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Sports Development
... budget of £40,076 per annum largely funded by the Arts Council of Northern Ireland and Belfast City Council. As an organisation they regularly seeks funding from other sources.
Introduction to your role in the organisation
After my initial meetings with the ...
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"Contempory choreographers who built on the radical experimental work of the 1960's have gradually reintroduced in new guises much of what was discarded" (Bremser)To what extent is this true of the 2 works you have studied?
... country. Dancers and non-dancer alike were asked to take part in performance and the ideas of the dancer's, their technical ability pushed to the limit.
The centre that became renowned for the creation of New Dance was Dartington college of Arts, ...
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"Discuss the ways in which the following are used in the contemporary dance work you have studied"
... of training, Bourne has recreated Tchaikovsky's classic ballet.
Bourne has given his piece a clear structure, and within it has incorporated dynamics and mood to build tension. A structure is an act of putting together, it is an arrangement of ...
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"How Does The 'The Caucasian Chalk Circle' Fit Into Brecht's Idea Of 'Epic Theatre'?"
... entertain an audience. In epic theatre the moral revolves around the play while on the other hand in natural theatre, the characters revolve around the play and the audience feel the characters' emotions and feelings. The characters in other plays ...
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"Lea Anderson draws her influences from many sources to create work which challenges stereotypes." To what extent is this seen in the work you have studied?
... portray her thoughts about stereotypes, often gender based. Her thoughts being that male and female should not be treated differently but as one. She portrays this constantly throughout her work by using male and female stereotypes.
Take for instance Perfect Moment; ...
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"Taking a range of plays studied on the course show how the play texts are affected by the particular style and cultural context of the theatre from which they are drawn."
... from "The daring personal and political satire of Aristophanes". The Three era's of Greek Comedy are categorised as Old, Middle and New, and the development of comedy is said to be "mainly due to the political and social conditions of ...
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'In what sense, were the costumes and masks appropriate to be used in Greek theatre?'
... and contributed to the dignified look and attitude of the tragic actor.
Firstly, the masks were very vital to the play but also demanded more skill from the actors. The large mask helped all the poeple in the theatre even in ...
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'Island' - GCSE drama Live Production interpretation
... been made to look like a mantelpiece in Mildred's home. On the shelf was placed a vase, a shell, a phone and a radio. At certain points, the traffic arrow was shown to represent the traffic island and at one ...
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'Island' - GCSE drama Live Production interpretation
... been made to look like a mantelpiece in Mildred's home. On the shelf was placed a vase, a shell, a phone and a radio. At certain points, the traffic arrow was shown to represent the traffic island and at one ...
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'Island' - GCSE drama Live Production interpretation
... been made to look like a mantelpiece in Mildred's home. On the shelf was placed a vase, a shell, a phone and a radio. At certain points, the traffic arrow was shown to represent the traffic island and at one ...
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'Island' - GCSE drama Live Production interpretation
... been made to look like a mantelpiece in Mildred's home. On the shelf was placed a vase, a shell, a phone and a radio. At certain points, the traffic arrow was shown to represent the traffic island and at one ...
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'Laundry Girls' by Bill Owen - drama coursework review.
... London, they are ordinary working class girls, working in a typical Victorian woman's job. The relationship between the characters seems to switch between being friendly towards each other to having a go at each other for getting their wages cut. ...
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'The crucible' context essay
... out into full scale war. The cold war was the conflict between the two super powers of the world; the communist Soviet Union and the capitalist United States. In 1953 the year of the play's first performance the Korean War ...
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'The Crucible' language essay
... says to Paris 'Uncle the rumour of witchcraft is all about' this is a form of narrative for the audience who cannot leave the present scene on stage.
Miller used the actual court records from the witchcraft trials to influence his ...
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'The more strongly the presence of the Aborigine is felt in the production, the more the play can be seen to be concerned with colonisation' discuss?
... primarily concerned with theatre's influence in changing people's lives rather than with the British colonisation of Australia. The arrival of the transported victims in Australia, allows the writer to dramatise how they will rebuild their shattered lives through their involvement ...
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'The philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways; the point, however, is to change it.' German playwright, Bertolt Brechts object was to apply this to the theatre.
... the German army, serving as an orderly in a military hospital. As a result of the experiences he incurred during this time he became a pacifist and opposed any form of violence.
Brecht's association with Communism began in 1919, when ...
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'The Truman Show' - how is Trumans life made to look real.
... him every morning just as he is going to work. This is the director trying to show that the world is real and not completely perfect. This serves to make Truman think his world is not a fake.
Christoph ...
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'Witness the True-Man Show'.
... to picking up a radio frequency describing his every move.
I think The Truman Show is an excellent film, Jim Carrey carried the film tremendously because of his superb acting and a huge amount of emotion as the character Truman.
...
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0 How far do you agree “Our Country’s Good” is about the redemptive power of the theatre
... chance to contribute to society instead of annoying it.
At the start of the play Ralph is very ambitious and sees the play as a tool to further his career in the navy, he also has a pre conception of ...
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2 Scenes From The Play Whose Life Is It Anyway And How I Would Direct Them If I were To
... around, Ken showing him as a is paralysed individual with life going on around him but for him it having stopped.
Staging would be a major problem in this play because seen as Ken is portrayed as a paralysed ...
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20th century innovators of theatre
... helped both directors and actors all over the world, especially actors in third world/war torn countries who either don't have access to theatre buildings due to financial constraints, or who have no theatre buildings due to bombings. Peter Brook encountered ...
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A changing stage.
... not directly related they all have similarities in staging because the series is set on an arena style stage, which forces the movement to be 360 degrees to ensure the entire audience sees the dramatic actions. Directed by Mark Harrison ...
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A comparison between ‘Bazaar and Rummage’ and ‘The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui’
... an atmosphere that is as deeply unsettling as it is darkly comic. It was played by only three actors, this was because Brecht was more interested in actors demonstrating the role as opposed to being the role. The actors playing ...
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A critical analysis of Act 1 of 'The Three Sisters' by Anton Chekhov.
... stage, rather than the hyperbolic romances that had obsessed British and foreign Victorian theatre and literature. There is one death in the play, yet it is commented upon with little emotion or circumstance- in the works of Dickens, or Hardy, ...
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A Critical Review of The Woman In Black, seen at The Fortune Theatre, 9th July 2001.
... so that they can understand his harrowing tale. He seeks help in the form of and actor/director/teacher. They act out his story - the story of a private detective searching through a deceased old woman's receipts and personal belongings in ...