening night... Promotions Tech rehearsals Dress Rehearsals

Notable Directors Georg II, Duke of Saxe-Meiningen

Konstantin Stanislavski The Lower Depths, 1904

Peter Brook RSC, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, 1970

Mike Nichols

Matthew Warchus Boeing, Boeing

God of Carnage

LaBete on Broadway 2010

Susan Stroman

CONTACT

The Producers 2001

Young Frankenstein

The Scottsboro Boys

Big Fish (2013)

Bullets Over Broadway (2014)

Julie Taymor The Magic Flute The Lion King

Joe Mantello The Santaland Diaries Wicked The Last Ship

Doug Hughes

Speak the speech, I pray you...

Society of Directors and Choreographers First contract for this union was negotiated in 1962 for Bob Fosse to direct and choreograph LITTLE ME...