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Drama essays -HELP!!!! (1 Viewer)

JYBJYBJYB238

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I'm a year 12 student at a (dreadfulll) country high school, and my class (and myself) still don't know how to write a drama essay properly!!
What we write for drama would be excellent A range english essays (but including include exporential learning ect etc - we put in what we're told to) - and receive a B at the highest! which is terrible as I want a minimum of a band 5 in drama, and an overall high atar.
The teacher seems to mark by his own mysterious, objective methods, and none of us can figure out how to please him with our essay work :(

Are we supposed to write in first person for the exporential?

What are some of the must-do points for a drama essay?

Some advice, in any way, shape or form would be excellent. Thanks.
 

captainpigs

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Don't be put off by your Bs in your essays- my drama class never once had an A range essay between any of us yet we all still performed well int he exam.

could i ask what topics your doing?

Yes- when speaking about workshops speak in first person.
A really good resource to read is this http://dramateachersnetwork.wordpress.com/2011/07/24/tips-for-writing-a-drama-essay/ it gives you a good idea.
I was lucky as we had a dedicated literacy teacher who gave all subjects structure scaffolds.

Good luck!
 

JYBJYBJYB238

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Wow i only just saw that this had a reply to it (sorry for being a few months slow)

thanks ~:)

I'm doing
verbatim theatre: the Laramie Project and Parramatta Girls
and Traditional Australian Theatre: the Removalist and Norm and Ahmed..

I don't have any interest in these texts either, so i think that may be a problem I'm facing with my questions, as I don't believe that these types of theatre (although they're interesting in theory) are very entertaining, nor do they really effectively use techniques etc. etc..........
 

captainpigs

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Damn I did different topics so I can't help.

Most of the drama texts aren't very interesting- I know most of mine weren't, you really just have to make sure you include some good techniques with your relevant workshop examples and you should do fine.
 

CameronM

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I'm a year 12 student at a (dreadfulll) country high school, and my class (and myself) still don't know how to write a drama essay properly!!
What we write for drama would be excellent A range english essays (but including include exporential learning ect etc - we put in what we're told to) - and receive a B at the highest! which is terrible as I want a minimum of a band 5 in drama, and an overall high atar.
The teacher seems to mark by his own mysterious, objective methods, and none of us can figure out how to please him with our essay work :(

Are we supposed to write in first person for the exporential?

What are some of the must-do points for a drama essay?

Some advice, in any way, shape or form would be excellent. Thanks.
Have you had any help yet?

Pretty much, for Removalists and Norm and Ahmed, you want to write about what each play's themes are:
E.G. for The Removalists=
- Gender – the ongoing struggle for equality in the relationships between sexes
• Masculine visions of women – what’s controversial/making news today? ie. Attitudes of footballers and sportspeople / derogatory comments from judges / objectification of women’s sexuality in magazines and television and music clips
• Male aggression/territorialism/insecurity – violence and aggression as prevalent as ever
• Huge recent police crackdowns on drinking and pub violence
• Generational envy/tension – the struggle of the older generations to let go
of their hard won past for their younger successors’ future
• Police brutality – the use of force and a variety of new weapons in the discharging of police duties, and how these are shown through staging, direction.

NORM AND AHMED:
- Racism and xenophobia
• Alienation and the fear of difference “never underestimate the power of difference” Buzo
• The insecurity behind male aggression
• Generational envy & the Australian Dream
• Class and education

There are similar themes in both of these plays by Williamson and Buzo, and you must also consider their relevance in todays society:
modern actors / directors have the freedom of interpretation – we can perform in ‘period detail’ or
theatrical ‘timelessness’, it is how we choose the represent the world and space on the play on the stage that counts.

In terms of Laramie and Parramatta Girls, you speak about how the differences between them, show the line that Verbatim playwrights all come across:
Can I make the stories of these people engaging, whilst still keeping the truth intact?
E.G. Parramatta Girls is a lot more theatrical than Laramie. There is much more complex characterisation, and much more complex sets and it's tense is in the remembered past, and flashes between the present and past. Whereas Laramie is more..chronological, and the actors play over 60 different characters between them.
In terms of the experiential contact, you may be able to research some past performances of all these plays, and read some reviews. Reviewers are trying to get people to go see the plays (or bag them out) and they should often speak of what the experience of watching the plays was like and what the audience was made to feel - which is pretty much exactly what you're supposed to write about! And then apply what you read to certain parts found in the plays and maybe add in a quote/stage direction found in the script that illustrates what you're trying to say and BINGO! You can also make up something, for Verbatim for example, make up a fake in-class workshop you did. A good one would be: You and your classmates got into 2 groups. 1 Group acted out Laramie in the way that Parramatta Girls is (very dramatic and theatrical), and the other acted out Parramatta Girls the way Laramie is, and you analysed both representations, and how the impact of the plays changed. - just an example

But most important of all - answer the question, and try not to retell too much, speak more about the context in Aust. Theatre, and the Theatricality in Verbatim.
 

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