Assignment # 3

HUT 101: Art of Theatre

Fridays, 1:00-4:25pm, room C426

Professor Jay Polish

Assignment # 3 — Collaborative Play Pre-Production

https://tinyurl.com/hutassign318

We have written our monologues and we have written our own plays and we have studied the play of a highly practiced, highly skilled playwright. We have explored set design and costume design and the way that choreography moves with heart of the play itself. We have explored performance and relationships with audience and the structures of rich character and plot development. And now, for our final project, we will be bringing these elements together.

In groups, we will be collaboratively working to pre-produce a play: to do this, we will be returning to Anon(ymous) by Naomi Iizuka and A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry. Together with your groups, you will be research, writing, working creatively, and presenting (respecting your Personal Traffic Lights, of course) on the following aspects of what it would take to pre-produce your version of these plays (each group will work on a different play) —

  1. Set design;
  2. Choreography;
  3. Lighting and sound;
  4. Costume design;
  5. Outreach and marketing; and
  6. Concept and casting.

Together, you will develop and present a detailed plan for each of these six elements of pre-production.

Who, for example, will your casting call be seeking to audition (for number 6)? How, specifically, do you plan to interpret and produce the storms described in the script (for number 3)? How will each character dress in different scenes (for number 4)? Who is the target audience for your production, and how will you get these people into the seats (for number 5)?

You will answer these questions and more with your group. The questions I’ve posed above are examples of the kinds of questions you need to answer: but part of this project will be coming up with important questions about each of the six elements together, and answering them together.

One week after class ends (on June 8th), you will present your pre-production plan to the class (and celebrate your amazing accomplishments this term!!)!!

Assignment # 2 – Playwriting Project

HUT 101: Art of Theatre

Fridays, 1:00-4:25pm, C426

Professor Jay Polish

https://tinyurl.com/playwritingassgmt

Assignment # 2 — Playwriting Project

This is it: your chance to write your own play! We’ve talked a lot in class about the importance of everyone from stage hands to directors in theatre; for this project, we’ll focus on the role of the playwright. You will all be playwrights after this project: you will be writing a ten-minute (five-page) play. In addition, you will be recording a detailed, academic reflection on your own process of crafting this play. We will work together and individually in class to start generating theme(s), characters, settings, and conflict for your play: beyond that, your imagination is your only limit! You may use your monologue as a centerpiece of the play, but you do not have to. (Note: much of this assignment is taken from Celia Braxton, another professor of Theatre here at LaGuardia!)

Due Dates:

Friday, May 18th — Please email me and bring five hard copies of your play draft to class with you (the extra copies are for the purposes of peer reviewing with your classmates). See the description below for elements that must be included in your play drafts.

Friday, May 25th — Please email me your final draft of your play. You must also submit (via email) a recording — audio only or video is fine — of yourself reflecting on the process of creating your play. See the description below for recording requirements. Note: we do not meet for class today, so make sure I have everything via email! No hard copies are needed.

Elements You Must Include in your Play Script:

  1. A Cover Sheet: The first page should only include the title (or working title) of your play as well as your name. (Note: the cover sheet does not count toward the five pages of your script.)
  2. Character Names: The second page should include the names of each character and, if you choose and if appropriate, a brief description of each character.
  3. Setting Description: Please include a brief description of the setting(s) for the play. This may include — but is not limited to — the geographical location, time period, power dynamics, and/or what the scenic elements should look like (set, costumes, lighting, props, etc.)
  4. Genre/Style: Feel free to explore any genre or style you wish. As a playwright, you are certainly not limited to creating a contemporary, realistic play. Does science fiction captivate you? Are there dragons flying around in your imagination? Feel free to bring them to life!
  5. Director’s Notes: You may want to include notes to anyone who may be directing, designing, performing, or producing your play as to what your expectations and guidelines are for any production of your play. (For example: Costuming for all of the characters should be designed in white fabrics. No color except white should be used.)
  6. Scenes: Your five-page play might take place all in one scene, or you may choose to write several scenes. This is completely up to you. There are no restrictions on how many scenes you need to have.
  7. Format: Character Names should be capitalized and start on the far left margin of the page, followed by a colon to show clearly who is speaking which line. Stage Directions should be noted by parentheses and should also be italicized to make it clear to any actor or director that these are not to be spoken. (See the formatting of Anon(ymous) for guidance.)
  8. Remember: You are writing a play, not a film. Terms and descriptions such as “EXTERIOR – DAY”, “CUT TO” “CLOSE UP ON” or any other term from film or video are not applicable to this project. Remember also that while lighting and stage technology can create an awe-inspiring array of different places and moods, the faster and more different the settings, the LESS is generally available to make the changes—the fewer scenic elements, props and costume changes will be available.

Note: You may find that five pages of material is not be nearly enough for you to fully explore your idea(s) in the play. In that case, you may want to write what would be considered an excerpt from a full length play. You may want to explore only one or two scenes from a larger concept that you have. In that case, and if you have an idea, you may include a summary of what you imagine would come before and/or after the scene(s) that you’ve written.

Recording Requirements:

In addition to the written play script, you must record a speech of between 1 and 3 minutes reflecting on your work on the play, where your ideas came from, and how you feel your characters or plot interconnect with these sources. The speech may be recorded as audio only or as video. In your speech, you should consider both academic and life-experience sources and connections:

  • issues and events you have discussed in this or other classes (high school or college), or issues in the news or in history, that inform the play;
  • cultural influences and expressions of importance to you that inform the play or individual characters; and
  • the life experiences you have had that inform the play.

Assignment # 1 — Monologue

HUT 101: The Art of Theatre

Fridays, 1:00-4:25pm, C426

Professor Jay Polish

https://tinyurl.com/monologueasmt

Assignment # 1 — Monologue

For this first assignment, you will write a monologue of your own. We will engage in pre-writing exercises in class to help get you started with your topic. Through this monologue, you will both flex your own creative muscles and develop a deep understanding of monologue structure, history, tone, and delivery. You will be encouraged to perform this monologue during our class midterm celebration on Friday, April 20th.

Due Dates:

Friday, April 13th — Please post to the blog and bring a hard copy of your monologue rough draft (you will be peer reviewing them with your classmates). Include not only your monologue draft — which should take you about three minutes to perform (roughly 400 words) — but also please answer each of the following: What three things do you want to ask your peers about your work? What three things are your favorite about your monologue? What three things are you unsure of? What body gestures, facial expressions, vocal tones, and rhythms do you plan to use to perform your monologue? When? Why?

Friday, April 20th — Please post to the blog and bring a hard copy of your monologue to class, and be prepared to share it with your classmates. This sharing is not necessary for your grade (you are allowed to show red on your Personal Traffic Light!), but we are all going to be taking risks together, so perhaps you will feel inspired to perform it; if so, you should come prepared to do so. Try to have it as memorized as you can: memorization really helps the rhythm flow out better. In addition to your monologue, please write a brief reflective artists’ statement that addresses each of the following questions: What did you learn writing this monologue? What you didn’t learn? How you can use what you learned in the future? Did writing a monologue (as opposed to an essay) help you understand the place of monologues in theatre? If yes, how? If no, why not? How you think you could have pushed your writing and performance even further? What rhetorical choices did you make in your monologue — both with your words and with your body — and how did these choices advance the depth of your work? How did the process of peer review push your analysis forward? If it didn’t, why not? How can you and your partners conduct your peer reviews differently next time? What fresh rhetorical insights might you bring from this assignment into future assignments?