Thursday, November 14, 2019
Drama Performed to Others :: Drama
Drama Performed to Others    Our drama group was given the task of introducing a year nine class to  the play 'Macbeth'. Apart from the obvious, there were five themes in  the play that the group as a whole thought needed exploring: insanity;  good versus bad; the supernatural; guilty conscience; and murder. We  looked into each of these topics individually and decided on how we  could include them in our final performance, in each lesson we learned  more and more about both 'Macbeth' and the skills needed to teach a  younger year group the basics of the play. We decided that the first  thing that needed to be learned was the creation of atmosphere on  stage. We did this by lowering the lights, putting just a candle in  the centre of the room, and playing the sound effect of rain and  howling gales. We each had to find one word that summed up the  'feeling' in the room. The key words that came up were remembered  throughout our development of the piece of drama and we tried to  capture these feelings on stage. Keeping in role and developing a  convincing character was essential for the task and I learned this  over the period of time building up to our final performance.    We had decided to show five still-images to the year nines and, along  with a narration, tell the story as an introduction. In groups we  picked out the five points that seemed most significant: the meeting  of the witches on the heath; the 'persuasion' scene (between Macbeth  and Lady Macbeth); the banquet scene; the second witches scene (the  premonitions); and the scene where Macduff finally kills Macbeth. In  these groups we performed the still-images and showed what each  character was thinking through thought-tracking, which added depth to  the image.    In pairs we performed our own versions of 'the persuasion scene', with  one playing Macbeth and one playing Lady Macbeth. Through  manipulation, Lady Macbeth always beats Macbeth one way or another,  and we learned to create the right mood on stage, this improvisational  work helped develop characterisation.    After discussing the scene we were to study (the 'banquet scene' [Act  Three, Scene Four]) and read through the original script, we began  improvisation of a modern-day remake of the scene. Our class decided  to work in just one group and we were sure we wanted to bring the  scene to a modern-day setting so we could come up with our own  interpretation. As a group we had to decide on who the Macbeth of the  21st century would be, and came up with plenty of suggestions. The one  we finally decided on was a night-club owner, the night-club    					    
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