The Book of Play Production for Little Theaters, Schools and CollegesD. Appleton, 1926 - 253 páginas |
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Página 9
... allowed , or even encouraged , to produce plays . But in both community and school , the superiority of some permanent dramatic organiza- tion over constantly changing groups is so obvious that argument should be unnecessary . The full ...
... allowed , or even encouraged , to produce plays . But in both community and school , the superiority of some permanent dramatic organiza- tion over constantly changing groups is so obvious that argument should be unnecessary . The full ...
Página 11
... allowed to become a member of the organization by successfully doing definite work of some sort . Those who wish to act should be encouraged to report to the director when plays are being cast , and they should be allowed to become full ...
... allowed to become a member of the organization by successfully doing definite work of some sort . Those who wish to act should be encouraged to report to the director when plays are being cast , and they should be allowed to become full ...
Página 40
... allowed to walk through their parts until the play has been read once or twice without movement . Some directors like to have the play read in this way as many times as possible in an evening , perhaps five or six times in the case of a ...
... allowed to walk through their parts until the play has been read once or twice without movement . Some directors like to have the play read in this way as many times as possible in an evening , perhaps five or six times in the case of a ...
Página 58
... allowed to have practice in playing the play through . These final rehearsals should not be interrupted for work on details that the coach has been unable to teach in the preceding re- hearsals . The time for details has gone by , and ...
... allowed to have practice in playing the play through . These final rehearsals should not be interrupted for work on details that the coach has been unable to teach in the preceding re- hearsals . The time for details has gone by , and ...
Página 86
... allowed to become so long or elaborate that it steals interest away from the play itself . The use of the Chronicler in Drinkwater's " Abraham Lincoln , " and the Ballad Man in MacKaye's " Washington , " is essentially nothing more nor ...
... allowed to become so long or elaborate that it steals interest away from the play itself . The use of the Chronicler in Drinkwater's " Abraham Lincoln , " and the Ballad Man in MacKaye's " Washington , " is essentially nothing more nor ...
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The Book of Play Production for Little Theaters Schools and Colleges Milton Smith Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
acting actors artist audience auditorium batten better blue Brander Matthews canvas cast ceiling central staging CHAPTER character cloth color wheel complementary colors conception corner Costume Design costume plate crêpe curtain cyclorama device director door dramatic art dramatic club draperies drop edge effect Elizabethan face fastened feet fireplace flats floor footlights front gelatine give glue gray grease paint Horace Mann School idea important inches interesting lash cleat light lines Little Theater make-up material method miter box modern Molière movement necessary nonprofessional One-Act Plays orange organization painted scenery performance plastic pieces platform play production possible produce professional prompter proper proscenium arch pulley rehearsals scene secured side sometimes sort spot stage design stage lighting stage manager stagecraft step suggest surface tacked theatrical things tion tumes usually wall William Gillette window frames wire wise York
Pasajes populares
Página 55 - Lord help me, any man, that is, any good man, that had such a mother, would have done exactly the same. I know you are only joking with me; but indeed, madam, though I was never at a play in London, yet I have seen acting before in the country; and the king for my money; he speaks all his words distinctly, half as loud again as the other. — Anybody may see he is an actor.
Página 55 - And then, to be sure, in that scene, as you called it, between him and his mother, where you told me he acted so fine, why, Lord help me, any man, that is, any good man, that had such a mother, would have done exactly the same. I know you are only joking with me ; but indeed, madam, though I was never...
Página 97 - You ask about the colours? What are the colours that Shakespeare has indicated for us? Do not first look at Nature, but look in the play of the poet. Two; one for the rock, the man; one for the mist, the spirit. Now, quickly, take and accept this statement from me. Touch not a single other colour, but only these two colours through your whole progress of designing your scene and your costumes, yet forget not that each colour contains many variations.
Página 97 - ... interiors" as they are called. But, bless your heart, don't bother about that! Call to mind that the interior of a castle is made from the stuff which is taken from the quarries. Is it not precisely the same colour to begin with? and do not the blows of the axes which hew out the great stones give a texture to each stone which resembles the texture given it by natural means, as rain, lightning, frost? So you will not have to change your mind or change your impression as you proceed. You will...
Página 105 - Some places speak distinctly. Certain dank gardens cry aloud for a murder; certain old houses demand to be haunted; certain coasts are set apart for shipwreck. Other spots again seem to abide their destiny, suggestive and impenetrable, 'miching mallecho.
Página 97 - I know you are yet not quite comfortable in your mind about this rock and this mist ; I know that you have got in the back of your head the recollection that a little later on in the play come several " interiors " as. they are called. But, bless your heart, don't bother about that ! Call to mind that the interior of a castle is made from the stuff which is taken from the quarries. Is it not precisely the same colour to begin with ? and do not the blows of the axes which hew out the great stones...
Página 95 - I see two things. I see a lofty and steep rock, and I see the moist cloud which envelops the head of this rock. That is to say, a place for fierce and warlike men to inhabit, a place for phantoms to nest in.
Página 54 - He the best player!" cries Partridge, with a contemptuous sneer, "why, I could act as well as he myself. I am sure, if I had seen a ghost, I should have looked in the very same manner, and done just as he did. And then, to be sure, in that scene, as you...
Página 97 - ... give a texture to each stone which resembles the texture given it by natural means, as rain, lightning, frost? So you will not have to change your mind or change your impression as you proceed. You will have but to give variations of the same theme, the rock - the brown; the mist the grey; and by these means you will, wonder of wonders, actually have preserved unity. Your success will depend upon your capacity to make variations upon these two themes; but remember never to let go of the main...
Página 48 - His tears are real, his laughter real, as real to himself as to his audience. Frequently, they are more real to himself than to his listeners ; for the capacity of feeling, and the faculty of expressing the sensation experienced, are widely different. The current upon which the actor is borne away may, or may not, be strong enough to bear the spectator upon its bosom.