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Voice and character Voice and character

Voice and character - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2016-03-05

Voice and character - PPT Presentation

workshop Feb half term booster Relaxation An important preparation for actors in rehearsals and even before a show Lying on your back is a basic but effective relaxation exercise and a great starting point for general relaxation in any situation ID: 243082

breathing feeling meaning activity feeling breathing activity meaning circumstances character today relaxation plays tension play show count breathe technique

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Slide1

Voice and character workshop

Feb half term boosterSlide2

Relaxation

:

An important preparation for actors, in rehearsals and even before a show.

Lying on your back is a basic but effective relaxation exercise, and a great starting point for general relaxation in any situation.

Place a couple of paperback books underneath your head – experiment with the thickness, to make sure your head isn’t tilting forward or back uncomfortably.

Lay with your arms either side, palms facing the floor, and bring your knees up, with your feet flat on the floor. Knees and feet should be apart, but not so far that there is tension in your legs to keep them apart.

In this position, make sure your whole body, from head to toe, is relaxed – you do this by identifying any areas that feel stiff or tense, and willing them to relax (imagine warmth spreading through your body, like hot treacle!).

Keep checking regularly to make sure no tension has crept back in. And don’t fall asleep!Slide3

Breathing

:

using the relaxation technique, combine some simple breathing exercises with it.

Place your hands gently on the side of your ribs, as this will allow you to actually feel the breathing apparatus at work.

Breathe in through your nose, and out through the mouth.

Breathe in for a count of four.

Hold for a count of four.

Breathe out slowly for a count of four.

Hold for a count of four.

Breathe in, taking the air in more deeply, feeling the diaphragm stretch as the ribs swing up and out.

Repeat, building the number of counts, but avoiding any tension creeping back into the body.

Make sure that the movement is in the lower part of the chest – exercising the diaphragm and breathing in ‘deep’ to make the best use of your breath.Slide4

Pronunciation – use breathing technique

What a to-do, to die today

At a minute or two to two

A thing distinctly hard to say but harder still to do

For they’ll beat a tattoo at a quarter to two

A rat-a-tat-at-a-tat-at-at-a-tattoo

At a minute or two to two today

At a minute or two to two! Slide5

Pronunciation – use breathing technique

Here are some good tongue twisters:

Red Lorry Yellow Lorry

Red Leather Yellow Leather

A big black bug bit a big black bear and made the big black bear bleed blood.Slide6

Intonation

Use gibberish to communicate meaning.

Do

the following using gibberish:

a) Commentate on a football match.

b) plead forgiveness

c) teach a complicated subject to a class of dimwits,

d) Convince the rest of the group to join their political party.

e)Another scenario faced by your own character in your play

The aim of this exercise is to show how intonation

to show

what a person is

feeling is

a large part of how we communicate

.Slide7

Sub-text/Inferred meaning

Shadow exercise

: interpret what lies behind the words being spoken in a scene.

In all of your plays there will be an element of a character hiding something, either what they’re feeling or something they have done. Therefore it is important for you to understand the subtext in your play

In groups of 4, label yourselves A, A1, B, B1.

A and B are to improvise a

conversation,

whilst A1 and B1 interpret the

meaning – this can be something directly taken from your play

e.g

. Two friends getting ready for a party:

A: what do you think of my dress?

A1: she wants approval, she is not feeling confident.

B: It looks great, Fits really nice.

B1: She looks awful. That style does nothing for her

As we watch these back, think how they deciphered the meaning

?

What did A1 and B1 do

t

o show the subtext?

How do tone and pace effect the meaning? Slide8

Given Circumstances

Given

circumstances are the basis for any actor, and are created by the director, designer and playwright.Actor MUST believe in the G.C.

Stan’s list for GC:

1. The story of the play

2. Its facts, time, etc

3. Conditions of life

4. The actor’s and director’s interpretations

5. The set, costumes, props

6. Light and soundSlide9

Your G.C.

Spend a few minutes jotting down some of the given circumstances for your character/s

If you are a chorus member, think about different parts of the story they are telling, in order to help you think about how these lines should be delivered (to build tension, to create interest, to tell the story)Slide10

Emotion Memory

Recall: through touch, taste, smell.

Activity

- Eating chocolate - imagine,

recall, do

,

describe

Actors have a large collection of memories to re-invent

Start off with sense memory:

Activity

: In a circle, imagine picking up a chair, weight, texture, etc.

Mime

it

Is

it believable? If not why not?

Pick up a chair for real.

Pause, think about the differences, comment on the task, reproduce based on doing the activity for real.

This can be applied for memories too.

So, think of a time when you were happy - what made you happy? Just think, don’t speak.

Where were you, what is the feeling of happy?

Activity

: Try to reproduce it in a mime.

Activity

: Now apply that to something you have never done, such as completing the Inca Trail, feeling a sense of achievement and seeing Machu Picchu out of the mist. 

Rehearse-perform-evaluate Slide11

Performance Task

Using

Given Circumstances, Emotion memory, imagination, tone of voice, good pronunciation

you will be given a few minutes to prepare an individual short scene

1

st

you will perform one of the scenes below with an internal monologue (thoughts spoken out loud)

Then you will perform it silently

Your father is dangerously ill upstairs but you have to be interviewed on the phone for a job

You find a letter on the table, it contains wonderful news, react to it

A hat on the table is actually a rat

You find a letter on the table, it contains terrible news, react to it

You need to be able to apply these to your individual playsSlide12

Application to Plays

All of the work we have done today is designed to help you develop what you do with your own plays and how you develop your own characters

Please spend some time now rehearsing some of your own lines applying the techniques we have explored today