Tuesday, 24 February 2015

Multimedia Theatre

Multimedia Theatre
1. What do we mean by the phrase 'multimedia in performance'?
Multimedia in performance can be a variety of media such as a laser show or fog while in a scene, or anything to do with the performance that enhances it with multiple forms of media. For example a scene with the smoke effect can be consolidated with negative emotions like sadness or anger to enhance the realistic emotion even more to the audience.

2. Give some examples of different types of media that could be used in a performance. Give examples of how they could be used and the positive and negative of them.


Type Of Media…
Example Of Use In Performance
Positives Of Using It…
Negatives Of Using It…

Video
A short clip appearing on a black board that links with the character’s thoughts.
Can give the audience a clearer insight of the story and the character.
There would be more of a chance of technical difficulties.

Text
Students could text their parents on the way in the show with a short, snappy sentence.
The audience feel connected with the performance though it may have not began or ended.
The probability of obtaining every member of the audience's phone number is quite low.
Images
Flashing images in the view of the audience to signify a back story of some kind towards the character.
The audience would become very intrigued into the play and focus throughout it.
The movement of the images may look unprofessional as they flutter through the air.
Smoke
Using smoke to enhance a certain emotion such as sadness or anger.
The audience would feel the piece is 3 dimensional instead of plain.
The smoke could stay on the stage when the next scene is performed.

Lesson 1 - Research

Background Research on Greek Theatre
1. When were ancient Greek plays performed?
They were performed around 600 – 700 BC.

2. How many years ago was this?
2715 years ago.

3. What different types of plays were performed?
The three genres of drama were comedy, satyr plays, and most important of all, tragedy.

4. What is a traditional Greek Theatre called?
It was called a Theatron.

5. What shape was the theatre?The place where the audience sat was circular and the place where the actors performed was rectangular. It was similar to a circular thrust like staging.

6. Find a picture of a traditional Greek Theatre for your blog.



7. Why were the theatres built this way?
They were built this way to allow the audience full line of sight when the performance was going on.

8. What different scenic elements are there?
The place where the audience sat was quite rocky and rough; the acting area is very smooth and flat coloured like sand. Furthermore, the audience were raised above the actors looking down on the performance instead of the same level.

9. Who sat on the seats at the front?
Priests sat on the front row of seats as these were shaped like thrones.

10. Could women take part in, or attend the plays?
Women did not participate in the drama that has come down to us simply because of custom. Drama was part of a festival for men involved with the worship of Dionysus. But women had their own festivals and during these they may have played the role of a goddess. Proper women probably stayed at home. It may have been that the women slaves were the only attendees.

11. Name some of the Greek playwrights and their plays.
Two Greek playwrights are:
Aeschylus (c. 525–456 BC):
The Persians (472 BC)
Seven Against Thebes (467 BC)
The Suppliants (463 BC)
Sophocles (c. 495-406 BC):
Antigone (c. 442 BC)
Oedipus the King (c. 429 BC)
Oedipus at Colonus (c. 401 BC)

12. What did the audience throw at the actors who performed badly?
They threw rotten vegetables or fruit and other displeasing objects at the actors.

13. What did the actors wear?
They wore masks and costumes like the pictures below.





14. How did the audience sat at the back of the large theatre hear anything?
It was the Greeks' arrangement of the seats that aided with the acoustics and allowed up to 14,000 people to hear the performance.

15. Who is Dionysus?
Dionysus is the god of wine and drunken revelry in Greek mythology. He is a patron of the theatre and an agricultural/fertility god.

16. Why is he important to Greek Theatre?
Dionysus was also the god of drama, especially tragedy, since this theatre was said to have been invented by the satyrs. They would sing and play roles, and the very word tragedy means "goat song". Dionysus' drunken party that followed him around was called Komos, and from that we have the word comedy, which means "song by drunken party". The Great Dionysian were annual festivals in Athens where dramatists competed with their plays. The god was also connected to the Orphism, again a mystery cult having to do with immortality and resurrection.

17. What is a Greek chorus?
A Greek chorus in a performance is a group of actors that collectively do actions or say things at the same time.

18. What purpose do the Chorus have in the performance?
The Chorus is used to emphasise a certain word or action in the performance that the audience remembers easily.

19. How and why were masks used?
Masks were a significant element in the worship of Dionysus at Athens, likely used in ceremonial rites and celebrations. Most of the evidence comes from only a few vase paintings of the 5th century BC, such as one showing a mask of the god suspended from a tree with decorated robe hanging below it.

20. What were the masks made of?
No physical evidence remains as the masks were made of organic materials and not considered permanent objects. Nevertheless, the mask is known to have been used since the time of Aeschylus and considered to be one of the iconic conventions of classical Greek theatre.