Dance & Theatre
orchestra
(ancient greek) opening dancing area in front of statehouse or lowest portion and expensive array of seats
technical support tools
costumes, sets, lights, props, makeup, sound
stereotyped character
based on the assumption that all members of given group possess certain simple behavioral traits; strokes of character development (dialect, movement, costume, etc) suffices to communicate a stereotype
Illumination
cast light upon otherwise darkened stage
drama
category of literature intended for the stage
action
character-character interaction, the total array of purposeful activity where characters try to achieve their objectives
restoration comedy
characteristic comedy of the english restoration (1660-1700); glittering language, salacious plots and debauched characters
Religious or Ceremonial Dance
choreography played significant role in cultural events , origins of dance so it was created in celebrations, rituals, rites of passage Native Indians expressed mourning the spirit in dance, to prepare for battles, celebrate joyful occassions
dramatic criticism
commentary on a play or script intended to enrich the experience of seeing the play or reading the script by others
Broadway theatre
commercial model dominated american theatre; profit-making and production sold to investors; long runs of single play using star performers
vomitoria
(roman theatre) tunnels that allowed the audience to enter and exit large theatre with ease; modern theatre have tunnels that allow actors to reach downstage of thrust stage by passing thru audience
Elizabethan Theatre
-Christopher Marlow, Ben Johnson, William Shakespeare -language of the educated; satire
19th Century (theatre)
-Industrial Revolution changed technology (electric lighting, mechanisms for scenery) -growth of melodrama -actor predominated over the author, Shaw, Ibsen and Chekhov -resident companies, playhouses, touring actors -Golden Age of American theatre (1880s-1920s)
Restoration England 1660s (theatre)
-Parliament closed theatre in England; French theatre grew -theatre architecture: artificial lighting, roofed in theatre, indoors, stage raised -Proscenium stage; scene changes slid by on panels -Baroque period: french playwrights Racine and Molière -women appear on stage as boys and young men
Ancient Greek Theatre
-amphitheaters (open air, semicircular, chorus dance music) -playwrights: Sophocles (tragedy: heroes glorified but tragic flaw, influence of gods) and Euripides -Violence took place off-stage -Dionysus festivals (tragedies/comedies/satire) -plots come from legends -influence of central acts and dialogue, masks used for age and emotion -women can't act
Prehistory to beginning of middle ages (dance)
-circle form & use of imagery -gender roles (men; hunting & women; planting) -social dance for births, events -ritual dance for religious (temple dances), fertility dances, hunting magic and favor with gods for seasons and harvests
Late 20th century Dance
-growth of contemporary dance, post-modern in the 60s -movement towards simplicity and less sophisticated technique -'No' manifesto to rejecting costumes and stories -Martha Graham and psychodrama: intense movement of pain, few, love; dance forms sculptured by body positions and release of torso, angular gestures -George Balanchine: modern American ballet, Broadway and Hollywood shows, lean body types -social dance and mass culture: rock and roll, MTV, hip-hop
Roman Theatre
-less influenced by religion -introduction of the subplot -women allowed minor parts -spectacles of the Coliseum -mass appeal/impressive theaters -raised stage replaced Greek semicircular amphitheaters
Medieval theatre
-minstrels, traveling groups, jugglers; open stage areas -church/liturgal dramas: bible stories, intent to educate -dramatic form to illustrate religious holiday to illiterate populace -passion play, miracle play, morality play with theme of religious loyalty
Renaissance and Reformation Theatre
-rebirth of Greek/Roman art culture and lit -professional actors and set design -open stages, proscenium arch (separate audience) -emphasis on the performer -protestant reformation led to secular works -Commedia dell'arte (improvisation, acting groups, situational comedy)
20th Century (theatre)
-social upheaval from WW1 and WW2 -realism, naturalism, symbolism, impressionism (ordinary life on stage) -commercial theatres (musicals, operas) -serious drama (Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams) -actor's studio -experimental theater (against naturalism) -community theater and ensemble theatre)
18th Century (theatre)
-society and economics determined direction of playwrights -acting began to closely mimic life -plays with ordinary people -commercial theatre
romantic era (dance)
1820-1870: ballet was characterized primarily by supernatural subject matter, long white tutus, dancing on toes, theatrical innovations etc
stock company
18th-20th century a form of resident company in which actors were hired according to lines of work and large number of plays prepared with short rehearsal periods and short runs
postmodern dance
1960s; create movement outside influences of traditional modern dancers (Cunningham, Grapham, Humphrey, Limon, Taylor)
Modern Dance
20th century, dancers resisting the rigid structure of classical ballet dance choreography is based on the subjective interpretation of internalized feelings, emotions, moods free-style dance
8 basic steps (locomotor motion)
Chasse: walking, running, leaping jumping hopping galloping skipping, sliding
Cultural dances
Chinese ribbon dance, Polish polonaise, Indian Kathakali or Bharatanatyam dance, Welsh clogging
Kabuki
Japanese traditional theatre form that combines colorful song and dance
Levels (dynamics)
Direction -(forward, back, sideways, diagonal, etc) form & shape - (angular, rounded, twisted, bent, etc) level - (high, medium, low) range -(wide, narrow, big/little) pathway - (floor, elevated, air) focus - (gaze, floor, away)
Cultural historic dance evolution
Egypt: gods/funerals Greece: in theatre-cores, festival of dionysus Rome: pantomime/dance India: balance and moderation, traditional dance China: ceremonial dance with hand movements, war Japan: Kabuki, male only, stomping rituals
Force (energy)
QUALITY OF ENERGY -(sustained/smooth, suspended/light, swing/undercurve, sway/overcurve, collapsed/loose, percussive/sharp, vibrate/shudder) DEGREE OF ENERGY- (strong, weak, heave, light, dynamic, static, flowing, tense)
Chorus
Greek/Roman drama of classical period; group of characters who comment on the action; frequently speaking directly to audience collective role to intermediate between major characters and audience
Interpreting theatre
Intent Structure Effectiveness Worth
Space
LOCOMOTOR (8 basic steps) NONLOCOMOTOR COMBINED LOCOMOTOR (often traditional folk steps) -be aware of space between dancers
Middle Ages dance
The church attempts to restrict pagan dance, associated with fertility Folk dance origins: maypole dance, recreational aspects (current examples: polka, square dance, polonaise, Hungarian tavern dance, Mexican El Jarabe Tapatio)
scriptwriting
based on culture, imagination, literature, personal life can apply to theater, film, tv, electronic media. classroom activities can include reading and analyzing scripts, outlining dramatic structure and working together in groups to plan scenarious
Theatrical Dance
based on music, songs, dialogue, and dance audience often experience it in the form of musical theatre productions; ballet, jazz and tap
Grand jeté
a leap from one leg to the other, working leg is kicked way from body
lifts
a part of pas de deux in which one dancer is lifted off the ground by another
elevation
ability to get up into the air and remain there long enough to perform various movements or poses
Promenade
an adagio movement in which dancer pivots completely around on one foot while maintaining a pose with working leg
Line
arrangement of head, shoulders, arms, torso, legs while dancing
arena staging
audience essentially surrounds the playing area theatre in the round
improvisation
creative, cooperative, spontaneous and flexible response to changing and unexpected dramatic stimuli embraces problem solving without preconception of how to perform and allows anything within the environment to be used during the experience
creative movement
dance movement that is primary and nonfunctional, emphasis on body mastery for expressive and communicative purposes
Acting
development and communication of characters; sensory elements and expressive qualities
Abstraction
essence of an idea applied to art of movement
proscenium arch
essentially an opening in the wall between two rooms; one room (stagehouse) for actors to perform and other room (auditorium) is the aduience
Renaissance dance
evolved from pageants and processions -Ballet developed in France and moved to Italy -Court dancing in Europe (nobility) -music to accompany specific technical steps, theatrical art -Minuet: a formal aristocratic court dance
pastoral play
extinct genre of play, popular in Italian renaissance; set in countryside with nymphs, shepherds, wandering knights; upbeat tones
kinesthetic awareness
feeling the dance movements of others in ones own muscles
dramatic question
first and most important element in rising action; conflict is established and "how will this turn out"; begin to develop suspense
spotting
focusing the eyes on one point in the distance in order to keep balance
creative drama
form of entertainment in which students improvise scenes for their own growth; learn subjects tother than theater (such as history, psychology, lit, etc)
satyr play
form of greek drama that coexisted with tragedy and classical period; burlesque of same ideas, ridiculing the gods and legends; bawdy language
proscenium staging
form of physical configuration between actor and audience
18th & 19th Century Dance
formal dancing spread and professional dancing masters/choreographing -ballet developed thru Europe, virtuoso dancing, pointe footwork -Era of Romanticism (early 1800s), continued evolution of ballet, emphasis on emotions and fantasy -focus on ballerina and male was secondary
Theatre
formal presentation of scripted play
melodrama
genre of theatre that is normally placed between tragedy and drama; largely serious in tone, major figures in jeopardy but they are saved from destruction at the end; moral stance is always clear- good characters are good and bad are bad
Dénouement
immediately follows the climax of a play; last remaining loose ends are tied up
gallery
in Elizabethan theatre, one of a tier of alcoves surrounding the interior of the yard where boxes and benches were greatest comfort for those who could afford it
mood
in lighting the use of elements of lighting to evoke or support particular emotional states of characters
Drama
involves reenactment of life situations for entertainment and human understanding; expression does not necessarily require a live-formal audience
grand jeté en tournan
leap where dancer turns halfway in midair to land facing the direction from which the movement started
chronological time
linear experienced time, related to cause and effect
body movement
locomotor and axial (contained movement around axis of the body)
flashback
manipulation of time in plot in which scene from earlier is shown after those that occur later
connotative meaning
meaning conveyed by symbols that are vague in terms of strict definition but rich in poetic meaning
climax
new piece of info is made public that tips the balance; followed by dénouement
Adagio
opposite of allegro, slower tempo; exercises of extensions and balances
Folk Dance
originated from medieval times 1. dance movements must predate 19th century 2. dance is performed by peasants or royalty 3. choreography is derived from tradition 4. there is no teacher (play and sing w/ movement, Hokey Pokey, London Bridge, Maypole dance)
passé
passing position where foot passes by the knee of supporting leg; position held in pirouettes the working leg rests on knee in retiré
environmental staging
physical relationship between audience and performers where there is little or no clear definition between space dedicated to each
lighting plot
plan of the stage showing the location of each lighting instrument, size and characters
exposition
playwriting device of providing info to audience
Organizational principles of theatre
plot & conflict setting character language rhythm and unity
upstage
portion of acting area that is farthest from audience
downstage
portion of the proscenium stage that is closest to the audience
Arabesque
pose in which the working leg is extended with straight knee directly behind the body
Allegro
quick or lively movements
extension
raising the leg to straightened position with the foot very high above ground, lift and hold the leg
form (theatre)
relationship of all the parts of plays of a certain type considered apart from any single example of that type, as in the form of farce and the form of the well-made play; what emerges is a model r ideal of a theatrical experience that can be used to describe specific examples
force
release of potential energy into kinetic energy
neoclassic drama
renaissance writers attempted to recapture glory of theatre in ancient greece/rome; aided by application of certain rules (unities), rigid verse forms and decorum on stage
Early 20th century Dance
revolutionary aspects of Ballets Russes (russia) stretched classical ballet -Revolution of modern dance -Isadora Duncan and Martha Graham -flapper era with fast-moving dances such as the Charleston
Time
rhythm, tempo, beat, meter, syncopation, rhapsodic rhythms (non-metric, i.e. breath, water, wind)
Barre
round rail attached to wall, for dancers to hold during first half of technique class
movement materials
sequences, motifs, and phrases developed as the choreographed dance
one-act play
short duration play that is presented without intermission and without major scenery changes
stage left/right
side of stage to the left/right of an actor facing the audience
Social Dance
socializing is main focus, partners are essential; hip-hop, line dance, ballroom, waltz, foxtrot, tango, rumba, swing
thrust stage
some part of the stage extends into and is surrounded by the audience,no more than 270 degrees around stage
Elements of Dance
space, time, levels (dynamics), force (energy)
pas de deux
specific codified form that is choreographed in many classical ballets; used to refer to any section of a dance performed by two dancers together
tempo
speed with which incidents make up the action take place
pit
standing or lowest admission fee seats
stage
structure where all drama and theatre takes place; ex: proscenium theatres, arena theatres, amphitheatures, black box theatre
inciting incident
the first incident in the chain of events called rising action; introduces disequilibrium
conventions
the temporary rules of the performance, specific to particular cultures, styles of theatre, and individual productions
Alignment
the way in which various parts of dancers body are in line with one another during movement
block
to decide upon gross movements of actors on stage; assign the physical relationship of actors and location of entrance & exit early blocking rehearsals for this
multiple plots
traditional element of theatre plotting in which more than one story line is presented simultaneously; plots kept separate until late in the play when they interact; share same theme
Aristotelian theatre
traditional theatre; clear simple plot, strong characters high levels of intellectual content; minimum of spectacle 3 unities: one main action, one physical space and unity of time -5 acts -no violence
Pirouette
twirl/spin; one foot can be executed outward or inward
modern dance
type of creative dance involving specialized movement techniques; emphasis is on expression and communication
storyboard
visual display of the plot; each scene is presented by a single picture or description