What type of theater is an example of poem play that is dramatic with the use of two or three actors and a narrator?

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What type of theater is an example of poem play that is dramatic with the use of two or three actors and a narrator?

A readers theater performance.

Readers theater is a style of theater in which the actors present dramatic readings of narrative material without costumes, props, scenery, or special lighting. Actors use only scripts and vocal expression to help the audience understand the story. Readers theater is also known as "theater of the mind", "interpreters theater", and "story theater",[1] and performances might be called "reading hours" or "play readings".[2]

History

The form of readers theater is similar to the recitations of epic poetry in fifth–century Greece[3][2] and public readings in later centuries by Charles Dickens and Mark Twain.[4] Although group dramatic readings had been popular since at least the early 1800s, the first use of the term "readers theater" is attributed to a New York group.[2] In 1945, Eugene O'Neill Jr. and Henry Alsberg established the Readers Theater group, which presented Oedipus Rex at the Majestic Theatre on Broadway.[5]

Professional readers theater

In 1949, a national readers theater tour by the First Drama Quartet—Charles Laughton, Agnes Moorehead, Charles Boyer, and Cedric Hardwicke[3]—appeared in 35 states, putting on 500 performances. Their presentation of Don Juan in Hell was seen by more than a half-million people. Columbia Masterworks recorded a performance, which was later re-released in .mp3 format by Saland Publishing. The Wall Street Journal described it as "No set, no props, just four actors in evening dress seated on stools placed behind music stands, reading Shaw's words out loud." Brooks Atkinson in the New York Times called it "a mighty and moving occasion, not only a performance but an intellectual crusade."[6]

Harris Yulin along with Ed Asner, Rene Auberjonois and Mira Furlan formed the Second Drama Quartet in 1994 and also performed Shaw's Don Juan in Hell. Other actors who participated with the Second Drama Quartet included Gena Rowlands, Dianne Wiest, Harold Gould, David Warner, Martin Landau, and Charles Durning. Yulin said of readers theater, "It’s not necessarily a richer experience, but it’s a different experience. It’s like listening to radio: People’s imaginations were engaged in a different way than with television."[7]

Multiple professional productions have made use of readers theater techniques, including the 1967 production of the You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown musical.[2]

Readers theater in education

Six readers from Southwest Missouri State University performed Ray Bradbury's Dandelion Wine at the 1960 Convention of the Speech Association of America. The University of Arkansas began a readers theater program in 1971.[1] The Texas State Junior College Speech tournament in 1975 included a Readers Theater competition.[8] High schools and universities began incorporating readers theater into their drama curriculum, and interpretive readings became a popular competitive event at state, regional, and national forensics tournaments.[2]

In the 1990s, the use of readers theater as a learning strategy spread to elementary and middle schools.[9] Dramatic readings for different subject areas, such as history, science, and sociology, are recommended as a way to engage students, as well as to animate the subjects.[2][10] Textbook publishers now offer readers theater scripts along with other educational materials.[9]

Characteristics

A key difference between traditional theater and readers theater is that readers theater is not staged or acted out through physical movement.[4][2] The interpretation of the dramatic reading relies almost entirely on the actors' voices. Although the early readers theater groups used only scripts and stools, the choice to read or memorize and whether to remain seated or allow movement vary according to the desires of the performing group.[2]

Readers theater can dramatize non-dramatic literature, such as a novel or short story or poem,>[11] and often includes a "narrator" role which might be a character in the story or a nonparticipating witness.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Conner, Norma (May 25, 1980). "Readers Theater". Northwest Arkansas Times. p. 48.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Coger, Leslie Irene. (1982). Readers theatre handbook : a dramatic approach to literature. White, Melvin Robert, 1911- (3rd ed.). Glenview, Ill.: Scott, Foresman. pp. 19–63. ISBN 0-673-15270-7. OCLC 7551026.
  3. ^ a b "A wider form of drama". Burlington Hawk Eye. August 1, 1973. p. 23.
  4. ^ a b Weitzmann, Margaret (February 14, 1963). "New Readers Theatre Theory Is Explained". Potsdam Courier and Freeman. p. 33.
  5. ^ DeMasi, Susan Rubenstein (2016). Henry Alsberg : the driving force of the New Deal Federal Writers' Project. Jefferson, North Carolina. p. 232. ISBN 978-0-7864-9535-1. OCLC 956984803.
  6. ^ Teachout, Terry (2010-02-06). "A Tour of 'Hell' in Evening Dress". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2020-02-20.
  7. ^ Woodard, Joseph (April 28, 1994). "The Second Drama Quartet Follows in Famous Footsteps". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2020-02-20.
  8. ^ "Reader's Theater Is Friday Night". Paris News (Texas). March 2, 1975. p. 18.
  9. ^ a b Campbell, Melvin; Cleland, Jo Ann. "Readers Theatre, Bible, and fluency". Avondale University College. Retrieved February 19, 2020.
  10. ^ "The Power of Readers Theater". Archived from the original on April 29, 2010.
  11. ^ "New Kind of Theater on the Road". Hutchinson News. January 7, 1972. p. 41.

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Home Literature Plays

dramatic literature, the texts of plays that can be read, as distinct from being seen and heard in performance.

The term dramatic literature implies a contradiction in that literature originally meant something written and drama meant something performed. Most of the problems, and much of the interest, in the study of dramatic literature stem from this contradiction. Even though a play may be appreciated solely for its qualities as writing, greater rewards probably accrue to those who remain alert to the volatility of the play as a whole.

In order to appreciate this complexity in drama, however, each of its elements—acting, directing, staging, etc.—should be studied, so that its relationship to all the others can be fully understood. It is the purpose of this article to study drama with particular attention to what the playwright sets down. The history of dramatic literature in Western culture is discussed in the article Western theatre, with some discussion of dramatic literature also included in articles on the literatures of various languages, nations, or regions—for example, English literature, French literature, German literature, and so on. For a discussion of the dramatic literatures of other cultures, see African literature, African theatre, East Asian arts, Islamic arts, South Asian arts, and Southeast Asian arts.

From the inception of a play in the mind of its author to the image of it that an audience takes away from the theatre, many hands and many physical elements help to bring it to life. Questions therefore arise as to what is and what is not essential to it. Is a play what its author thought he was writing, or the words he wrote? Is a play the way in which those words are intended to be embodied, or their actual interpretation by a director and the actors on a particular stage? Is a play in part the expectation an audience brings to the theatre, or is it the real response to what is seen and heard? Since drama is such a complex process of communication, its study and evaluation is as uncertain as it is mercurial.

What type of theater is an example of poem play that is dramatic with the use of two or three actors and a narrator?

English and Irish Playwrights (Part One) Quiz

The British Isles have a long history of theatre, with many notable playwrights. How much do you know about those from England and Ireland? Find out with this quiz.

All plays depend upon a general agreement by all participants—author, actors, and audience—to accept the operation of theatre and the conventions associated with it, just as players and spectators accept the rules of a game. Drama is a decidedly unreal activity, which can be indulged only if everyone involved admits it. Here lies some of the fascination of its study. For one test of great drama is how far it can take the spectator beyond his own immediate reality and to what use this imaginative release can be put. But the student of drama must know the rules with which the players began the game before he can make this kind of judgment. These rules may be conventions of writing, acting, or audience expectation. Only when all conventions are working together smoothly in synthesis, and the make-believe of the experience is enjoyed passionately with mind and emotion, can great drama be seen for what it is: the combined work of a good playwright, good players, and a good audience who have come together in the best possible physical circumstances.

Drama in some form is found in almost every society, primitive and civilized, and has served a wide variety of functions in the community. There are, for example, records of a sacred drama in Egypt 2,000 years before the Common Era, and Thespis in the 6th century bce in ancient Greece is accorded the distinction of being the first known playwright. Elements of drama such as mime and dance, costume and decor long preceded the introduction of words and the literary sophistication now associated with a play. Moreover, such basic elements were not superseded by words, merely enhanced by them. Nevertheless, it is only when a play’s script assumes a disciplinary control over the dramatic experience that the student of drama gains measurable evidence of what was intended to constitute the play. Only then can dramatic literature be discussed as such.

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The texts of plays indicate the different functions they served at different times. Some plays embraced nearly the whole community in a specifically religious celebration, as when all the male citizens of a Greek city-state came together to honour their gods or when the annual Feast of Corpus Christi was celebrated with the great medieval Christian mystery cycles. On the other hand, the ceremonious temple ritual of the early Noh drama of Japan was performed at religious festivals only for the feudal aristocracy. But the drama may also serve a more directly didactic purpose, as did the morality plays of the later Middle Ages, some 19th-century melodramas, and the 20th-century discussion plays of George Bernard Shaw and Bertolt Brecht. Plays can satirize society, or they can gently illuminate human weakness; they can divine the greatness and the limitations of humans in tragedy, or, in modern naturalistic playwriting, probe the human mind. Drama is the most wide-ranging of all the arts: it not only represents life but also is a way of seeing it. And it repeatedly proves Samuel Johnson’s contention that there can be no certain limit to the modes of composition open to the dramatist.