BOD_ER_VCE Area of study 3 Outcome 3
Transcription
BOD_ER_VCE Area of study 3 Outcome 3
THE MARGUK PROGRAM BEAUTIFUL ONE DAY Education Resource Pack VCE AREA OF STUDY 3 OUTCOME 3 Acts I - IV COLLATED BY KAMARRA BELL-WYKES WITH CULTURAL & ACADEMIC CONSULTANCY BY RACHEL CUMMINS & LYNORE GEIA PHOTOS BY PONCH HAWKES, HEIDRUN LÖHR AND FRANK MAINOO DRAMA: UNIT 3, OUTCOME 3 ANALYSING A NON-NATURALISTIC ENSEMBLE PERFORMANCE Remember these questions are designed only as a guide to prompt discussion, you as an audience member will take away your own interpretations and may choose to focus on different features of the performance for your SAC assessment task. Characters BEAUTIFUL ONE DAY features the devisors/performers playing themselves. Other “characters” portrayed are a range of real life people taken from across history to the current day, including Palm Island community members, police officers and prosecutors. Structure BEAUTIFUL ONE DAY is made up 4 acts, each act focusing on different parts of the Palm Island story and each having similarities and differences. In this section we will look at each act separately to best analyse some of the main conventions and elements in each. This is not a definitive list and you will find that some elements and conventions are embedded within others. Themes BEAUTIFUL ONE DAY focuses specifically on the life and times of the Palm Island community however the themes within it: oppression, injustice, the spirit of survival, the strength of family and community, a greater exploration of Australian History, subsequent Government’s treatment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community in general. As you watch the performance consider the individuals themes and message of each act and how the dramatic conventions and elements are used to highlight these themes. 1 EXPLORING ACT I KEY SKILLS: PERFORMANCE STYLES AND EXPRESSIVE SKILLS. REPRESENTATION OF CHARACTERS AND THE ACTOR/AUDIENCE RELATIONSHIP Two of the non-naturalistic conventions used in BEAUTIFUL ONE DAY is that the performers play themselves, using the convention of direct address. • What effect does direct address have on the actor/audience relationship? • Does it engage or distance? Choose some examples and discuss in detail. • When the performers are playing themselves do you still consider them as characters? Why/Why not? • When the performers are playing themselves do you see the performers all being of an equal status? Why/Why not? • What effect do the personal recollections have on the representation of characters and how the audience perceives them? • What other performance skills (focus, timing, energy) do the performers use? • Do you consider the style and delivery of dialogue naturalistic or non-naturalistic? Explain your answer. • How do the performers playing themselves contribute to the nonnaturalistic style of Documentary Theatre? • How does the rhythm highlight the intended meaning of the dialogue and the themes of the play? • How does the rhythm in this piece create tension? • How does this rhythm contribute to the non-naturalistic style of the performance? • How does repetition create rhythm? • How does repetition create tension? 2 Character transformation generally occurs when the style of verbatim (word for word recounts from actual documents and interviews) are used. • Make a list of as many of the verbatim characters and the way their character transformations are achieved in Act I. • (Costume, performance style, expressive skills, use of props, direct introduction) • Why do you think some of the verbatim characters are given costumes and others are not? How does this work to highlight the themes of piece? How does this contribute to the non-naturalistic styles within the piece? • How do the performers use their expressive skills to shift/transform between themselves and the verbatim characters? • Is there a contrast between each of the different verbatim characters? • How was this achieved through expressive skills and performance styles? • How does the portrayal of the Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Verbatim characters relate to the themes of the performance? • How does the portrayal of the the verbatim characters affect the way you feel about the characters they are playing? • Do you consider the verbatim characters to be fully realised and detailed characters? Why? Why not? How was each character portrayed/created? • How do the verbatim characters contribute to the dramatic elements of contrast, conflict and tension? 3 KEY SKILLS: DRAMATIC CONVENTIONS, ELEMENTS AND STAGECRAFT Rhythm and tension The element of rhythm is used generously through out the performance. Major shifts in rhythm can be seen in each act and smaller shifts between sections of dialogue. Some rhythms are more noticeable and up-tempo, some slow and heavy. Recall the rhythm of Paul Dwyer’s delivery of The Aboriginal Protection Act: PAUL: “No answering back to the native police. No laughing or whistling after curfew (7 days jail) . No untidiness. No untidy hair. No dresses above the knee. No pants or shorts for women. No fashionable home-made bikinis. No going to church without a police escort. No going to school without a police escort. No cheekiness. No offensive language. No traditional languages. No traditional ceremonies. No speaking against the laws. No disobeying the orders of a protector. No asking why. No answering back. No leaving the reserve without permission.” • How does the rhythm highlight the intended meaning of the dialogue and the themes of the play? • How does the rhythm in this piece create tension? • How does this rhythm contribute to the non-naturalistic style of the performance? • How does repetition create rhythm? • How does repetition create tension? Read the extract below and consider the way small excerpts of dialogue from Act II are woven throughout Act I. Describe the effect this has on the rhythm of Act I, how it creates tension and how it contributes to the nonnaturalistic style of performance. RACHAEL: They sat up all night waiting for the police. Two o’clock in the morning the raids began, front doors were kicked down, Willie Thaiday ran out and came face to face with a white sergeant and a gun pointed at him: PAUL: “Don’t move Willie or you’ll get it”. RACHAEL: The seven leaders were marched to the jetty handcuffed, at gunpoint, and surrounded by police. Then they took the leaders’ families off the island, marching the women and children at gunpoint as well, down to the jetty, and off Palm Island. JANE: “Very significant force has been applied?” PAUL: “Correct.” JANE: “Resulting in a very significant injury?” PAUL: “Correct.” 4 Contrast Contrast is created a number of different ways throughout the performance, in Act I this is mainly through image and dialogue. • Think of a specific moment in Act I where contrast is created and describe how it is achieved • Describe how this contributes to the non-naturalistic style of the performance. Song, Dance And Voice-Over Song, dance and voice over are used very deliberately during the retelling of Shirley Abicare’s visit to Palm Island. • How does Jane and Paul’s singing “Froggy goes walking” combined with Shirley Abicare’s voice over contrast with the mood and the dialogue of this section? • How does the traditional dance contrast with the song and voice over and what effect does this have? • How does the use of song, dance and voice over contribute to the non-naturalistic style of the performance? https://vimeo.com/116820961 (To watch enter password: B1day) 5 EXPLORING ACT II KEY SKILLS: PERFORMANCE STYLES AND EXPRESSIVE SKILLS REPRESENTATION OF CHARACTERS Act II features the inquest and court transcripts related to Mulrunji Doomadgee’s death in custody, Chris Hurley’s character dominates most of this act. • How is the character of Chris Hurley introduced? • What expressive skills does Paul Dwyer use to represent Chris Hurley? • Would you consider his performance as naturalistic or nonnaturalistic? • How does his performance affect the way the audience perceives him? • Is Chris Hurley a fully realised character? Justify your answer. • How is the character of Mulrunji Doomadgee represented on stage? • Rachael Maza sits on a chair throughout this whole act – what effect does her presence have? What different roles and purposes does she have? 6 Symbol • In the second act the character of Chris Hurley has a name placard placed around his neck– this is used as a character device but also a symbolic representation – what do you think it signifies? • Chalk is used to draw up the court room outline - what do you think this signifies? • How do these symbols relate to the themes of the piece? • Can you think of a non-naturalistic style of theatre that uses similar conventions? • The sound of a bell is used on a number of occasions throughout the performance – what purpose is it used for and what does it signify? 7 KEY SKILLS: DRAMATIC CONVENTIONS, ELEMENTS AND STAGECRAFT Transformation of place and time In Act II the space is transformed into that of a courtroom over a number of dates and at the same time we are taken into the world of Palm Island after dark. • How is this transformation achieved? • What effect does it have on the actor/audience relationship? • What non-naturalistic convention is used to indicate time jumps? Stagecraft, mood, tension and the actor/audience relationship Stagecraft is used deliberately in Act II to create mood and tension: • Describe your impression of the mood in Act II – what are the main factors that contribute to this? • Describe how the interaction of light and sound production create contrast, mood and tension? • Describe the use of video screens in this act and how they contribute to the world of the play. • When the stage action is projected on the video screens what effect does this have on the actor/audience relationship? • Do the screens compete with the physical actors in the space? • Is there a fourth wall? • How close is the action on the stage to the audience? What effect does this have? • Describe how stage craft contributes to the overall non-naturalism of the performance. 8 EXPLORING ACT III KEY SKILLS: PERFORMANCE STYLES AND EXPRESSIVE SKILLS REPRESENTATION OF CHARACTERS AND THE ACTOR/AUDIENCE RELATIONSHIP Verbatim theatre aims to present material objectively, accurately and to stay as close to the source as possible. BEAUTIFUL ONE DAY uses a range of written accounts, interviews and video footage. In Act III, we are introduced to the verbatim characters of Erykah Kyle, David Bulsey, Lex Wotton, Georgina Haines, Perry Thompson (members of the Palm Island Community who were present at the 2004 protest), as well as various police officers involved in the raids. • What differences and similarities do you see between the verbatim performances in Act III compared to Act I and II? • What specific performance and expressive skills are used? • How do you think performing verbatim material affects the performance and expressive skills used by the performers? • How is sound production used and to what effect? • How are costume and prop used in the playing of multiple roles? • Is there any character transformation in this act and if so how is it achieved? • When Paul Dwyer and Jane Phegan appear dressed in full riot gear, what effect does this have on the actor/audience relationship? • The expressive skills used to portray David Bulsey(Kylie), Lex Wotton(Harry) and Eryka Kyle (Rachael) are very different to those used earlier in the performance - describe the skills used and the effect they have. Analyse the image below for its non-naturalistic elements and consider: • Use of space and the performers placement in it • The microphone as an image and a prop • Use of light and technology 9 Stillness and Silence Stillness and silence are used very deliberately in Act III when the Palm Island performers take a moment of silence to commemorate Mulrunji Doomadgee’s death. The non-Aboriginal performers are noticeably absent during this moment. • Why do you think the directorial choice to have only the Palm Islanders on stage was made? • Describe the impact this moment of silence has on the audience. Climax and conflict The recreation of the Palm Island riot and the police raid portrayed in Act III are the climax of the performance. • Do you agree with this statement? Justify your answer. • How is verbatim theatre used in this recreation? • How are stagecraft and theatre technology used in this recreation? • Describe the other non-naturalistic conventions that contribute to the climax? • Describe how performance and expressive skills contribute to the climax. Thinking about conflict, who do you think it exists between in the play? • (Keep in mind that the conflict may be symbolic) 10 EXPLORING ACT IV KEY SKILLS: PERFORMANCE STYLES AND EXPRESSIVE SKILLS REPRESENTATION OF CHARACTERS In Act IV, Magdalena Blackley recalls memories of her childhood and introduces video footage of different members of her family and the Palm Island community on the video screens behind her. These people then reflect on the past, present and future of Palm Island. • How does Magdalena interact with this video footage and does this shift the actor/audience relationship? • Do you consider the people featured in these videos as characters in the performance? Justify your answer. KEY SKILLS: STAGE CRAFT AND THE ACTOR AUDIENCE RELATIONSHIP • How is sound production and theatre technology used and what effect does it have on the actor/audience relationship? • What adjectives would you use to describe the mood of the last act? • What connections can you make between the mood and the themes here? BRECHT’S EPIC THEATRE Reflect now on the production and the knowledge you have of Epic Theatre. • What aspects of BEAUTIFUL ONE DAY draw on the conventions of Epic Theatre? • Do you think the themes of BEAUTIFUL ONE DAY suit the style of Epic Theatre? 11 ILBIJERRI THEATRE COMPANY Arts House, Meat Market 5 Blackwood Street North Melbourne VIC 3051 T: 03 9329 9097 F: 03 9329 9105 [email protected] ilbijerri.com.au facebook.com/ilbijerri @ILBIJERRI Kamarra Bell-Wykes [email protected] (03) 9329 9097 ILBIJERRI acknowledges the support of the Lord Mayor's Charitable Foundation and Gandel Philanthropy for providing seed funding for the Education program.