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Scene 2006-7 March Issue 3 THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL SCHOOLS THEATRE ASSOCIATION IN THIS ISSUE: SP ED E IT CIA IO L N What’s Happening in Schools? : The International Theatre Educator www.ista.co.uk ISTA – A WHO’S WHO Editor: Sally Robertson Artwork: Jo Doidge Print: Brewers Business Solutions Ltd, Cornwall, UK Cover Image: taken by Julie Ladner, Drama teacher and host of Western Academy of Beijing, Middle School Festival – Autumn 2006. Photographs: from Calderdale High School Festival and Beijing Middle School Festival; selected from the ISTA archives by Liane Campbell. To submit material or comments for future issues please email Sally Robertson on [email protected] © International Schools Theatre Association (ISTA) 2006-7 ISTA and its editors accept no liability for the views, opinions and advice contained in this journal. The editors reserve the right to edit any materials submitted for publication. ISTA Contact Information International Schools Theatre Association PO Box 74 Helston TR13 8EE UK Email: [email protected] Website: www.ista.co.uk Board of Trustees David Lightbody, President – General Manager Cameron Mackintosh China Fenella Kelly, Vice President – Cairo American College, Egypt Darren Scully, Vice President – St Julian’s School, Portugal Doug Bishop – Taipei American School, Taiwan Ian Pike – Freelance writer, UK Michael Westberg – Inter Community School Zurich, Switzerland Honorary Life Members Dinos Aristidou – UK Ted Miltenberger – France Mike Pasternak – Switzerland ISTA Global Patrons The American School in The Hague Community, the Netherlands Encore! Ensemble Theatre Workshop, USA International School of Brussels, Belgium International School of Geneva, La Chataigneraie, Switzerland International School Hamburg, Germany Michigan State University, USA The Robertson Family, UK St Julian’s School, Portugal ISTA Personnel Emmy Abrahamson, Vienna, Austria – [email protected] Bev Brian, Cornwall, UK – [email protected] Liane Campbell, Perth, Australia – [email protected] Sally Robertson, Cornwall, UK – [email protected] Jo Webb, Cornwall, UK – [email protected] Regional Representatives Africa – Fenella Kelly, Cairo American College, Egypt Latin America – Jeff Aitken, Escuela Campo Alegre, Venezuela North America – Rob Warren, Atlanta International School, USA Beijing MS Editorial 2006-7 March Issue 3 ASKING MEMBERS... I’m absolutely thrilled with this issue! Each year at the Board of Trustees meeting, I ask various members of the Board to brainstorm possible themes for issues of Scene. It was at last year’s meeting where Darren Scully suggested the idea of ‘What’s Happening in Schools?’ A collection of plays recently performed/ produced in schools to create a new resource for member teachers. Brilliant. One of the most frequently asked questions we receive, throughout the year, has something to do with teachers needing help or inspiration as to what kind of production to do. Whether it’s an easy musical, an all female cast, a play that is devised, a piece to do with IB students, a full school community project, a middle school play for over 80 kids etc etc. Teachers are constantly searching for new ideas and have very specific needs regarding the productions they want/are asked to do. ISTA should absolutely be able to help with this. The process of realising this particular idea has shown that such a project is doable and only enhances what we can offer to teachers by way of resources, not to mention the follow up (new dialogues, exchanging scripts etc) that ensues. Due thanks go to all the teachers who wrote in and put up with my pestering along the way. My wish is that you all feel you are getting back much more than you put in. I particularly enjoyed a comment from one teacher, who said being asked to write in with his notes on productions, forced him to reflect on the choice of plays he did with his students. Undoubtedly there have been all kinds of wonderful spin offs as well. Moving beyond purely content, you will see we have a new look for Scene. I can only extend my sincere thanks to Ian Pike and David Lightbody at this year’s Board meeting for their thoughts, suggestions and guidance. This kind of collaborative process ensures that we continually keep strengthening what lies at the heart of ISTA; dialogue, keeping things alive and partaking in the wonderful world that is theatre. Finally, thanks to Jo Doidge for her creative brilliance in realising our ideas. What’s Happening in Schools? A new Publication I know that some of you were struggling for time, at the time of commissioning. However I would very much like to contact you again – to ask if you can contribute to ‘phase 2’ of this project. It is our aim, at the very least, to double the current number of contributions, so as to create a new publication for the wider teaching community. I have a model for you to use and worked out in the early stages of this project that a contribution should take no more than 15-20 minutes – given the formula we are using. It would be great to build on what we have started here. Other resources? I am very much aware that we need to monitor how much we ask you to contribute during any one year. Getting the balance wrong would negatively affect good will and this wouldn’t be good practice. But say we tried to do a project of this kind, every 2nd year – what other resources would you find useful? If we could collect other information from member teachers, what would this be? Please do write in with your ideas, as the further ahead we can plan the better. As part of our Teacher Enrichment work, one of our goals is to develop and extend our current list of resources for teachers. You, as members of ISTA, have a voice in determining what those resources should be. I look forward to hearing from you. Editor [email protected] Please respond directly to [email protected] Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 1 What’s Happeni Charmaine Basel and Belinda Shorland – British International School, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam sneakers scold and flirt with the audience, and duels are fought with giant salamis. THE TEENAGE DILEMMAS OF ANDY LEE: written by Charmaine and Belinda After looking through various plays and feeling that they somehow didn’t feel quite “international enough”, we decided to write one. The play focuses on its central character Andy’s trials and tribulations - a type of Adrian Mole with a cultural twist. It is set in Vietnam (but this could easily be interchanged) and explores the cultural particularities of having a mixed background and going to school in a multicultural setting. The play has 30 written cast members of all ages and has potential for more. It is in three acts and running time without interval is about 1hour and 10 minutes. It took us around 4 weeks to write - including a few late nights and weekends. Highlights include: a whole cast Bollywood dance / dream sequence; a granny fight and a whole cast karaoke / dance finale to Blue Suede Shoes. The piece was a success in the sense that the audience connected with the subject matter and really enjoyed the humour. We also received compliments on the writing. It was a worthwhile experience writing and directing the play and most importantly, it was wonderful to have the students perform a play that was specifically tailored for an international setting. My starting point was Scala’s scenario “The Betrothed,” which I adapted to fit the twenty 11 to 18 year olds who auditioned. The first step was to encourage them to play, to experiment with movement, tempo and status. They studied the Masters: Charlie, Buster and Margaret Rutherford’s Lady Bracknell, Bertie & Jeeves, Basil & Sybill, Tom & Jerry. With no text to fall back on, it was important they take responsibility for their own characters and create their own Lazzi. I found that allowing a bit of anarchy into rehearsals gave birth to accidental discoveries, and many wonderful comic moments. Laurie Carroll Berube – Institut Le Rosey, Switzerland LOVE KNOTS based on a Commedia dell’Arte Scenario by Flaminia Scala Tackling a scenario for students to improvise around, rather than a scripted play, felt like jumping into the void - especially for the end-of-year production. In the end, I had more fun with this show than any other! Full of gags, pratfalls, and mistaken identity, improvised physical comedy relying on whiplash timing, it is exhausting to stage. But we had a great time creating an anything-can-happen cartoon world where lovers approach in slow-motion, servants in high-top 2 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 N.B. John Wright’s Why is that so Funny? was invaluable – especially when creating a Keystone Cops chase-cum-spaghetti-on-the-head food fight! Emily Blackburn – ACS International School of Egham, UK THE WISH PEDDLER by Tom McCoy: The Dramatic Publishing Company Our fall middle school production last year was part of a celebration of the arts at our school. This event included: a dance show, visual art displays, performances by our school’s four bands, a choir performance and a play. THE WISH PEDDLAR is a very short play, but it has an expandable cast. We wanted to have a lot of students involved, so this was ideal for our purposes. The play is a bit thin to stand on its own, but I can see that it would be a good jumping off point for other devised scenes. I think it would be a good project for lower school or for a middle and lower school collaboration. A DOLL’S HOUSE by Henrik Ibsen: rights held by Samuel French In February one of my IB 12 students took on the challenge of directing A Doll’s House. The results were excellent. The small cast (3 M, 2F) allowed for intense work from some dedicated (mostly IB) actors. The intimacy of our small black box studio was ideal for this quiet and poignant play. The technical aspects of this production were very simple, but it did give some of my IB students an opportunity to further their design skills. The true challenge came in the development and handling of the characters. It was exciting to watch the students stretch themselves and succeed. ONCE UPON A MATTRESS by Marshall Barer and Mary Rodgers: rights held by Josef Weinberger Ltd. in the UK and Rodgers and Hammerstein in the United States Our school has a tradition of a largescale spring musical and last year we did ONCE UPON A MATTRESS. This production was a true crowd pleaser, and it was a joy to work on. The characters are funny and the students quickly related to the fractured Princess and the Pea fairy tale. We were able to include students from 6th -12th grade, as the themes and content are universal the whole school was able to enjoy the production. We had a cast of 24, but this number could easily be shrunk or expanded as needed. There are a lot of opportunities for large dance numbers and the chorus has a personality all of its own. Our small orchestra consisted of piano, keyboards, a double bass and percussion. It was large enough to sound good, but small enough to handle. This was by far our most technically challenging show of the year, but it wasn’t so beyond our means that weren’t able to create a strong production. We did end up having only nine mattresses due to health and safety hazards, but we made up for what could have been a disappointing effect by having Princess Winnifred use a trampoline to vault into bed! Mike Caemmerer – American Embassy School New Delhi, India MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM by William Shakespeare This was a standard production but with my IB students in mind. The first year IB students were told in February of 2005 that the October production would be the Dream. As the director I gave them my rough sketch for design ng in Schools? and then set them about the task of critiquing the idea. Their critiques had to be based on research and theory as well as the potential that the idea had for bringing the play to life on stage. They were very much the design team. By the end of May, the idea had been solidified enough so that one of the students took on the task of bringing the costumes to life. She was in London in the summer and met with ISTA’s David Lightbody to get some design help. She came back in the fall with full designs. She then turned those over to another IB student who was in charge of actual costume construction, including fabric purchasing and working with the tailor. Nearly all IB Theatre Arts students were involved in some aspect, either on stage or off. The process for all the students was invaluable. They saw the birth of an idea and worked with it until they saw it (or acted it) on stage. Their ability to understand the intricacies of design and production grew significantly and the process clearly impacted their own work. As a school theatre director/teacher and given whatever constraints (real or imagined), I find myself avoiding the same steps that I require of my students. This process put into perspective exactly what I ask them to do on a regular basis with design and production. It also gave them the kind of emersion in a project they do not normally get. ALL IN THE TIMING and TIME FLIES: One Act play collections of David Ives: Vintage Books and Grove Press, respectively. I have found this one night production to be a great way to start a year. At AES, with students moving in and out yearly at a rate of about 20%, it is difficult to know what kind of large production the students are able to pull off. An evening of one-acts gives me as director the ability to choose pieces of varying difficulty, while at the same time giving around 20 students the opportunity to have meaningful roles on stage. I am a huge fan of David Ives. His style lends itself to challenging pieces for talented performers (SURE THING for example), but also lets students with less experience learn the art of timing (ARABIAN NIGHTS, CAPTIVE AUDIENCE). The school community audience can easily tolerate the short acts and the sophisticated humor behind Ives. The feedback for the actors is always instant and gratifying. COMPLEAT WRKS of WLLM SHSKPR: abridged, Borgeson, Long and Singer, Applause Books This is the most recent production at AES. Two graduating seniors dragged their IB teacher on stage to perform this well-known comedy. The stipulation from this teacher was that he have nothing to do with the production except acting. Students would be responsible for all elements of production. They agreed. The play is an intense production experience in that while only three actors are on stage, the supporting crew required 8 members not including the student director. Most of these 9 were rather prolific on stage, but had little or no off stage experience. A baptism by fire! Again, the play was fine, but the process was the beneficial aspect. They really ran all elements of production-set design, costume design, posters and tickets, props, directing: they did it all. The play was pulled off in four weeks requiring an intense effort from all. And while the acting was a great penultimate experience for the seniors, it is the students who worked backstage that still talk about this play. This piece got the “stage junkies” in the wings to fully appreciate the enormity of work that goes into a production. MY FATHER’S DRAGON based on the book by Ruth Stiles Gannett The Thespian Society takes on as its community service goal to bring theatre to the drama starved elementary students. Thespians put on an annual theatre workshop for grades 3-5 with 50 to 70 students who show up for the full day of theatre games and mini-workshops. Two years ago they extended that to create a full theatre experience for the students. The popular children’s story MY FATHER’S DRAGON had been adapted to music by the high school music teacher. It provided a great vehicle for an elementary show: flexible casting allowing for between 40 and 70 students, outrageous costumes, and individual stage time, even for the smallest of parts. In addition, it meant that the Thespians could (had to) all be involved. They managed the entire production, from audition to closing curtain. They were in charge of makeup design and application, costume design and application, blocking and direction, choreography, everything. Calderdale HS Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 3 “Come as you are and leave with a different perspective on life.” Hanna Lopes Coelho, St Nicholas School, Sao Paulo, Brazil Adults were asked to help, but even they played only a supporting role, following the lead of the Thespians. Because of the sheer number of students, it was necessary for me to do a lot of the time management, but I did so only in consultation with the student director. It was a fabulous experience for both the elementary and the high school students. The Elementary School students loved working with the high school students, and I think the feeling was mutual. It was a great community builder too, as 3rd graders now know seniors and were greeting them in the school hallways like they were best friends. Kate Caster – International School Hamburg, Germany GOD’S FAVOURITE by Neil Simon: published by Samuel French, Inc., New York This is a comedy based on the biblical story of Job. You know the one... God and the Devil have an argument about who has the most faith in God. God tells the Devil his ‘servant on earth’ is Jo Benjamin (Job) who will never renounce God, no matter what the Devil does to make his life miserable. Simon has modernized the story with some funny twists, including a bumbling messenger from God sent to tell Jo Benjamin the bad news. We endeavored to do a double cast with this show because it only has 8 characters. It did work nicely as it was a great opportunity for our community to see 2 quite different interpretations of the same script. It was, however, a bit difficult during the rehearsal process. Fortunately, I had a wonderful student director. KISS ME KATE: book by Sam & Bella Spewack, music & lyrics by Cole Porter, published by Tams-Witmark Music Library, Inc., New York This musical is quite a good one for a large group. We were able to use 7th12th graders with the variety this show has to offer. This show provides an excellent opportunity to costume characters in the 1950’s as well as the Elizabethan period. Not only does it have wonderful Cole Porter music, it has an interesting storyline... a little different from the typical musical 4 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 comedies around. This is a play within a play where the leading actor and actress (who used to be married and now can’t stand each other) are putting up a production of “The Taming of the Shrew.” The off stage antics cross over to the on stage performance. Besides this, a side story involves 2 comic gangsters who are trying to extort money from another cast member for his gambling debts. Some of the more well known songs include: “Brush up Your Shakespeare,” “Why Can’t You Behave?,” “Wunderbar,” “Too Darn Hot” and “Always True to You in my Fashion.” STORY THEATRE by Paul Sills: published by Samual French Inc., New York This show was developed with my 9th grade students for Elementary School children. It is a compilation of some of the best-known children’s stories plus a few odd ones. The great thing about his script is that you can do parts or the entire show. We chose to use most of the stories and cut the more gruesome ones. There is also a lot of opportunity to create each story with unusual and interesting characters. It works really well as an ensemble piece with no real set and minimal costuming. It’s a dream budget show. Doug Dean – Marymount International School Rome, Italy ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST by Dale Wasserman The rehearsal period for this high school production lasted five months. Each student developed their character’s “back story” individually and we spent a long time discussing mental health and the wafer-thin line that separates sanity from insanity. I worked on the “less is more” principal; I didn’t want a group of over-the-top “nutbags”, as McMurphy refers to them. I wanted real people that had simply found life too complex to deal with. That, for me, brought out the tragedy of their situations and lended extra weight to the coldly villainous attitude of Nurse Ratched. This is NOT an easy play to do well, I was fortunate to be blessed with an extremely talented and dedicated group of students. Our set was stark white and I went with a soundrack of Joni Mitchell and Bob Dylan, reflecting the play’s anti-establishment themes. REVOLTING RHYMES by Roald Dahl This was an 8th grade production. We had spent part of the year working on clowning, physical comedy and status and this piece gave us an excellent chance to put what we had learned into practice. The narrator of the six stories was a clearly identifiable authority figure, albeit one who had his status lowered as the plays collapsed around him. We introduced ideas taken from Michael Green’s Coarse Acting Shows, with actors “forgetting” lines, outsized props, misplaced sound effects, wobbly scenery etc. We made many of the props and costumes ourselves, including two life-size ugly sisters, complete with detachable heads. The bottom line was though, that through all of this, the actors still had to tell the story and tell it clearly. I cast 30 actors but it could be done with far fewer. The stage started in pristine condition but, by the end, was full of props, chopped-off heads, used dynamite sticks and discarded costumes, leaving the poor narrator utterly beaten as the curtain drew. It was SO much fun; I can’t wait to do it again with another group! THE TROJAN WOMEN by Euripides This was the high school production that we ended the 2005/06 academic year with. I had a group that was almost entirely female and, in particular, four gifted girls to play the challenging roles of Hecuba, Cassandra, Andromache and Helen. I wanted to strike a balance between the traditional Greek style of performing and a more modern, naturalistic approach. So, rather than having the chorus speaking in unison I asked each of the girls to develop an individual character and shared the chorus lines between them. The middle school art teacher, a talented artist in his own right, designed a post-apocalyptic set for me, with rough, patched tents, washing lines, broken machinery, fallen buildings; a world deprived of the luxuries we now take for granted but somehow still recognizable as our own. This is a moving, powerful and challenging play. Alenka Dorrell - American International School Budapest, Hungary Kabuki MACBETH: three Scenes from Shakespeare As part of a final directing unit, three IB student directors tackled the Prophecy, the Letter and the Final Battle in Kabuki style. Each student actor also took on a production role. The results were spectacular and the learning curve immense for everyone. The play lent itself well to the style. Our witches created some very Kabuki special effects (fishing lights in their teeth, cobwebs sprayed from their sleeves), the kata for the warriors and the extremely bloody fights with convenient mie to underscore the action (and allow everyone to breathe!) gave the choreographers a job while the designers worked with Kabuki colour symbolism for the Hanamichi floor cloths and the wall hangings. There was space for the musicians to compose a drumming and flute score and our narrator spoke the text in Japanese and English! THE GRADUATING CLASS by the High School Theatre Ensemble of AISB This was a devised production. We set it in an International School, improvising with characters from different walks of life/circumstances. The basic premise was a student thinking on the questions posed by her headmaster at Graduation, ‘Where have you come from? Where are you going?’ After every rehearsal, I took away the notes I had written from the students’ improvs and wrote the script that way. This is obviously going to be a touch frustrating in terms of writing because often you would rather the story was different (!) but it is a great way to teach devising and character; and to give the kids ensemble ownership of their piece. It was also hugely popular with the audience because they recognized so much from it – though we tried hard not to tell any personal stories. THREE SISTERS: an adaptation based on the play by Anton Chekhov My IB Seniors are exploring Naturalism through site-specific and Promenade theatre, by rehearsing and performing in my house. The first two acts take place in the living room, the third act is in the basement and fourth act takes Calderdale HS place in the garden! I can report that we are having a ball doing this piece. Working within a domestic environment has been fantastic. So many moments happen differently. A stage rehearsal for instance, had Vershinin walking around when talking. In the living room, this was clearly ‘unnatural’ so we made it much more static but used hands and faces more. In terms of production too it has been fascinating. Mood music doesn’t work at home, but you can do all sorts of things with stage lighting. Our performance is, for instance at 6pm but the first act is daytime, spring. We are placing large lights outside windows to shine in and give the conceit. Because it is cold here, torches and fire heaters are part of the 4th act (now set at night...) Interestingly, the 3rd act, in the smallest space, works the best of all. Anne Marie Drodz – Bilkent University Preparatory School, Turkey ANTIGONE by Jean Anouillh adapted by Anne Marie Grade 12 IB Theatre Arts students gained an experience of performing this play in a professional small studio theatre in February 2006. The play was adapted to suit the individual needs of 7 students. They were given enough individual exposure but were not overburdened with large chunks of text to memorize. The essence of the play was kept intact – maintaining themes of oppression, teenage rebellion and search for identity. Drawing on Greek myths and the theatrical conventions of Greek Theatre, (masks, ritual dance and choral movement), we also used rehearsal techniques drawn from Boal’s “Theatre of the Oppressed” which was later incorporated into the fabric of the play, eg, Colombian Hypnosis, Mirroring, Image Sculpturing etc. This was interlaced with modern music and modern references in terms of props and costuming. The set design owed much to the influence of Peter Brook with a minimalist approach and an “empty space” feel to the piece. The 7 actors gained a worthwhile experience of performing in a professional theatre space and gained a synthesis of the two year journey they had taken from Greek Theatre in Year 1 through to Theatre of the Oppressed in Year 2. THE DINING ROOM by A.R. Gurney The Grade 11 IB Theatre Arts class performed this American classic in May of 2006. Each of the six actors played six to eight characters in the course of the two-act play. As the director, I was thrilled to finally have the numbers and talent to put this piece on the stage. This was also the first time at BUPS/BIS that students performed a full length dramatic piece, another sign of how our theatre department is expanding. The structure of the script made every student stretch themselves to reach the ultimate challenge faced by every actor: How does one create a believable character onstage? They had to exit, unbutton a shirt or pin up their hair and come back on stage as another character entirely. Due to scheduling restrictions, the IB students worked on the piece for over three months before it went up, requiring them to sustain focus and commitment on a much higher scale. The main challenge of the piece, technically, was the set and props. The dining room in question had to be stereotypically American WASP, yet versatile enough that it could withstand the 11 scenes played around it. Students learned the incredible frustrations every prop master goes through: how to find not just a spoon, but a whole set that not only matches each other but the Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 5 massive and ever-growing metropolis which offers the best and the worst of the urban experience. Transitions between scenes were achieved with the use of projected photographs and video and a rock band playing selections from The Clash. THE CHRYSALIDS: adapted by David Harrower from the novel by S John Windham H Calderdale The text is specifically written for Calderdale H S teenage actors and our cast of Grade 7 to 10 students handled the roles very well. A design motif for the production was a reworking of Da Vinci’s famous image of the man with his limbs stretched out set inside a pentagon. This became the symbol of “purity” for the xenophobic citizens of Waknuk. The production was set in the round with five risers creating a pentagonal stage with 5 entrances. As a part of the project, Grade 10 music students overall design concept. The studied minimalist music and experience certainly allowed the actors composed in that genre. Selections to grow; the time commitment enabled from their compositions were used as them to reflect and focus on their scene transition music and to process; and finally they gained an underscore the recorded passages of understanding of just how many items “telepathy” from the mutant children. and roles are required to get a full length play on it’s feet. Gillian Eugene - Lincoln Community School, Ghana Geoffrey Duffield - Western Academy of Beijing, China THE VISIT by Freidrich Durrenmatt: translated from the German by Patrick Bowles Durrenmatt’s THE VISIT is a great text to stage provided you can cast the two lead roles that require a fair amount of sophistication. Beyond those roles, it is potentially a great ensemble piece with scope for lots of interesting characterization for a cast of about 35. We staged it on a fairly empty stage with design emphasis on costumes. I think this suits the Brechtian flavor of the script. This is an excellent piece of theatre to provoke discussion on ethical issues. METROPOLIS This was a devised project for a group of about 30 Grade 7 to 9 students, loosely based on an Australian play by Tony Nicholls and Felicity Lyons, URBS URBIS. Heinemann published the play in 1982 in the One Act Play series, but I think it is now out of print. URBS URBIS is a pastiche of scenes in a variety of theatrical styles on issues of urban life. Using the original text as an exemplar, the company devised original scenes about life in Beijing, a 6 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 THE MARRIAGE OF ANANSEWA by Efua T. Sutherland This tale is based on the oral traditions of Ananse, a trickster spider in the Ghanaian culture. As with many West African plays, it relies heavily on music, song, and has opportunities for quite a bit of dance. It also makes use of a storyteller, which is a well-known figure in Ghanaian culture. The play is most suitable for High School students, though we had a mix of High School and Middle School (in fact, the role of Ananse was played by a 6th grader). The cast can range from ten members upwards as, apart from the main characters, all the cast can act as the players (similar to a chorus), and a combination of other roles. I think we had fifteen to twenty students in our performance. The play is quite long so you will want to edit it. We had an outside artist who knew the play, and knew African drumming, singing and dancing, to come and work with the students. We were able to do a bunch of the songs in Twi (one of the local Ghanaian languages), which was very cool for the actors and the audience. He also taught us some West African dance, and worked on drumming with our student and teacher musicians. The cunningness of Ananse and the wild turn of events that take place makes this play very unique and really quite funny! The kids and the audience alike loved the play, and thought it very refreshing to see an African, specifically Ghanaian, play on the stage. RELIA: A NOH RETELLING OF THE TALE by Gillian Eugene In this play I adapted the familiar tale of Cinderella using the theatrical tradition of Japanese Noh Theatre. Aiding me in the writing process was a book, The Noh Plays of Japan: An Anthology, written by Arthur Waley that contained a variety of Noh plays. The result was something quite dark, spiritual and “ghost-like,” yet also quite funny! We set the play outside in the grass, trying to closely imitate the stage and set-up of an actual Noh performance. Around the stage we built a bamboo frame with lanterns hanging down. We had Japanese drumming playing as the audience entered and at various points throughout the performance. I had a local artist make these fabulous wooden masks for the main characters, and all the characters had on thick wooden clogs that made this amazing sound on the floor. Everyone had on a different style of kimono, and the hair and make-up became very wild and over-the-top! There were two musicians that played the flute throughout the performance. We incorporated much movement into the play and, I must say, the whole thing was just beautiful. We had mostly Middle School students in this production, and it was perfect for them. The number of cast can vary as the chorus can have any number of people take part. This was an excellent way to get the students and adults alike familiar with some of the elements of Noh Theatre. CONFERENCE OF THE BIRDS by Peter Brooke and Jean-Claude Carriere This play is for High School students and has a cast of 12 – 16 (this allows each actor to play a bird and at least one other character). It is a challenging script, as one has to really work to discern the meaning of the various stories and to clearly grasp the overall narrative. The play is adapted from a Middle Eastern poem, and tells the story of a group of birds, led by the Hoopoe, on a grueling journey to find their king. There are various mini- narratives throughout the play, told by the Hoopoe, each to teach a lesson to the other birds. The play is quite visually stimulating. We had one of the classes at school design a bird mask and wings for each bird character; underneath this all the actors wore white Middle Eastern dress (baggy pants, knee-length shirt). The creativity and colours that came from the student’s bird creations were awesome! We performed the play in the round, with the main action taking place on a circular carpet surrounded by bamboo poles. When the birds were not in the circle they were perched on various sized ramps and levels in the corners of the room. The play is physically demanding in that the actors must work hard to develop their “bird bodies,” as well as give the illusion of flight throughout the play. Tim Evans – Yokohama International School, Japan THE BURIAL AT THEBES: Heaney after Sophocles This is Sophocles’ Antigone, but a fairly new version by Seamus Heaney. The language is very accessible. The students did not feel threatened by it. The cast was from 7th to 12th grade. I used all my IB class too. The latter took on both performance and production roles. I used some eighteen students on stage. I chose six students to be the Chorus; you could have two or twenty. It was my first time working with a CHORUS and was a desired challenge. They hold the play together. But what would I do with them on stage all the time!? They explored: jazz dance, Tango, physical theatre and acrobatics. The stage was open and minimal. We reset it in a mythical South American country. Creon looked highly dubious as the Chorus swept in to the sampled Tango sounds of Gotan Project. He did not have a Cuban cigar. ARMS AND THE MAN by G.B.Shaw This is a perfect low-key, small cast project for IB students wishing to explore Victorian Theatre. 3 female, 4 male. 3 ACTS. 3 settings. A set design challenge. We did it on an open stage with 3 distinct areas for each Act. Colour coded, semi-real and contemporary. The play has many themes: love, honour, deceit, war, male/female. It concerns a soldier trapped in the bedroom of a young lady whose fiancé is on the other side of the conflict. The fugitive appears eccentric in his views of war and honour. She becomes intrigued. Will she protect him? THE NAVIGATOR This was an adaptation of the little known musical from 1976: Stephen Sondheim’s PACIFIC OVERTURES. With at least a dozen songs it was far too ambitious for MS/HS. But being here in Japan it seemed impossible to ignore. So we rewrote the start and the end. We only included 4 songs. It had a rather dated view of the Japanese: walkmans and sushi rolls. We added AWA ODORI dance, BUTOH movement and Complicite lighting effects recently seen in THE ELEPHANT VANISHES. The Cast was large. I used over thirty but you could add more in the crowd scenes. This is in many ways Sondheim’s attempt at an Asian play. So for IB students there are opportunities for exploring: Kabuki, Noh, Butoh, Kyogen and Bunraku. We selected two out of those; Butoh and Kyogen conventions. It is the story of Manjiro, a young boy who is shipwrecked. He is rescued by an American Whaler and is taken to New England. He learns English, one of the first Japanese to do so, and returns dangerously to the closed kingdom. It is all based on fact so there is plenty of opportunity for research and historical cross-over. Again we used our open stage and created settings with slide projections. We also had live music: taiko drums, koto and piano. This was a very special play to do and if you are going for your BIG one; the one you wish to be remembered by, the one you will watch again and again on your dvd, then... dozo. Jerry Flynn – International School of Tanganyika, Tanzania lighting and sound for the IB Theatre Arts students. It was a three- month project, rehearsing twice a week as an extra-curricular activity. The outcome was kitsch and humorous. The students and staff had a great time working with this one and it was received well as an enjoyable evening of family entertainment. PINNOCHIO written by John Morley, published by Samuel French At the time of writing this is our current project. We are working with a cast of 35 students from grades 6-12. There are 12 principal roles with supporting cast as puppets, circus performers and villagers. The play is directorially challenging with the script demanding a variety of illusions and complex settings. The original script is a musical although we have decided instead we have the MYP grade 10 students composing and recording an original score. The production is being used as a vehicle for the IB students as well, one who is working on Costume Design for her Individual Project and one who has taken on the role of Stage Manager. The production is working along the lines of Physical/Total Theatre. Its greatest challenge and benefit is the opportunity it gives for an exploration of movement and ensemble theatre. Beijing MS S Calderdale H DRACULA SPECTACULAR: book & lyrics by John Gardiner, music by Andrew Parr, published by Samuel French This was a secondary school (grades 6-12) musical play with a cast of 25 (this is flexible). It has great music, both big chorus numbers and challenging solos and duets. The characters are melodramatic and stereotypical creating some great humor. It has good scope for design and construction and so we had a large crew working on those elements throughout the rehearsal process. It was also used as a project in stage Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 7 Calderdale HS ANIMAL FARM adapted by Peter Hall, lyrics by Adrian Mitchell, published by Heinemann Educational This was the 2006 Secondary School production that was done with a large cast of 44 students plus 5 musicians. As the adaptation says, the play is called a ‘fairy tale...’ so the set design, created in part by the students, went for a two-dimensional story book feel. All the performers/characters wore masks. These were beautifully made by the Art department [visit www.istafrica.com]. To everyone’s credit the masks were brought to vivid life through three months of focused ensemble work. We saw subtle characterizations from everyone, and a sense of stage awareness and movement skills that belied any theatrical inexperience. There is a saying in the theatre... ‘never work with kids or animals’. ‘Animal Farm’ was a successful exception to this rule for sure. Leanne Fulcher – International School of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia PETER PAN: full length musical Age appropriate: Elementary and Middle School, separate scripts Original script written by Leanne Fulcher and Sarah Charley Lyrics by Sarah Charley Length: one hour and 45 minutes Cast size: 45-50 Music: 10 songs with extra musical interludes between scenes. I have actually produced or coproduced this version of Peter Pan twice. The first time was in Monterrey, Mexico where I co-wrote the script to be a bilingual script. The natives (Mayans) were only Spanish speaking, the family and mermaids only spoke English, but Peter and his lost boys spoke both languages. We had the benefit of having a mostly bilingual 8 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 audience, so we were able to have fun with the languages. The music is all recognizable tunes with original lyrics written by the very talented Sarah Charley. (10 songs in total including Fame which was re-written to be “Pan!” and the Cheers theme song that became “Never-Never Land.”) The music definitely makes this show, as the students still sing the songs 3 years later. The second time I produced Peter Pan was in Kuala Lumpur, where I now teach middle school. I re-wrote the script to make it more middle school humor, changed it to be a full English script, added historical details about the mermaids and changed the location to Kuala Lumpur. (Peter Pan is available in the public domain, so there was no need to pay for the rights.) We had a talented high school student who used blue screen technology to superimpose Peter Pan and the family as they flew by the Petronas Twin Towers. Floating clouds covered the stools to create an awe-inspiring scene. Sound and light and backstage was crewed entirely by middle school students. Our orchestra was hand picked from our middle school talent pool. THE UGLY DUCKLING: one act written by A.A. Milne Published by Cerf, Bennett and Van H Cartmell, 24 One Act Plays, First Broadway Books 2000, www.broadwaybooks.com Age appropriate: Upper Middle and High School Length: 40-45 minutes, although it is possible to cut this down to 20-25 minutes Cast size: 3 male, 3 female The story is based on the children’s story, but is actually the story of an ugly princess, whose parents are frustrated in their attempts to find her a suitable husband. They end up scheming to present a beautiful maid as the bride-to-be. Luckily the princess ends up meeting the prince who is also scheming and they fall in love without the benefit of any tricks. The audience loves this story, because of the fabulous humor. The language is a bit difficult, but can be simplified. I used this script for an art’s festival. The set is very simple as it only requires two thrones and one bench. Costumes can be colorful and add to the story very much. THE PINK PANTHER STRIKES AGAIN: full-length play Written by William Gleason based on the film by Blake Edwards & frank Waldman, published by The dramatic Publishing Company, www.dramaticpublishing.com Age appropriate: Middle and High School Length: 2 hours Cast size: 25-24 with flexible number of speaking parts and 6-12 pink panthers This is our production for 2006/2007. We are really excited by the script. It is very slap-stick, which is fun for the students and the audience. The audition was equally based on balance and athleticism as on acting ability, which allowed for students to get involved that do not normally take part in the fine arts. We’ve done some great workshops on stage combat to prepare for this production. On the difficult side, there are an incredible amount of scene changes. The script compensates for this by recommending a simple suggestive set, but you can also make it more complex depending on your resources. Although this is not strictly a musical, our middle school orchestra will be supporting our music needs. We’ve also had a lot of fun with sound effects for this show, although you can buy a sound effects tape from the publisher. The part we are most excited about is our Pink Panthers (PP’s). We have 7 female and 5 male PP’s who function as entertainers between scenes but also move set and props on stage. This allows the show to run smoothly without the need to shut the curtain for set changes. Our dance choreographer also has them walking over chairs in the audience, belaying off the balcony and clowning for the audience during intermission. They have become as important to the story as the story itself. The students chosen as PPs were chosen based on their dance skills, gymnastics, athletic ability and/or circus skills. The PP’s are also developing their own specific personalities, such as the shy one, the rebel, the clown character, etc. Neil Harris and Flicky Lappish – Shatin College, Hong Kong OUR COUNTRY’S GOOD by Timberlake Wertenbaker The play is set in Australia 1789. A young lieutenant is directing rehearsals of the first play ever to be staged in that country. With only two copies of the text, a cast of convicts, and one leading lady who may be about to be hanged, they struggle on and eventually become transformed by the redemptive, transcendental power of theatre. In order to explore the play practically, we began by looking at Brechtian devices that might be used in order to tell the story more effectively: narration, cross cutting, addressing the audience, stylized acting, titles and slogans were all part of this process. It is a good IB project as the demands of the script (overlapping dialogue, for example) and the doubling-up of characters presents itself as a challenge for the actors. There is a fair amount of research the cast can do into the characters they are playing as well as the context in which the play is set. The “play-within-a-play” element allowed the students to research Restoration comedy in THE RECRUITING OFFICER that the convicts perform. OUR COUNTRY’S GOOD also presents a group with some strong ensemble moments that encourages the group of students to work on performance skills, another element of the IB Theatre Arts course. To this end, we started by looking at many of Boal’s rhythm games and ‘shoals of fish’ exercises as well as Liz’s monologue at the beginning of Act II to get the group thinking about using choral speech. We also found good use for Max Stafford Clarke’s technique of using playing cards to determine character status in scenes. These rehearsal techniques are always good for the students to record in their portfolios and can be reused when working on their Practical Play Analysis (IB Theatre Arts component). At the end of the scheme of work all of the lines and characters were divided up, a good opportunity for students to help determine the shape of the piece. The project, which is still ongoing, placed the students in charge of one responsibility each such as set design, costume, lighting and direction. We wish them well in their new theatrical landscape! ANTIGONE: two theatrical approaches The group began by improvising on the theme of moral dilemma. The scenario is: there has been some professional espionage in the company, the MD has to decide who is deserving of promotion, who dismissal. Pursuing the same theme but in a different context, the group looked at ANTIGONE by Jean Anouilh. After working on presenting the Prologue as an ensemble, further extracts were chosen for performance. Simultaneously the group researched the techniques of Brecht and Stanislavski and used their practice to interpret the text. The group was then directed to compare and contrast the extract with a similar moment in the text of Sophocles and at some time in the performance move between the two texts. These moments of switching between the two texts proved to be quite theatrical. The costumes used were simple, with the title character in white and with changes between actors realized on stage as a distancing device. Finally, the reasons for the different attitudes to the key protagonists were discussed and decisions reached about the playwrights’ intentions and the historical/political context. The group then returned to working as an ensemble for the final moments of the performance that was staged infront of parents in a studio laid out in a variety of stage configurations including traverse. Working on ancient and modern versions of this text offered both exciting and varied performance possibilities for the actors and a depth to their studies in World Theatre. THE RAMAYANA We performed the ancient Indian story of the Ramayana as a whole school production with about 120 students aged from Yr 8 to Yr 13. Our version borrowed heavily from the Balinese theatre traditions I had learnt about on an IB TAPS there. The script was compiled by borrowing from various sources, trying to “beef up” key sections between pairs of characters in a psychological modern realist sense e.g. “Why did Rama reject his wife?” and dividing the whole epic into three sections for three separate casts. The whole ensemble came together at the beginning and the end. The Music Department wrote an excellent atmospheric score for a Gamelan orchestra of about 15 players who dressed up in sarongs on performance nights. Rama’s ‘hunting of the deer’ sequence was particularly magical with Gamelan accompaniment to the deer’s balletic movements. The monstrous characters such as Ravana, so important to the drama, were created through masks we made with gummed tape and we bought yellow and orange silk for the ‘good’ characters while purple or black cloth was used for the ‘baddies.’ The three Ramas wore all over blue body paint and there were three Sitas in identical saris. We went through a lot of makeup from Snazaroo! (an online face-paint supplier). As you would imagine with such a large cast, there was a great deal of ensemble work needed for the forest scenes and the great battle at the end but this didn’t prevent the sections being rehearsed independently. The production ended with the trial of Sita and a fire dance to test her virtue. (Not very PC I know but reflecting the tone of the original epic.) The opening at Ayodhya was performed outside on the playground with the parents looking down from landings. The actors and audience, behind a chanting chorus, processed together as if on Rama’s journey, to the school hall where others in the ensemble were already in situ as the magical forest. Difficult battles and seduction scenes were performed behind a shadow screen about 15 by 15 feet in height. All in all I thought it was great fun but I think some of the students would have rather done Grease again! Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 9 “Loads of fun and a real revelation about what general classroom teachers are able to achieve by Deborah Morehouse, Jakarta International School, Indonesia integrating drama into their classroom.” Ash Huxtable – International School of Penang, Malaysia WOLF LULLABY by Hillary Bell: an IB Theatre Arts production Second year students were keen to choose and collaboratively direct their own production. After reading a series of scripts they were immediately drawn to Bell’s tale of a nine year old Angie who is accused of murdering a twoyear old boy. The story draws inspiration from the nature vs. nurture debate that surrounded chilling real-life child murders (e.g. Mary Bell and James Bolger), resultant media attention and the effects this has on the accused, their parents and law enforcers. The students took up a challenging piece with enthusiasm and a great deal of consideration. They enjoyed the way that the story unfolded in a series of psychologically realistic scenes but gave them the opportunity to use anti-realistic techniques, staging and technical effects. A great play for original music and sound composition that is guaranteed to have your audience squirming in their seats. The real success comes when the audience are unsure whether they are meant to hate Angie or feel sorry for her. THE INSANE ASSYLUM: a Commedia dell’ Arte scenario Another IB project that challenged students to recreate the traditional atmosphere of a commedia performance. The project began with an introduction to mask using the excellent resources of the Trestle Theatre Company and their Basic Mask Set (the set comes with a detailed teacher’s resource pack with lesson by lesson workshops). Students took the skills learnt in this unit out into ‘streets’ performing original, short, spontaneous scenarios during primary school break-times. Here they learnt the hard way about the unpredictable nature of audiences as well as the limitations and boundless magic of masks. They used these experiences and new-found skills in approaching the demands of commedia, to improvising and rehearsing the ‘canavaccios’ of THE INSANE ASSYLUM. They had by now made the transference to commedia 10 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 masks, bought over the internet from Darkside Masks in New Zealand. The students also designed and realised their stock character costumes as well as undertaking workshops in Lazzi acrobatics and circus skills (mostly juggling). The final performance was done in a small 100- seat theatre that the students transformed into a surreal lantern festooned wonderland. Preshow sought to energise the audience through displays of circus tricks and live musicians in an attempt to recreate a noisy market place. Traditional fourth wall barriers were broken in order to bring the audience closer to experiencing the production rather than just watching it – techniques learnt in the initial ‘street theatre’ mask work were invaluable. World theatre tradition transformed into a living, breathing event. PUTERI GUNANG LEDANG: The Fairy Princess of Gunang Mountain This devised performance took the very popular and well-known Malay folktale and re-told it using the traditional practices of puppetry, dance and music with a creative twist. The story revolves around the Sultan of Malacca and his arrogant assertion that he will marry the Fairy Princess of Gunang Ledang. A quest ensues, marked by terrible trials and results in a set of impossible demands laid down by the Princess. A cast of 40 were divided into Sultan’s subjects, a group of savage tigers, wild men of the forest and guardians of the Princess. The main three characters of the Sultan, his trusted warrior and the Princess herself were giant six-meter tall wayang golek puppets operated by students. The groups learnt traditional Balinese dance movements in a series of workshops. These movements were then used as a basis for more contemporary choreography (designed collaboratively by students and staff) as the students learnt to tell the story of “Puteri” through dance/drama. Transition narration was provided by wayang kulit puppets and voice-overs. An original score was devised by music students who used their work as part their IB and GCSE composition/performance requirements. This score also mixed traditional and contemporary styles. The whole piece lasted about 40 minutes and was performed on the school field as the centre-piece of a performance evening called ‘Ria’ (Malay for ‘celebration’) that focused on the living culture of Malaysia – ‘bringing the outside in’ – where invited performance practitioners were brought together to demonstrate their art for the school and local community. An exhausting exercise for a small department – but unbelievably worthwhile and inspiring. Greg Jemison - American International School of Bucharest, Romania SIAMESE FIGHTERS was a short play I wrote when I was teaching in a large comprehensive school in the UK. It was written at the request of a local primary school that was undertaking projects to highlight the problems of bullying in school. I worked with a small group of middle school students on re-working the play to make it relevant to an international school in Romania. This was a small scale production - bare stage, no tech and minimal props - aimed at performances for Grades 4, 5 and 6 plus a performance for parents, faculty and friends. The play looks at bullying at different levels and at how victims can also be bullies. The script provides a framework for considerable improvisation and the performance finishes with the cast coming back on stage in character to face the questions of the audience. In fact this aspect of the project was the most grueling for the performers as some questions were very searching and really put the characters on the spot. Our major production was a musical melodrama called CAMILLA or CAPTIVE AT KENTIGERN COURT with a cast of 45 with almost the same number involved in support roles. It’s set in the early 1800’s with highwaymen, tavern wenches and aristocracy (mainly High Schoolers) and downtrodden servants (Middle School) oppressed by the wicked onearmed Sir Pegram and his sinister sidekick - Flitch. Comedy and tragedy are juxtaposed and the moment when the smallest servant stands up to his wicked master and has his neck Beijing MS broken on stage guaranteed gasps of horror from the audience. Fun too for the tech guys who experimented with snapping celery and carrots in front of a mic to reinforce the effect. The music is scored for string quartet plus flute, piano and percussion and not having any string players we pulled in music students from the local University who were fantastic. We have good links with a local theatre and also a film studio who were invaluable in helping us with set, props and costume and this involvement with the wider community really helped to energize the students involved. I wrote the play some years ago with one of my students who wrote all the music. Our most recent purely High School production was Moliere’s THE MISER. There was some cutting and a fair amount of translation to make the play more accessible and contemporary. The production was not period specific and costuming was eclectic with Harpagon in tail coat and battered top hat and the sly servant La Fleche in baggy jeans and entering on a kid’s scooter. We used Commedia as a way into much of the physical comedy and this gave the cast the opportunity to create their own Lazzi and visual comic details. For the scene where Harpagon searches inside La Fleche’s baggy pants for stolen goods the two boys created an amazing and hilarious routine. Initially many of the cast were doubtful as to whether the play would be funny for a contemporary audience and felt such achievement when the audience responded as they hoped. We used a soundtrack based entirely on the Hooked on Classics series of well known classical pieces with ‘naff’ disco beat. Nancy Jenkins – Anglican International School, Jerusalem (formerly at International School Yangon, Myanmar) THE VENETIAN TWINS by Goldoni in a translation by Ranjit Bolt This is the second time I have directed this play, which I saw performed by the RSC twice! This is a brilliant, entertaining and irreverent translation, yet still suitable for schools. I worked with a cast of 14 for over 12 weeks, all of whom were aged between 13 and 18. I cast two different students as the twins on both occasions. In Rangoon, one was a boy and one a girl. The use of half masks made this possible. Girls also played the father, several of the servants and the villain of the piece. This play can be performed with minimal set and lighting and it is possible to localize a lot of it, so the inn became the American Colony Hotel, Jerusalem etc. The audience loved it and so did the students. MY FAIR LADY I worked with about 25 students, aged 11 to 18, a Musical Director playing a piano and two Choreographers. I had to re-cast the musical in a morning because the school board banned my first choice, BLOOD BROTHERS, that I had chosen partly because I had promised the students we would do a musical, only thought I had one student who could sing and believed I could handle the choreography myself. Three hours later I assembled the cast of BB and announced a change of plan. We had a minimalist set and lighting, but we went to town on the costumes and props. I also had choreographers who made the dancing really innovative and exciting and the costumes were spectacular. It was extremely ambitious, but the students pulled it off. If we can mount a production like this, from within a Middle School/High School of 70 students with no music department, no drama department apart from extra-curricular and no dance training, anyone can... THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST The challenge of what to do after MY FAIR LADY... We decided on something more intellectual with a small cast, which would allow the two students who played Professor Higgins and Colonel Pickering to play opposite each other again. I worked with 9 students aged 15-17. We went for a sumptuous set and less elaborate and authentic costumes. Students and audience loved the play, but the cast did comment that the first night audience was much better because they got more of the jokes. This production also featured an AfricanAmerican Lady Bracknell! And this year...? GUYS AND DOLLS. We now have a music teacher, so she will start a choir in October and teach all the musical numbers, I will cast the musical in January, for performance in June. Beijing MS Fenella Kelly - Cairo American College, Egypt SPARKLESHARK by Philip Ridley from the National Theatre anthology of plays for young people CAC had been experiencing some bullying and discrimination problems before I arrived at the school, so I thought this Middle School play would help highlight and address some of those issues. I auditioned as soon as I arrived and had an overwhelming number of students audition. I therefore decided to double cast the show and also avoid stereotyping by doing so. For example, the bully was tall and blonde in one show and very small and dark in the other; the object of bullying (the character of Finn, an older sibling with speech and communication problems) was a stocky boy in the first show and a tall girl in the second. The ‘popular’ girls gang was also different each night, with one group being predominantly American and the other group being more international. We worked on the play for 8 weeks and simultaneously the Middle School Stagecraft classes (one of which I was teaching) designed and built the set and designed the lights. Students felt true ownership of the production and the large student involvement meant that audiences were large, and hopefully our message reached many. Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 11 ALICE IN WONDERLAND: an adaptation of the version in Plays for Children by Blanche Mervin AND THE EIFFEL TOWE WEDDING PARTY taken from The Infernal Machine and other Plays by Jean Cocteau My High School Acting class wanted to do plays that really enabled them to develop character, voice and movement. We therefore chose to do 2 plays that could really allow them to work on contrast in rhythm, style, staging etc, but also have an overarching theme that they could apply to both. We chose these two plays and decided to do both of them in a Surrealistic style. The set and costumes were researched, designed and made by the Middle School and High School Stagecraft classes. These classes worked in collaboration with the director, who communicated the ideas and needs of the cast to the Stagecraft students. ALICE IN WONDERLAND was the most fluid script with students reading the A.A. Milne novel and taking other characters and scenes that they felt HAD to be included. Other lines were adapted and added to other scenes to allow for more characters and action. THE EIFFEL TOWER WEDDING PARTY was taken as written, but for both plays we had to add the Surrealist slant, so we experimented with unusual staging, use of trap doors for objects and people to appear and disappear ‘as if in a dream’ and we also worked with music and movement to add variety, juxtaposition and the elements of the unexpected. Students in the class worked on this play for 10 weeks. The Stagecraft classes worked on the set, lights and costumes for 5 weeks. In total there were about 90 students involved in the production process. Susan King-Lachance – Jakarta International School, Indonesia THE CHALK CIRCLE by Bertolt Brecht Jakarta International School’s high school theatre program recently staged this play set in Indonesia during an undetermined time period- yesterday? today? tomorrow? There is a reason it is called Epic Theatre! Although it was a big show involving 45 cast members from grades 9-12 and almost as many crew members, it was great fun to work with and fairly accessible for high school actors. Since we set the 12 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 production in Indonesia, we used kecak to stage the opening Parable of the Chalk Circle, wayang golek puppets for the lawyers, popular dangdut music, and comic clowns from wayang orang. It was a lovely experience for our students to actively study the performing arts of our host country, and our production hopefully opened the eyes of the audience to the social problems in their world. It’s amazing how contemporary Brecht still is; this play could be staged anywhere in the world and still be poignant. All we did was change the names of the characters to Indonesian names and references to places in Indonesia. Our prep time was seven weeks. Without two directors (myself and Tom Schulz) this would have been a bit too short of a rehearsal period for a production of this scale. Luckily at Jakarta International School we have stipends available for a set designer, tech director, producer, costumer, and director. THE TAMING OF THE SHREW by William Shakespeare Last March students prepared a Commedia dell’Arte version of this play as a 45-minute festival piece that traveled to Bangkok, Thailand. Auditions and casting were done in conjunction with a one-week CDA workshop given by Marco Luly (whom many ISTA members will know through attending various Asian festivals and TAPS). This piece was a double challenge for the cast of sixteen 1012th grade actors since they were dealing with two distinct styles. Masked zanni sat on the stage the entire show and stepped forward to play various roles as well as contributing sound effects to the very physical comedy found in the play. Masks were designed and constructed by an IB theatre student who used the work as her individual project. Over the six week preparation period, actors fully explored the traditional Commedia style; masks made of plaster with foam rubber features were less traditional, but equally fun. Costumes were also student designed. Since the show traveled, the set consisted of long lengths of fabric draped over battens and hung rope ladders. WHAT I DID LAST SUMMER by A.R Gurney In late April of 2006, three one-acts were staged with the audience seated on our main stage in modified arena configuration. My favorite text was WHAT I DID LAST SUMMER, cut to a 40 minute play. Rights can be arranged through Dramatists Play Service, Inc. We performed only the first act since we had a short fourweek rehearsal period. The characters are age-appropriate and the realistic acting style required was a nice relief from the more stylized and exaggerated traditional styles we had worked with last year. It has a small cast (two men and four women) and is an absolute jewel. Sandy Landis – International School of Stavanger, Norway Musicals: PIPPIN, FAME AND GREASE Pippin and Fame are available in Europe from Josef Weinberger Ltd, http://www.josefweinberger.com/weinberger/index.html Grease is available in Scandinavia from Nordiska, www.nordiska.dk High School I put these three together because they are quite well known texts. For our featured production of the year, we have, recently, tended to select crowdpleasing musicals such as these. Each has its own style and places its own unique demands on the actors. For our presentations of PIPPIN, we rehearsed for approximately six weeks three times a week. We split the lead player’s part among approximately fifteen students and attempted to provide each participant with a featured moment. Students were allowed to select the scenes in which they participated and responsibilities were shared. Much of the blocking and choreography was student-initiated. This is a very “sweet” text, with catchy music and a nice message. For FAME, we divided a cast of 35 into three ensembles: a music ensemble, a dance ensemble and an acting ensemble. These groups were able to have separate rehearsals and this allowed us to use an abbreviated rehearsal period (six weeks, three meetings a week). Our music ensemble made up the “music students” in the FAME school but also provided all the music for the show itself. The dance ensemble worked with our choreographer to develop their own dances that provided transitions between scenes and ‘scenery’ for songs and scenes. We had minimal technical demands, restricting our set to black boxes and platforms. The stage was a fluid area through which students moved freely, as if in a school, including moving from the performance space into the instrumental area. This text was extremely flexible and we felt that we could adjust it to match our group’s strengths effectively. GREASE, of course, is an old stand-by. While there aren’t many ‘moments’ in the text that challenge actors emotionally, it is such good fun that students challenge themselves. We really focused on character acting and comedic timing for this one. We spent eight weeks in rehearsals (three meetings a week), splitting time among choreographic, dramatic, and music rehearsals. We had a stationary set consisting of a scaffolding platform with a stage-right staircase and backstage access, a set of lockers and several benches that served multiple purposes. INTERVIEW: a one act play from AMERICAN HURRAH published by Dramatists Play Service, available alone or with AMERICAN HURRAH, www.dramatists.com High School This is a fantastic text to challenge drama students. It is approximately 20 minutes long but those twenty minutes are extremely intense and demanding. The first half of the play consists of four anonymous interviewers bombarding four ‘average’ people with questions regarding their lives and work experiences. The audience understands that this questioning process in meant to approximate the situation of a job interview. However, in the absurd world of the play, the questions drift away from reality, becoming more and more absurd and seemingly more and more probing, even diabolical. The second half of the play follows the same characters through a series of monologues that move the action from the impersonal, surface realm of the first half to a more internal realm. Overall, the play is a fairly cynical statement on life, suggesting that the world is a cold, impersonal place where only the fittest, or cleverest, survive. In terms of style, the play verges on the absurd. It is very fast-paced and requires a strong sense of timing. While individual actors will be challenged and showcased, the play provides tremendous opportunities for creative ensemble work. It has a minimal set (eight chairs or boxes) and technical demands and is very flexible in terms of performance space. We developed it over the course of about five rehearsals for a one-off performance, but I have also used it as a contest piece and as part of an evening of one-acts. Keith LeFever – Schule Schloss Salem, Germany UBU REX by Alfred Jarry We read this play in our middle school theater workshop session looking at possible sections for scene work. The students were so fascinated by the intensity of the play that we decided to produce it for Parents Day, which was five months away. At first we would read a scene, then use the basic structure to improvise. In this way we could experiment with the play and find our own levels of expression. We also cast the play using the improvisations as the basis for character selection. We ended up having most of the main roles played by girls; only Tatzensaum and Bubelas were played by boys. Then we brought in a professional acting coach from the National Theater in Mannheim, to do an intensive two-day workshop on body language and extreme forms of expression, using masks and group exercises. We developed ideas such as slow-motion racing, the ‘great escape’ of the Queen and Bubelas over 12 meters long being supported only by bodies and not touching the floor, finger puppets to represent thousands of angry citizens, and using shadows as a method of execution. Our four musicians used tools that they found in the janitor’s room as their instruments. We used the floor of our Gym as the stage and it was 6 meters wide and 16 meters long. We had the audience raised on two sides with the stage being in the middle. At each end we had a two level scaffold and two wooden slides which lead down to the main stage. This provided plenty of space for the 28 actors and gave us endless possibilities for movement and the ‘crowd’ scenes. The entire tech was done by the middle school students. The lighting was particularly complicated and detailed and demanded long hours to hang and focus. The make up crew had a blast as we let them free to come up with outlandish designs, which produced a green Ubu with bones, bugs, and body parts in his hair. We had a wave of illness that reached the cast; therefore our rehearsal time was cut short. We asked the school if we couldn’t use some class time to finish the play, our request was rejected. Therefore we showed the rise of Ubu, but not the fall. THE LEARNED LADIES by Moliére This play we performed with the high school group as a main stage production. As usual we were searching for a play with strong female roles as the balance of power in our theater group hardly ever swings the other way. Most of the group had exceptional speech skills and had been with me for almost four years. The play has wonderful themes such as family dynamic, intellectual snobbery and, of course, the role of women in society. We used a great German translation that was modern and phonetically ingenious. Because of the language we decided to set the play in the fifties which had some of the same attitudes toward women, daughters, and intellectuals as in Moliére’s time... more or less. The choice helped our prop and costume department and cut down on our overall production costs. We had the stage set up in a sort of thrust mode, which was shaped more like a “T”, with the living room jutting out with the bar and entrances at the back. Having the audience on three sides increased the intimacy of the Beijing MS Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 13 a house. I resolved the problem of the ‘basement’ by creating an attic instead, this meant that actors were on stage and visible while they were making their inventions but it worked nicely. Character work fantastic and includes accents and physical stage combat /age work for students to explore. It’s a great ensemble piece for 12-15 actors (I added in a few characters). Light comedy/love story... Students loved working on this. Beijing MS space and when watching, one felt like almost part of the family. The production was a huge success in the community, which always pleases the PR department. AFTER JULIET by Sharman Macdonald, published by Samuel French A play written by the mother of Keira Knightley, about what happens to the teenage Capulets and Montagues after the death of Romeo and Juliet. We chose this play again out of the need to find a play with plenty of female roles. In order to increase the number of the performers we coupled the play with scenes from Shakespeare’s ROMEO AND JULIET also to refresh the audience about who is/was who. Again, in order to cut production costs, we kept the stage almost completely bare using only platforms, scaffolding, a bed and a couch for both plays. The main production elements we used were lighting, fog, and music. We were fortunate to have two excellent student musicians, one on the grand piano with the other playing cello, they played original music combining it with fantastic improvisations. We also made “R+J” timeless using modern costumes and props and a rather modern translation (German). One more play that I’m doing with the 8th and 9th graders is THE POET AND THE RENT by David Mamet (Samuel French)... a fun play with a very flexible cast and simple production elements. Gillian Lynch – American School of Paris, France High School Productions YOU CAN’T TAKE IT WITH YOU by Kaufmann and Hart Social /Political Context: America 1930’s - great for getting students to do research. A very simple set inside of 14 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 BLOOD WEDDING by Lorca Small cast, simple stage set. Melodrama. In this production I had the MS design a forest. We had a live cello player and baroque lyric singer and Bunraku type puppets woven throughout the production. Actors also had the chance to work with a tango dancer in workshop sessions for the wedding scene. CHANGES OF HEART by Marivaux Small cast. Simple set. Parallel work on Commedia dell’arte as Marivaux wrote for the Italian players. Great for IB dramaturgy. Heightened language but accessible to young acting students. Working on rhythm and timing important. THE GOVERNMENT INSPECTOR by Gogol I am working with a cast of 30. Grotesque and physical comedy as well as having a very dark underlining. Very simple to stage, we are working on a 3m x 3m. Minimal set and lighting requirements. ANTIGONE by Anouilh An IB class project . Performed outside in “found” space for younger audience (MS). STEEL MAGNOLIAS by IB Class Project. Performed beginning scenes as worked on stage, reading for the rest. Excellent for set design, accents and older character work. Middle School Productions THE TREE THAT HOLDS UP THE SKY, part of the Cambridge play series Great ensemble piece (25students). Also looking into other theatre/ performance traditions. Story takes place in the Amazon jungle. A road is being build through the forest causing devastation until it comes to a halt as a result of a tree needing to be knocked down. A meeting of two cultures and two belief systems. Environmental play with a strong message. Also chorus work. Some of the script needed to be touched up but also has some moments of humour. Students loved working on it and great for all audiences (Lower School included). Adaptation of ALICE IN WONDERLAND and a few scenes from THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS Mixed and massed a few scripts and adapted some scenes. Great improv work possible around the story in order to build script. Strong ensemble piece. Had the IB students design a modular set. (40 students) A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM A massive undertaking with 6th-8th graders. They came out loving the Bard. A THOUSAND CRANES, OUR DAY OUT and I NEVER SAW ANOTHER BUTTERFLY have all been in class 8th grade projects. Chuck and Becci McDaniel – John F Kennedy School, Berlin, Germany DIE DREIGROSCHENOPER by Bertolt Brecht: The Threepenny Opera, English version from TamsWimark, Blitzstein translation We produced Brecht’s Three Penny Opera in the original German. The music is sometimes lush, sometimes stark, and the small orchestra is ideal for schools with small music programs. The cast is flexible. (We used 27, but could have made do with19.) There are 4 good roles for women (if you include the Street Singer). The piece also allows you to experiment with Brecht’s concept of Verfremdung (making things strange). We stripped away all the masking curtains, revealing the bare walls. The stage itself was, for the most part, bare. Individual scenes were introduced by Titeln (signs, in our case, projected PowerPoint slides). Each scene itself was represented by a single, free standing, painted flat that represented the location of the scene (bales of hay for the stable, lush velvet drapes for the whorehouse). The jail cell we created with a single gobo. In all, the spare setting allowed us both to cut costs and let the students experience a special kind of theatricality and intimacy with the audience. The play itself, with its cast of devious characters and its focus on social issues (greed, injustice, corruption, and more), was great fun for our students as well. “It was wonderful to see young people from all over the globe coming together to further their learning about theatre in a mutually supportive and excitingly enriching environment.” Paula Mor, Island School, Hong Kong THE LADY IS NOT FOR BURNING by Christopher Fry, published by Dramatists Play Service Fry’s play is a beautiful lyrical exploration of life, love, and morality. This piece can be done in very Shakespearean style, with a simple set consisting of only a couple of raised platforms and a few benches and chairs. The small cast has several women’s roles with some meat to them, and the roles of the chaplain and town drunk can be converted, giving a balance of 6 M to 5 F. The play itself (written in blank verse) is both a verbal delight and an effective challenge to students. Our students revelled in the unusual word formations and, through working with the play’s intricate language, gained greater control of their own vocal mechanisms. Definitely a worthwhile challenge. ORIGINAL VIDEOS Our Advanced Drama class created original videos for public presentation. During class, we concentrated on three basic elements of filmmaking: directing, writing, and acting. We looked at both classic films, such as Citizen Kane and Casablanca, and more recent gems, such as American Beauty. The students, in groups of about five, pitched a script idea, wrote a draft screenplay that was critiqued by the teacher, then revised the screenplay into a shooting script. Students then created a locations chart, shot individual scenes, then edited them together using iMovie. Students were both their own actors and directors, and all students participated in the editing process. We had a gala presentation evening. All the students’ videos were shown, and the audience voted on Best Supporting Player, Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Screenplay, and Best Picture. Winners received little Smurf statuettes. It was a great way to cap the project, which we would recommend as a means to helping drama students connect the dots between the two media of theatre and film. Annie Mcmanners – Frankfurt International School, Germany HOMER’S ODYSSEY by David Calcutt published by Nelson as a Dramascript We worked for 2 months on this with 9-12 grade students. 15 girls and 15 boys. The first scene in the play is slightly dodgy and could take a few cuts, but it soon perks up. The girls played the suitors of Penelope in the first and last scene wearing masks and robes and then the boys burst in with a sort of Haka that was virile and visceral to lead into the rest of the play. Masses of music and movement opportunities, dance, mime and choral speaking. We performed on the floor of the room with audience on 3 sides and a series of platforms and steps leading up to the stage at one end. The Cyclops was rear projection with a voice over, but there are other great production challenges for IB students to work on. GRIMM TALES AND MORE GRIMM TALES by Carol Ann Duffy and Tim Supple, published by Faber and Faber Each of these contains 7 or 8 different stories with dramatizations. We selected 8 scenes from the two plays and put them together as one performance. We performed on the floor with audience on three sides with large painted screens on either side to provide exits etc. There was a cast of 50, divided into two groups, but it could be done with 10 actors. In Act 1, one group performed as the sound factory for the stories, sitting apart from the actors, making sound/music using a variety of traditional and improvised instruments as well as their voices. For Act 2 they swapped with the other group. Each story has a different set of challenges and we used Folkmanis puppets in many instances as well as creating all of the settings and props using students. The screens were painted with a scary forest taken from a book of Walt Disney stills from Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs. We worked for 2 months with students from grades 9-12. ARABIAN NIGHTS by Dominic Cooke, published by Nick Hearn Books Rich colour, fabric, carpets, gold and silver, food platters with real food, belly dancing, incense burners. This is all you need to do this show. We had a large cast of 55 and there are about 40 roles but you could do it with 10, with doubling. There is a lot of room to make each story individual and I asked pairs of IB students to take charge of a scene, encouraging them to negotiate with each other to produce an umbrella design, as well as individual ideas. The Music department purchased a number of authentic Beijing MS Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 15 instruments including a Duduk on eBay and learned how to play them for the show. Other music was provided by CD’s (there is a lot of Music of the Middle East available on World Music CD’s.) Plenty of opportunities for group dances at weddings and celebrations and at the end. then throws their arms up in confusion. Then fingers are pointed at someone, usually early in the line, for losing the story. They want to turn the destruction of the story into a story, too, the plot of which is the loss of the plot. Even in the little games we play, we need to make up stories. Mark Mouck – American School of Warsaw, Poland When devising longer stories with my students, I emphasize making the story meaningful to their audience. To explore the creation of meaning, we explore dramatic structure. In their sophomore year, we spend a day looking at the various incarnations of the hero myth. The discussion springs from Joseph Campbell’s The Power of Myth and The Hero with a Thousand Faces. I warn them that this discussion may ruin their movie-going experience as we apply the structure presented in these books to Hollywood films. The analysis of structure generally helps their stories, but I wanted to go deeper into dramatic structure with my IB students. After reading that IB wants students to engage directly with the writings of theater practitioners, I bought a number of ‘primary texts’. David Mamet’s collection of essays, Three Uses of the Knife, was among them. Using David Mamet’s THREE USES OF THE KNIFE to explore dramatic structure After playing theater games for the first few days of a school year, I have each of my IB I students lead the ensemble through a game. Afterwards, they write about it in their journals in terms of taking leadership versus playing a supporting role in the ensemble. This year one of my students introduced me to a physical variation of the telephone game, which I have since used as a warm up. The idea is that one student performs an action for the next student in line, who then repeats it on down the line with oftenhumorous results at the end. I have found that the initiator of the movement generally wants to tell a story in mime: a freshmen being stuffed into a locker; burying a treasure-box; a frog trying to jump over a log. By the time the movement gets to the last person, the story has been lost. The last person usually flails about for five seconds and Calderdale H S S Calderdale H The first line of the first essay is, “It’s in our nature to dramatize.” That is, we want to find meaning in everything that happens to us (and it happens to us.) Mamet provides a couple of examples of finding meaning in everyday experiences. “Great. It’s raining. Just when I’m blue. Isn’t that just like life?” In another example Mamet goes on for two pages describing the perfect ball game. “Do we wish for our team to take the field and thrash the opposition from the First Moment?... No. We wish for a closely fought match that contains many satisfying reversals.” Ultimately it is just a sphere (of sorts) moving back and forth across a field. Ultimately it is just water condensing in the atmosphere above us. Ultimately it is just a movement we are asked to pass down the line. Just as we find meaning in phenomena, we find satisfaction in creating highs and lows in life, what Mamet summarizes as the “Yes! No! but Wait!” structure of drama. He explains, “It is difficult, finally, not to see our lives as a play with ourselves the hero.” When I first gave the third essay in Mamet’s book to my IB 1 students last 16 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 year in preparation for a Shakespeareinspired devised theater competition, I thought I was asking them to explore tragedy. A naturally comedic group, I wanted to challenge them to understand the nature and purpose (to steal Mamet’s phrase) of tragedy. But as they worked the piece over three weeks, they realized that comic relief was necessary for the rhythm and tempo of the play. As they fitted the play with the ups and downs they thought necessary, they realized, and I, that they weren’t studying just tragedy, only one of the masks, they were studying the nature of drama. The story they created was fun... for a tragedy. In the end, they decided it was about what would happen if Hamlet and Lady Macbeth, unmarried in their story, were to meet and fall in love. Somebody is going to cry “Out, damned spot!” (Hamlet) and somebody is going to get murdered (Lady Macbeth.) Story spoiler: Hamlet kills himself, too. But the beginning of the process to create the story came from the title of Mamet’s collection of essays. In the final essay he quotes the blues singer Leadbelly, “You take a knife, you use it to cut the bread, so you’ll have strength to work; you use it to shave, so you’ll look nice for you lover; on discovering her with another, you use it to cut out her lying heart.” At the beginning of the process, before they looked to Shakespeare for inspiration, before they considered the rhythm of highs and lows in the play, I asked them to use an object as a symbol or image that would, as Mamet suggests, “subtly change its purpose through the course of the play.” Like the knife, the symbol or image should not physically change, but our perception of it should. Mamet says, “The tragedy of murder is affecting as the irony of the recurrent knife is affecting. The appearance of the knife is the attempt of the orderly affronted mind to confront the awesome.” Like the rain or ball described above, the knife is neither good nor evil. Thinking has made it both. He summarizes the effect of purposeful dramatic structure here: In great drama we see this lesson [the worthlessness of reason] learned by the hero. More important, we undergo the lesson ourselves, as we have our expectations raised only to be dashed, as we find that we HS Calderdale have suggested to ourselves the wrong conclusion and that, stripped of our intellectual arrogance, we must acknowledge our sinful, weak, impotent state -and that, having acknowledged it, we may find peace. The object my students used and its symbolic nature got them third place at the competition. The first two places went to comedies. Their “knife” was a pen used to write a book on the virtues of the solitary life. After the book propels the author to fame, we encounter the first act problem: he falls in love. The audience is rooting for their hero though. Then the second act problem: the new couple has an argument over the virtues of solitude. Here I interrupted the student’s process for a discussion about character/relationship foils. They decided to insert a few scenes about “the ideal couple”, who in one scene have an argument, but who come to terms with their disagreement in another scene of emasculating comic relief. If only our hero could learn this lesson. After a few more plot twists where the author picks himself back up only to fall down again, our hero, tragically proud and unable to heed the rules of relationships, kills the woman with the pen for making him contradict everything he wrote. The murder sequesters him to a loneliness he can’t handle, and he writes a suicide note with the still bloody pen. The knife remains the same, but the play allows the audience to give it significance. The various incarnations of the knife, as it changes in the minds of the audience, charts the highs and lows of the story. The three uses of the knife are the three parts of dramatic structure. In the telephone game, while my students are passing the movement down the line, I have had some fun with keeping the rest of them entertained. Most recently, I asked the rest of the line to name an animal for me to mimic. One called out a monkey. I lowered myself like an American football player at the line of scrimmage, stuck my fingers on my head like a pair of horns and jumped around. “That’s not a monkey!” “Try a giraffe.” Again, I squatted down, put my fingers on my head and jumped about. “That’s not a giraffe!” After repeating a few more times, I squatted down with my fingers on my head and, while jumping around, asked them what I am now. They got the joke and started calling out all sorts of things. The action was the same every time; the joke was in their perception of the action. Mark Palfrey – Munich International School, Germany THE VENETIAN TWINS by Nick Enright A musical. The play text was written by Nick Enright and the music by Terence Clarke. The piece is a pastiche of styles and genres loosely based on Goldoni‘s A SERVANT OF TWO MASTERS. The MIS production was rehearsed as an after school activity. The cast worked 6 hours per week for about 12 weeks to learn the dialogue, song and movement required. We had a live band and the actors/singers were mic’d. I employed two vocal coaches, musical director, set designer, choreographer and make up artists to assist. This show is a lot of work but is highly entertaining. CHRONICLE OF DEATH foretold by Gabriel Garcia Marquez I adapted the novel into a play script. A long task. The novel takes the structure of a Greek Tragedy so that was the starting point. The community, who do not stop the murder were the chorus, who never left the stage. They were set up as a jury watching and commenting on the action; they also delivered a lot of the text taking the role of the narrator. Most actors played multiple roles. We used live music (Indian) as we transported the story to Goa. We used rear screen projections, 40 still images, as the backdrops for each scene. Chapters were introduced with Brechtian style titles, also projected. The death scene was done behind the screen with coloured images. The piece was rehearsed, as an after school activity, for about 12 weeks. I worked closely with a musical director/musician, set designer and later a lighting designer. RANDOM This year I am working on Random. As the name suggests, it is a pot pourri of pieces. The aim is to contrast and juxtapose. Taking the audience from comfort to discomfort, humour to horror. The extracts will not be Calderdale H S delivered in one piece but cut up. The set is minimalist, lighting and sound will be very important. I am working closely with the same team as last year. The genesis of this ides came from the demands of the previous year. It was physically and emotionally draining to undertake such a large project as CHRONICLE given the demands that IB and Grade 10 students have on their time. Trying to get twenty cast members together for two hours was impossible. RANDOM allows groups to meet when they can and work on their own pieces. Elcin Peker – Eyuboglu High School, Turkey BLOOD BROTHERS by William Russell This ninety-minute play was performed by our Middle School students. We spent 2 hours per week- in a sevenmonth period, and we worked with two separate groups. Since the play requires two different casts to perform childhood and adolescent periods, we had the opportunity to work with 30 students. We performed the original play. Although it is a musical, we only focused on 3 significant pieces of music and designed dance Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 17 “What other event makes professional development feel like such a vacation for the mind and soul?” Doug Bishop, Taipei American School, Taiwan choreography for them. After practising some basic drama skills and going over the importance of body language, gestures/mimics and posture we were ready to start. Before the audition part students did research on the play and read the critics. After reading the scripts, they started practising for audition. The play was performed at our school’s OPEN HOUSE DAY. John Pitonzo – International School of Florence, Italy PIRATES OF THE MEDITERRANEAN: Middle School Middle School students ideated and participated in the creation of the script. They spent 3 months putting the play together, creating their own costumes, writing the dialogue, and designing the set. The play involved a ghost pirate recruiting a group of neighborhood kids to locate a long lost treasure in order to end the curse placed on him by a lady Bucaneer for the “haircut” he had given her. They performed the play in front of the elementary school and at Teatro Le Laudi in Florence as part of a doubleheader with Romeo and Juliet. THE TERRIBLE TRAGEDY OF FAUSTINA FAUX: High School This was a take-off on Marlowe’s Dr. Faustus. Faustina, an average student with self-perceived average looks, one true friend and an acceptance into a non-competitive university, makes a deal with the devil for the highest grades, beauty and popularity. Twenty-four years later, highly successful, men at her feet, the devil comes collecting and she has a change of heart. In this version things turn out in her favor as The All. Powerful shows up and plays a dirty trick on the devil. The play had a cast of 8 consisting of Faustina, her friend, Mephistofeles, a good angel, bad angel, a shady teen selling drugs, watches and black magic, God, the Devil, and the most popular boy in the school. This play was 50 minutes long and performed for grades 7 through 11. ROMEO AND JULIET: High School The Upper School Drama class, combined of 21 grade 9 and 10 students, performed a contemporary, slightly edited version of Shakespeare’s 18 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 love play. They performed this play at Teatro Le Laudi in Florence. The play included contemporary music selected by the students. Catherine Rankin - BISS Beijing International School, China RITES OF PASSAGE: student devised A group of 7 students aging from 11 to 16 worked with me on a student devised piece call “Rites of Passage” for our One Act Play Festival. The main theme was based on what adolescents do to be accepted by their peers. Some of the ideas I had came from other small group workshops but the overall performance was a truly collaborative effort. The focus of the performance was ensemble work so there was no lead character. It started with the idea of a new person arriving into a tribe – “ Deep in the Jungle there is a tribe. The tribe is adolescence and the jungle is here!” The play then progressed through a variety of events such as – smoking (using Madonna’s vogue as a base) drugs; alcohol (poem about the hangover fairy); fashion sense (wigs) and sex. Through out sections the students performed monologues lasting one minute, that focused on an individual’s reaction to the “tests”. The play concluded with an initiation sequence. We performed the piece for the school and audiences at the Festival. The audiences found it to be a powerful performance. AIDS – Student devised The AIDS presentation was for World Aids Day. The performance started with a PowerPoint display with Avril Lavigne’s version of “Knocking on Heaven’s Door”. A group of five students were frozen in still images. After the PowerPoint, the lights came up and each person said a series of statistics. On the second series of statistics, the students moved into a circle. A chant of “Ring a Ring a Rosy” was used as the students moved around in a circle. At the end of each line, students would freeze and one of the students would come to the front, in role to present a monologue. The monologues included: a doctor; a friend of someone in hospital; a drug addict; and two monologues about getting AIDS through unprotected sex. The final sequence had the group saying the whole poem again ending with “All fall down” and the lights went out. It was a powerful piece and gave teachers an opportunity to discuss the issues of AIDS within pastoral care and the sciences. Stan Ratoff – American School in London, UK ANNIE JR from the Broadway Jr series Choosing a musical for MS students – in which the range of the songs are appropriate – can be difficult – at least it was for me. In the end, on the recommendation from my musical director, I looked at the Broadway Jr. series and found Annie Jr. It was perfect for 7th and 8th graders - even though it was originally geared for younger singers. The length of the musical was very manageable (onehour long) and it provided the students with a very positive musical theatre experience. We had a 10-week rehearsal schedule, meeting 2-4 times a week after school for the first two months and everyday for the final two weeks. We had a cast of over 30 students. The first two weeks focused on ensemble building and reviewing the themes of the musical. We read the original Little Orphan Annie comic strips to get a sense of the character and time it was published. The set was created to look like the original newspaper comic strip. Only after the second week did we begin to read the script and begin rehearsing the musical. Everyone in the cast felt that there should be a real Sandy (the dog), so we held dog auditions, with the cast members making the final decision. It was quite an experience working with a live animal – it reminds me of W.C.Fields’s comment that one should never work with animals and children – and here I was working with both! In the end, both children and dog were hits and everyone enjoyed the musical. As for Tech, we hired a lighting designer who worked with me on designing the lighting. He then trained a couple of 8th grade students who ran the lights and sound for the performances. Musicals are big hits within a school community – sometimes they overshadow a dramatic performance but within an international community, it will be a musical that will bring the community together. THE COMEDY OF ERRORS by William Shakespeare Shakespeare can be difficult for MS students, and sometimes for teachers, but I decided to try my first Shakespeare play. Which one to choose? It just so happened that I had tickets to see THE COMEDY OF ERRORS in the West End, London – and I was struck by both the simplistic and humorous way it was produced. I had found my Shakespeare play. Two week before auditions, students were able to drop by my room to read through the script and become familiar with the play. I spent many lunch periods and recess time talking with students about Shakespeare and THE COMEDY OF ERRORS. When I choose a play for MS students, I always try and find a theme that would be relevant to their life experiences. This Shakespeare play was a perfect choice to explore identity – which is a major issue for adolescent-aged students. With a 10-week rehearsal schedule, we spent the beginning weeks exploring the language and how to create ‘normal’ dialogue with the verse. During this time, we had the good fortune to participate in a Shakespeare workshop at the Globe Theatre, exploring themes of the play. We even had a chance to act out some scenes on the stage. This was an invaluable experience for the cast. Our set was all white with revolving doors, which were metaphors for the changing identities. Both set of twins were dressed the same and the action was more Commedia dell’ Arte than Shakespeare. The cast had a ball doing this play and their interest in Shakespeare grew. For me THE COMEDY OF ERRORS was an easy and funny play to do with MS students. It was very accessible as an introduction to Shakespeare. Again, I used MS students as crew, lighting and sound people for the production. THE ODYSSEY adapted by David Calcutt The ODYSSEY is a wonderful play to do because it touches on many adolescent issues such as identity, transition, friendship, risk-taking, love, etc. Another reason for choosing THE ODYSSEY was my policy of allowing anyone who auditions to be involved in the play as either cast or crew. Usually I get around 30-40 students auditioning for the MS play so I always try to choose a play with a large and flexible cast. THE ODYSSEY proved to be an amazing experience for both cast and myself. During the early stages of the rehearsal process, we explored the story and improvised each adventure Odysseus experienced. I also began to explore with the cast the concepts of ritual and storytelling. The adaptation focused on the concept of a story within a story – which made it easier for both the cast and audience to understand the story and to allow monsters and Cyclops to appear on stage by using effigies for these creatures. The staging was simple – chairs for listeners of the story in the play and the floor for the actors telling the story. 9th grade students who were studying THE ODYSSEY in class talked to the cast about the story. The characters created their own dance and rituals needed in the play. Through the exploration and development of rituals, the cast became closer to each other and a real ensemble experience was created for all involved. I also had a high school assistant director who worked with the students. My designer designed every costume and we had parents make them. It was quite an adventure – just like the journey in the story. It was a fascinating experience bringing together parents, cast and crew to work on one adventure – which was an odyssey in itself. Steve Reynolds – United World College of Li Po Chun, Hong Kong WOZA ALBERT by Percy Mtwa, Mbongeni Ngema and Barney Simon The play was presented by IB Theatre Arts students as their year two/end of course production. It was the culmination of their African theatre unit as well as a celebration (and closure) of the course as a whole. The play features two actors playing a variety of characters with a basic (easy to prepare) staging. It is fast moving, funny and very physical, but also focuses on the serious issue of racism through its Apartheid South African setting. We split the play into four sections and two different students played the characters in each section (because there are so many characters there is little need for character development). A student director was then appointed for each unit. So, the students owned the material and I as teacher just oversaw the production values and transitions between each unit. We rehearsed over an 8-week period (the separately run units made simultaneous rehearsals easy), in lessons and after school. We explored the history of South Africa and physical theatre skills before focusing on the text and delivered a studio performance over three nights to the Li Po Chun college community. THE LIST by Steve Reynolds This play was presented by the Dar es Salaam Young Peoples Theatre, a youth group that was based in the International School of Tanganyika and open to all local young people (no auditions – inclusive entry). The group was dedicated to producing plays Calderdale HS Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 19 about African issues affecting African people in African places. The group decided to produce a play focusing on HIV Aids and I came up with an idea that (rather than the deluge of heavy moralizing material around) we should try to devise a comedy! I had an initial idea of a naive village girl who dies of Aids. She has been taken advantage of by a number of male characters. Just before her funeral, the village discovers that she wrote a letter to be read at her funeral and rumour quickly spreads that it is a list of the men that may have infected her. The comic element arises in the farcical attempts of the men to find and destroy the ‘list’! Characters are lightly drawn as the message focuses on educating the audience about HIV Aids. The group devised scenarios in a number of workshops and I would note any characters, lines or actions that held potential for a script. I would then draft a scene, return to the group and rehearse it, making changes as we went along. We also invited medical and government experts to talk to the group and inform our work. The play was rehearsed over a 12-week period and features 19 characters (the protagonists are women) in a 2 hour show. The play was presented ‘in the round’ to the wider Dar es Salaam community including honorary government guests at the international school. The play is due for publication by Macmillan Aiden in November 2006 in Swahili translation. THE COMEDY OF ERRORS by William Shakespeare This is a good choice for a Shakespeare production because it is funny... and one of Shakespeare’s shortest plays! The play was produced at Li Po Chun United World College as part of the IB CAS (after school activities) programme. Students auditioned for a role. The play focuses on a series of mistaken identities and is a good choice for ‘mirror’ work or an exploration of identity itself. A big emphasis was made on demystifying the language and focusing on meaning. In rehearsal, modern English translations were made by the cast of every scene. Then the scene would be improvised in modern English, before returning to the original text to be sure that the students understood the material/language (and owned it rather than it owning them). Of the 15 or so characters, some gender switching 20 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 was done to reflect the high proportion of talented females that auditioned (so some girls played men or male characters were changed to female). I was also lucky enough to have identical twins in the cast! The performance was staged in the open air with a bare brilliant white set comprising of a row of doors on an upstage wall. In contrast, the actors wore vivid and exaggerated costumes. The doors encouraged the fast paced on – off stage action of the play. Other activity groups were encouraged to join the production with the college circus group providing jugglers and acrobats for the setting of Ephesus and the college orchestral group providing music. The play runs for around two hours and was presented to the college community with a night (free of charge) devoted to the surrounding local community. Daniel Sartdet and Elaine Neilsen – Copenhagen International School, Denmark HANS ON! In connection with Hans Christian Andersen’s 200th birthday, we worked on a production involving all our 2nd, 3rd and 4th Grade students. There were approximately 100 students altogether. Each grade level chose one of the stories and worked on a way to present it. The second grade chose “The Ugly Duckling” and sang the wellknown song with the same title. They created a movement piece using a narrator. The third grade worked on “The Emperor’s New Clothes” and every child was asked to memorize a very short line to contribute to the story. The fourth grade contributed a reader’s theatre presentation of “The Little Mermaid.” which involved everyone with reading, chorus work and sound effects. In addition, one of our language teachers devised a movement piece with her students, to tell the story of “The Nightingale” and our 2nd and 3rd grade Drama Club group presented a stylized version of “The Snow Queen.” The performance was held together by members of the 4th and 5th grade Drama Club who shared poems written by HC Andersen and first person accounts of parts of his life. The Primary School Choir opened and closed the presentation with music and songs about Hans Andersen and his famous stories. The preparation and rehearsal period took six weeks that was found to be just the right length of time in order to keep and hold a meaningful impetus for children of this age. The Primary Drama and Music teachers coordinated the performance but all the teachers were involved in putting the production together. THREE MORE SLEEPLESS NIGHTS by Caryl Churchill, found in Churchill, Shorts, NHB, 1990, ISBN: 1854590855 This was done by a small group of last year students. It is a wonderfully dark short piece that deals with disintegrating relationships. The play consists of three scenes that take place in three different bedrooms. The first couple has an argument about the husband’s adultery, in the second bedroom we see another couple where the husband keeps talking about cult movies while the wife slips further and further into depression, and in the final scene we see the wife from the first scene with the husband from the second scene discussing their relationship while repeating all the mistakes from their previous ones. This play is really good to do with the older students as they can take on responsibility for creating the characters, and the play employs Churchill’s device of overlapping dialogue, which is a great challenge for the students. SUMMER – A RED TENNIS BALL ON A COUCH IN A GARDEN OF LOVE: an adaptation of Shakespeare’s MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING This was a Senior School Production (14-18 year olds). We decided to have a stab at reshaping a classic. We looked at the text, but basically built each scene from scratch through improvisation using a synopsis and scene description from York Notes (!). The students felt a great sense of ownership of the play, and it renewed their enthusiasm for Shakespeare. Darren Scully – St Julian’s School, Portugal Three challenging plays: Bryony Lavery’s ILLYRIA, Fousto Paravidino’s NUTS, and Nick Dear’s LUNCH IN VENICE ILLYRIA is a country ripped apart by civil war where even the children, have known little else but fear. Title-tattle and gossip mean that truth is another casualty of war. Make shift military switch sides according to the way the Tom Schulz – Jakarta International School, Indonesia Beijing MS war is going and terrorize the community as they shake in their skins. Leaders come and go and envious bureaucrats jostle for positions. And foreign journalists report watered down versions for our consumption. Illyria could be anywhere. As an ensemble piece Illyria takes risks. It does not hold back from graphic tales of torture, rape, the abuse of power and the evil depths of war. At the same time it presents a positive vision of the healing power of storytelling. The language Bryony Lavery uses might shock some parents. We think the supportive structures of the ensemble mean that our actors are comfortable and safe in exploring such themes. We wrote an explanatory letter to parents pointing out Lavery’s ‘message’ and inviting them to a symposium on the role and purpose of theatre in schools: Theatre is a dangerous thing... But remember it is fiction. The place for brutality and horror is on the stage not in life and I believe human beings can rehearse for reality through drama. It is the nature of theatre to experience the inconceivable. Illyria has a strong moral standpoint and it doesn’t leave people in the horror. The journey is through horror to hope and resolution and to peace which are huge and mighty things. From the same collection, NUTS by Fausto Paravidino is a very impressive ensemble piece. The first half is intensely funny as Buddy is left to take charge of a beautiful house with an impressive sofa and an even more impressive TV. His failure to tell the girl of his love for her lead to a series of calamities as his friends turn up and the place is trashed. By the time the son of the owners has turned up Buddy has been thoroughly demoralized and walked over. The second half is very different. All the characters from the fit half reappear some ten years later but all relationships have been zeroed out and they do not know each other. Torture and humiliation alternate and the humour is dark. Paravidino explores the kind of mindset that allows for police states to emerge and maintain themselves. A final scene offers an alternate reality as we are taken back to the final scene of the first half but with a twist and Buddy is given another chance to assert himself. This is great theatre. LUNCH IN VENICE by Nick Dear is a short piece, around 40 minutes, for a cast of 6. The play is set around a campo in Venice on a hot day. Five students are ostensibly on an art trip and discussion centres on the meaning of art and its purpose in a society which is destroying itself. Harley is a knowledgeable, attractive and vain young man while Ben, equally smart but brooding reflects that all art glories war. Conrad is tearing himself up inside for his failure to find anything meaningful in his life. Bianca is in love with Harley and Emmy is fascinated with food and Italian culture. It is when Vivi, an older woman lost and trying to get to the Hotel Bauer for lunch, appears and disappears only to reappear still lost, that the audience is dealt a thunderbolt as we realize just where the characters are and what has happened. The truth of the play resonates until the end as the characters dance to Vivaldiís second movement of the Winter concerto. The play is a real challenge for a teenage cast and the Sixth Sense-ish quality a beautiful conceit. All three plays can be found in the BT New Connections Series/Shell Connections available from the National Theatre bookshop Check out the website at http://ntconnections.org.uk/ B.YOND: THE STAR 2006 Middle School Play Written by Bill Titmuss, Tom Schulz and Tom Bartlett Directed by Tom Schulz, Bill Titmuss and Tom Bartlett Music created and arranged by Rick Beder Choreographed by Kat Carag, HS student and Sara Becker Actors: 54 students Dancers: 32 students Bands: 12 students Tech crew: 10 students This play is about Middle School students and the possibilities of what they may be or become. Our production took place in two venues. One venue was a Little Theater, the other a large multi-purpose hall where we constructed a replica of the Little Theater stage. Each venue had live music. Each venue had a large video projection screen with live feed from the other venue so the audience saw both venues at once. This piece can easily be adapted to a single venue. ACT I: Two narrators in each venue explain to the audience that they are attending the Middle School graduation ceremony. The video screens come to life. A male student dressed as a female science teacher appears on the screen. The teacher attempts to explain the vastness of the universe, and quantum mechanics and infinite possibilities. She explains that perhaps the audience needs to see a more “Down to Earth” metaphor. On each stage there are eight Yonds, the main character, lying in fetal positions. As the video ends, eerie music starts and the Yonds perform a “Bhuto” like, slow motion birth. Eight “generic” students wearing Trestle Theater masks enter and watch the birth. “Principal System” enters and says to the mask characters, “You know the drill, time to get these new kids in shape.” The masks begin to teach the Yonds, a ritualized repetitive movement. The movement is disquieting in its repetitive submission to orders. The video feed is live in both venues. The narrators sing “When You Wish Upon a Star” the play’s theme song. Then in one venue, half the cast perform three stories about Yond’s first day at Kindergarten. In the other venue, we see three stories about Yond getting into trouble. Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 21 Dancers take both stages. Next, the narrators in each venue remember Middle School dances. The dance starts with “Is It in His Kiss”. They then join in with a modern piece by Nellie. Act I ends with the principal busting two Yonds for kissing. Act II : The act opens with the repetitive movement with reminders from Principal System as to why the students tow the line. Then as with the first act, the audience sees three scenes about dating and three scenes about family life in each venue. Between scenes there is a dance number to “Shining Star” so the cast can change venues. Next is a fiveminute video interview with HS students talking about their time in Middle School. Included in the interview is discussion about their first kiss. The final three scenes are set in a Middle School classroom. The third and final vignette shows a confident Yond, a popular kid who does everything well, quietly rebelling against Principal System’s repetitive movement. The students unite in defense of this Yond. The casts exit both venues. Principal System then explains that students grow up and begin to see the possibilities as to who they are and who they may become. His job is done. He then asks the audience to quietly follow him out of the theater. Both audiences converge outside where all the students are assembled and singing a slow a cappella version of When You Wish Upon a Star. Beijing MS Beijing MS Other than our original piece, “B. Yond: The Star” last year, the last 3 of our past 5 shows have been Tim Kelly musicals. GROOVY – A MUSICAL COMEDY TRIBUTE TO THE 60’S In GROOVY! you’ll celebrate the hippies and flower children of the 1960s. Travis, Muriel and Alice decide to throw a free Music, Beads and Flowers Celebration. A popular singing group, the Lemon Bugs, love the idea and donate their talent. In no time, crazily-painted buses start arriving at Crumb’s Apple Farm, the site of the festival. Everything is going nicely until Mrs Porter, who hates ‘The Love Generation,’ shows up and demands that the local police close it down. If this weren’t bad enough, two music promoters offer the Lemon Bugs a deal they can’t refuse if they will skip the celebration. Although the hippies might wear buttons that say ‘Never Trust Anyone Over Thirty,’ their hearts are in the right place and the celebration triumphs. Great 60’s style songs. Full length version of the one act EVERYTHINGS GROOVY! Playing time - 90 minutes. INTERNAL TEAM MACHINE Here’s an easy-to-produce musical! It takes place inside the body of a high school student. Marc Williams always starts to sneeze whenever he sees a certain girl he likes. Unfortunately for several students, Marc’s sneezes go too far. The teens, who were shrunk in a fluke nasal spray accident, are swooped into his nasal passages and thrown into his body’s dark interior. How will Chad, Mindy, Lavinia, Danny and Julia, the prom queen wannabe, escape? In their attempts, they elude evil bacteria and take a rafting trip through the circulatory system on a toothpick. Watch the good white and red blood cells battle hostile intruders. Gasp in wonder at the brains’ Command Center. You’ll have fun with this show. Playing time - 90 minutes. LITTLE LUNCHEONETTE OF TERROR Terror (and laughter) reigns when Mongo, a rock-eating creature from the center of the earth, contacts young Pete Berserker, owner of Pete’s Luncheonette. All the kids from high school hang out at Pete’s. But they’re no match for Mongo, who can control thoughts, cause havoc and change his 22 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 shape. Actually, Mongo is a walking bucket of toxic waste. He plans to conquer Earth by enrolling the kids in his personal army. First, however, he drains their brains of ‘knowledge’ that’s why they have to read the entire Encyclopedia Britannica! Pete’s girlfriend tells him ‘With a little more experience you could be a genius.’ Pete takes the message to heart, ultimately sending the nasty Mongo back to his own turf. The cast, of course, is a wild bunch. One very simple set, no production problems and all the tunes are hits. I have significantly rewritten these to include speaking parts for 60 + actors and to increase the ‘humor for adults’ aspect of the shows. A catalogue of Tim Kelly’s plays is available at http://www.playbureau. com/catalogue.asp ROBYN HOOD:OUTLAW PRINCESS by New Zeland playwright John Reynolds This is a ‘pop’ musical, based loosely on the traditional tales of Robin Hood, with Robyn portrayed as a female leading a female band of outlaws. It is essentially a fantasy and the setting is timeless. The characters can be played by actors from any ethnic or cultural group and is written for unlimited cast numbers, predominantly female. Instrumentation is for rhythm section (piano, guitar, bass and drums) with optional woodwind and brass or synthesiser. It is possible to perform this work with any combination of these instruments, or piano only. Sixteen songs, some solo, all written in low singable keys. Peter Shearer – British Council School Madrid, Spain (formerly at Southbank International School, UK) THE DOG BENEATH THE SKIN by W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood Read this script and you’d most likely think it’s impossible to stage, the perfect example of two literati writing for the theatre, or of a “play” providing no more than a form for literature. Put it on the stage, as we did, and you’ll discover and create something electric: a vision of Europe in the 1930s that is both terrifying and hilarious. Especially terrifying because we know what was to follow (the play was first staged in 1936) and the authors’ prescience and perceptiveness is astounding. “My tree of knowledge expanded by several branches during those four wonderful days.” Trine Kolbjornsen, St Johns International School, Belgium Having been involved in an Auckland University production of THE DOG BENEATH THE SKIN, I knew staging it was possible. A sprawling, episodic and incisively satirical play, it involves elements of epic and surrealist theatre, revue and music hall, as well as a chorus who speak some of the best modernist poetry ever written. With a large, keen group of high school actors and drawing the main cast from IB Theatre Arts students, we rehearsed 42 actors (a third of the high school), most of whom were busy for the entire show. The chorus work became the challenge for first year IB students, who also took cameo parts and support roles. Second Year IB students, busy with coursework and Individual Projects, took on other cameos while drama elective members clocked up CAS hours by the score in yet more cameos and ensemble work. Mounting this play in our small studio theatre, creating space for audience and 40-something actors seemed impossible at first. The solution came by staging the piece in line, with audience in four rows on each side, close to the action. Which proved yet again the adage: “Good ideas solve problems.” Scene changes were drilled over and over and thus an entire generation of students learned to do this properly. Design was simple and we did not come close to realising the design possibilities this play could provide. The original music, by Benjamin Britten, proved impossible to get hold of. In any case (I’ve been told) it’s well beyond the range of most school voices. Just as well that a singable and memorable score by Mike Peake, a London based musician, was available and perfect for the play. The music pastiches and parodies’ styles move from the maudlin sentimental to Kurt Weill, via Wagner and others. Likewise, the performance rights are held in New York and took some tracking down (“Dog beneath the what? Never heard of it!”), but we were compensated for our efforts by getting the rights for nothing. HIGHLIGHTS: a quintessential English village with the nastiest of undercurrents; an ensemble madhouse scene; an audience in tears of laughter at cabaret artiste Dirty Desmond, who destroys an original Rembrandt in front of a genuine art critic; shortly followed by transfixing poetry and a denouement that draws the battle lines for the conflict with fascism. This is a play that will challenge any production team (I recommend doing OH! WHAT A LOVELY WAR a year or two earlier, as we did, as practice and also as a thematic, musical and historical leadup). THE DOG BENEATH THE SKIN will also challenge preconceptions of theatre and history. Most of all, it will please, shock and captivate an audience, while giving them insights about where our society has come from and where it might still go. Pam Slawson – American International School DhakaBangladesh A COMPANY OF WAYWARD SAINTS by George Herman, published by Samuel French Inc This is a contemporary play about a modern Commedia dell’Arte theatre troupe. I had a class of mixed first-year IB students and younger high-school students and wanted to do an in-class production that would serve all of their needs. The nine Commedia characters were played by the eighteen actors in my class - sharing the roles made perfect sense since a Commedia troupe could have more than one actor playing a masque. The topic of the play served as a springboard for IB Theatre Arts students’ study of Commedia conventions. They were also able to practice applied research of characters, Commedia performance techniques, masks, costumes, and history. The research was presented to all of the students who used it in designing masks, costumes and developing characterizations. The episodic nature of the text gave each student their time in the spotlight and made simultaneous rehearsing of all of the various scenes possible. The scene design was quite simple, and the theme of the show – the importance of working as an ensemble - was certainly relevant to my own class as the diverse group of students learned to work together as an ensemble. MANKIND & CO published by Thomas Hischak Pioneer Drama Service Inc, Denver, Colorado I’ve always liked using this play with Middle School students because the subject of the play is usually relevant to their studies (classical mythology), the performance style is lively and leaves room for a great deal of creativity, and I can cast an infinite number of students and spread the parts out fairly equally among students, giving all students a featured role. There are narrators, which can be divided into as many parts and played by as many actors as one desires, and the anachronisms, and opportunities for clowning, dance, mime, and music make it attractive to this age group. A clowning concept was used and Middle School students loved being able to help pull together their own mismatched costumes from our existing wardrobe. They also were allowed to design their own makeup, basically painting their faces with stars, hearts, lightning bolts, etc. A COMEDY OF ERRORS by William Shakespeare: Bollywood style Shakespeare’s plays make great material for understanding how a production concept can be applied to a play. I asked a class of Advanced Theatre students to help me make Shakespeare more relevant to their audience. The result was a production set in India and produced by borrowing some conventions from the popular Bollywood film industry. The characters, conflicts, and situations in A COMEDY OF ERRORS are familiar to the Bollywood film genre. Already the shortest of Shakespeare’s comedies, we cut the script so it would play in one hour without intermission. This was easy to do by accessing on-line text and deleting selectively. Music, Indian dancing, 19th century costumes, and a few selective name changes were all that was needed to make Shakespeare familiar in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Sam Stone – Southbank International School, UK THE FORMAL by Sue Murray, an Australian play approximately one our duration Overview – Grade 12 girls are getting ready for their school Formal, (or Prom as it’s also known.) Three fairies are helping them get ready and comment on the action throughout. There are issues of body image, popularity, Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 23 daughter / parent relationships and friendship to name a few themes. Excellent production notes and how to stage using Brechtian theatre styles therefore great for low budgets. Great roles for girls, but the ‘dates’ are literally cardboard cut - outs. My grade 10’s in Australia directed, produced and designed the whole production and did a fantastic job. They actually cast one of the Mum’s as a Dad and we had 2 male fairies that worked just as effectively and they also used males for the dates, but these are really cameo roles. I would use with Middle Year grade 10 students or as a Grade 11 IB1’s play to analyse Brechtian theatre. It could also be used for an Individual Project for IB2’S to direct and stage. It’s a fantastic issue based piece of poignant play writing! ANIMAL FARM by George Orwell, adapted by Ian Wooldridge, published by Nick Hearn Books, London Approximately one hour, with no interval Overview – ‘George Orwell’s satire on the perils of Stalinism’. Animals take over the control of their farm after ongoing neglect and ruthless treatment by their human farmer, but with the pigs now in control of ANIMAL FARM things appear to go from bad to worse with some animals becoming ‘...more equal than others’. At the time of writing, I am about to audition my Grade 6-8 students for the Middle Years play in February at my present school. The staff at Nick Herne books has been so helpful with regards to obtaining performing rites and sending the plays. I would highly recommend them to all teachers, especially to new Drama teachers. Easy to apply online no matter where your school is. It involves a large cast or you can double up actors to have a cast of 6 if your school is small. IB 1’s are involved in costume and set design as part of their Technical involvement in production and I am going to appoint a dramaturg too. There are helpful production notes included and the students appear to be very excited about ‘doing’ the play! Helen Szymczak - Marymount International School, London I only teach girls, so it can be a real issue finding plays that are suitable. Here is a list of some productions I have done. 24 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 FIND ME by Olwen Wynmark About a girl called Verity Taylor who at the age of 20 was charged by the police of damaging a chair in the mental hospital where she was a patient. Later, she was committed to Broadmoor ‘from where she may not be discharged or transferred elsewhere without permission of the home secretary’. Using a technique of multiple characterization the play seeks to investigate in depth the personality of the young girl, to ‘find’ her – and at the same time studies the effects of her behaviour on the family, friends and officials in whose care she is placed. I had a cast of 23 actresses, so instead of one actress playing Verity I had 5. IB CLASSWORK I do a lot of short performances with my I.B girls as I usually have small classes – no bigger than 6/7, so combine a lot of skills in one project. One student will direct, another focusing on design, another on technical and the others will perform. Throughout their two years they all have to alternate the various roles. These are plays that have strong women characters, and small casts! KINDERTRANSPORT by Diane Samuels, written in 1992 A full-length play- will need to choose sections to perform. The play is about a Jewish child being sent to live in Britain to escape the holocaust. She has to forge a relationship with a ‘new’ mother and she changes her identity. Later her own daughter finds some letters and asks her questions about them which forces her to confront the truth about her past. Cast (4-5): Evelyn – English middle-class woman in her 50’s; Faith- Evelyn’s only child in her early 20’s; Eva- Evelyn’s younger selfshe starts the play at 9 and finishes at 17 years old- Jewish German becoming increasingly English; Helga – Eva’s mum German Jewish woman in her early 30’s; Lil – Eva/Evelyn’s English foster mother. In her 80’s. Structure is chronologically moving forwards in present interspersed with flash backs to the past as Evelyn’s memories come back to haunt her. Act 1 has some good sections for four actors especially Act 1 Scene 2. MY MOTHER SAID I NEVER SHOULD by Charlotte Keatley (written 1987) A full length play- will need to choose sections to perform. Play about four generations of women in a family, how they relate to one another and how their different lifestyles reflect the changing opportunities for women in society over the last century. Cast (4): Doris Partington born 1900; Margaret Bradley born 1931; Jackie Metcalf born 1952; Rosie Metcalfe born 1971. The set is non-naturalistic ‘a magic place where things can happen’. The play moves through chronologically interspersed with scenes of all four women playing together as children. Scenes often done in pairs to begin with and later all four characters are together. METAMORPHOSIS by Steven Berkoff from Franz kafka‚s short story written in 1969 Cast (4-6 – depends which section(s) you do): Gregor Samsa, his Mother, his Father, his sister Greta, his boss the Chief Clerk, the Lodger. This play is a physical theatre piece based around the idea of Gregor Samsa waking up one morning to discover that he has turned into a beetle. This symbolizes the way he feels he is treated by his family and boss and seems to represent his mental breakdown due to having to work so hard and feeling the pressure of people relying on him. Opportunities for stylized acting, costume, lighting and set design. THE CONAHUE SISTERS by Geraldine Aron, written in 1990 One act play- will need slight cutting. Cast (3): Dunya, Rosie and Annie (all in 30s). The play is set in Ireland and is about three catholic girls who killed a boy when they were children. They were curious about sex and made him kiss them and then, feeling rapt with guilt about what they’ve done, they kill him. The play is based around the three girls having a reunion and then re-enacting the murder- taking it in turns to play the boy they killed. Michael Thomas – Regent’s School Pattaya, Thailand HAROUN AND THE SEA OF STORIES by Salman Rushdie, adapted by Tim Supple and David Tushingham, published in paper back by Faber and Faber, ISBN 0-571-19693-4 The school is fortunate to have a large space called the Globe and, like Shakespeare’s original, it includes a large balcony space behind the stage which leant itself well to the epic scale of the text. The Asian setting perfectly matched the actual location of the eventual performance, which took place after 4 months of intensive but enjoyable rehearsal. This was the first large-scale drama production in the school’s history so much time was spent working on the creation of an ensemble through games and improvisation work based on different kinds of story-making tasks. The cast of 35 assisted in the making of the numerous props and elements of scenic design and costume. The play also provides great opportunities for innovative music composition and the students took every chance to experiment with Thai instruments, most of which were eventually included in the final accompanying score. The musicians were situated on the balcony next to the actors who, when not featured in a particular scene, acted as a chorus on the action taking place below. THE LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS: book and lyrics by Howard Ashman and music by Alan Menken This production involved nearly 40 students in Years 7-9 on stage with an equal number in the orchestra. Most of the students had already heard of the show and, even when they had not, they soon absorbed the memorable tunes. A large design team, led by Year 12 IB Art students worked on the creation of the giant plant Audrey 2 and an IB Theatre Arts student created the choreography for the performance. The rapidly expanding plant eventually took over the audience at the end and so remained faithful to Howard Ashman’s original concept. THE CANTERBURY TALES adapted from Chaucer‚s stories by Phil Woods and Michael Bogdanov, published by Iron Press, ISBN 0-906228-43-3 The plays provide a perfect blend of magic, tragedy and moments of pure bawdy humour, which found an appreciative local audience! In order to involve as many students as possible the links between each tale were developed to include more characters. The plays were all co-directed by IB Theatre Arts students. Elements of Asian drama traditions were integrated into the production including the use of especially deigned masks and Balinese Shadow puppets for the Franklin’s Tale. The play was also performed to students at the local Asian University. Beijing MS Tony Thomas – St Christopher’s School Bahrain AFTER JULIET by Shaman MacDonald, Shell Connections 99 Cast of 15 (5m and 10f) Picks up the story after the death of Romeo and Juliet and takes place in Verona during the fragile peace between the warring families. There are some excellent female roles, especially Rosaline, who feels betrayed by her cousin, Juliet, for stealing Romeo away from her. The piece has an incredible intensity, which builds to a climactic finish. It was very popular with our senior students (15-18). Easy to stage – not too long – has some very powerful and funny moments. RESTORATION by Edward Bond, Methuen Cast of 13 (8m and 5f) This is a very funny and dark piece. It needs a strong cast, particularly for the central characters and you have the challenge of costuming a period piece! It is a brilliant play about the injustices of the class system in the early industrial era. Very Brechtian in style – loads of songs punching home the political message but you could leave them out. It does need cutting to bring down to two hours. But an interesting and entertaining yarn nonetheless. OUT OF THEIR HEADS by Marcus Romer, Young Blood anthology of youth plays Cast of 10 Although this isn’t a big cast, you can double the main characters and have extra actors to people the clubs and pubs that form the backdrop of the play. This is a very exciting modern piece that tackles the subject of drugs in a non-condescending and truthful way. It has a terrific central plot involving a triangular relationship between two guys and a girl and has loads of opportunities to use modern music and spectacular lighting designs. It is quite easy to stage – suits a studio that can become the club using fluorescent lighting and a few moving lights. High energy but thought provoking, especially as the story cuts to different locations very quickly and tells the story nonchronologically. It has a very good twist in the story too, which the students like. Only suitable for high school students really or maybe upper middle schoolers. Jen Tickle – TISA, International School of Azerbaijan (formerly at Bangkok Patana School, Thailand and Overseas School of Colombo, Sri Lanka) All three plays listed below were very much team efforts, and developed through student led workshops as well as co-directed by drama teachers. THREEPENNY OPERA by Bertholt Brecht and Kurt Weill Universal Edition Ltd, 48 Great Marlborough Street, London, W1F 7BB (tel: 020 7437 5205 / fax: 020 7439 2897/ email: [email protected] or [email protected] High School students. Needs a few very strong singers for main male and female roles. The orchestration has some quirks and it’s not easy to play but we were able to fit out a band comprised of students and peripatetic music staff. There are a few options for the libretto – we worked with Jeremy Sams’ fantastic lyrics from the Donmar Warehouse version (available on CD through Amazon) that had to be toned down a little but made the whole show so politically relevant for all concerned. We had a cast of about thirty, and created a whole chorus line Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 25 “A fantastic experience steeped in ISTA values which left me feeling both exhausted and inspired. We tried, we learnt, we discussed, we disagreed, we laughed and we made new friends. Every primary teacher should be able to have this experience. For childrenís sakes we Zoë Weiner, St. Julian’s School, Portugal need more of this approach in our classrooms.” of beggars and whores. Students choreographed the main numbers. Being in Bangkok we re-set it in our local red light district, turning the theatre into a cabaret bar with the audience sat round tables, waiters and computer monitors on each table which provided captions, snatches of song lyrics and a pictorial montage to enhance the modern relevance of the song lyrics. We also caused huge outrage and were nearly shut down after the first night, but I’d do it again any day! (A HARD DAY’S) TWELFTH NIGHT High school students with mixed cast as large as you like. The Shakespeare classic set in the 1960’s. An idea taken from a music teacher in Beijing, this was hugely successful as students helped to play a part in updating the setting, which gave them great ownership as well as a refreshed understanding of the dialogue. Duke Orsino, in flowing ‘60’s hippy gear enters strumming a guitar and singing ‘While My Guitar Gently Weeps’; Sir Toby Belch sings ‘I am the Walrus’ in the kitchen and a chorus surrounds poor captive Mad Malvolio accusing him of being a ‘Nowhere Man’. It was fun to work with the cast choosing Beatles songs that fitted the text and helped support it. Groups of students choreographed the whole show that took place in the round in a Girl Guide shed decorated with saris and incense. The music was simple to arrange for a basic five-piece band and a small string group, based on one of those Beatles Complete songbooks for piano. It was a great crowd pleaser and a fabulous way to expose an international cast and audience to Shakespeare in a non-threatening way. THE ARABIAN NIGHTS Lower Secondary students and a large mixed cast. This was quite a dated text that we chopped up and turned into a wonderfully warm show. We cut the songs and work-shopped a number of new ones that we made up, based on fragments and folk songs from many of the countries visited in the play. It was easy to direct as it fitted neatly into five sections which we cast independently and then fitted 26 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 Shahariar and Scheherazade into the transition sections. We were able to explore many theatrical styles from Beijing Opera to belly dancing, fabulous costumes in rich colours, a lot of dance and physical theatre with all the students having a great deal of input into their sections. We spent a good deal of time focusing on the rich cultural traditions of the Arab world, which created some very valuable discussions. We also had a Muslim Dad come in and act as our sensitivity gauge, as we added prayers and a variety of Muslim cultural traditions and phrases. We decorated the hall with huge swathes of fabric like a Bedouin tent; the local carpet merchant lent us some (very valuable!) carpets for the floor and local Indian and Turkish restaurants sold food outside. Kristen Van Ginhoven – International School of Brussels, Belgium ALICE IN WONDERLAND AND THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS by Adrian Mitchell, rights from The Peters Fraser & Dunlop Group Ltd, Drury House, 34/43 Russell Street, London WC2B 5HA This was a middle school production done in the style of Physical Theatre. It is a terrific ensemble play that affords tons of opportunity for use of imagination. We had over 50 MS students in the show, with 5 different Alice’s. There was a ‘physical theatre chorus’ that took over all the responsibility for creating the different environments. They became the water by using fabric, they became the train tracks or the forest or the flowers by using their bodies and working as an ensemble. They also used their imaginations to create the different ways that Alice grows and shrinks. We had a ‘storytelling chorus’ that took over the responsibilities of narrating the story. Many of the poems in the play were delivered by this chorus using choral reading techniques. We also had a ‘sound master’ who was in charge of creating the sounds that accompanied the show. There was a continual soundscape and he and his assistant had a sound booth on the stage filled with all kinds of soundmakers. Then, there were the actors who mostly took on double roles throughout the play, as there are so many parts to cast. They were all dressed in neutral black costumes and added extra bits to show the audience who they were in that scene. We had a physical theatre specialist, Rebecca Patterson, come in to give a workshop on a Saturday for the kids early on in rehearsal, which made a huge difference. The idea of putting on this version of the play can be daunting, as it is so complex and there are so many environments and characters, but, once we latched onto physical theatre, minimalism (we started with a blank stage with one platform the length of the stage upstage) and sound as our main vehicles to tell the story, it became an excellent experiment in using imagination and the MS students who participated in it all said afterwards that they never would have expected it to turn out so well. They truly felt the power of working as an ensemble. SHAKESPEARE’S WOMEN by Libby Appel and Michael Flachmann, rights from Southern Illinois University Press, fax: + 618-453-1221 This play became a collaborative project between the HS performance, technical theatre, choir, strings and visual arts classes. Plus, it also had students in it who auditioned as part of an after school program. It grew out of a desire for the Performing Arts department to collaborate on a project that would afford all the students diverse challenges in their specific area. So, the play is basically a battle of the sexes featuring Shakespeare’s greatest scenes. We decided to use each act to visit a timeline in history as part of our concept. Therefore, act one, where the male narrator is trying to persuade the audience that women are frail, using various scenes from Shakespeare to illustrate his point, moved from medieval to renaissance to classical to baroque to romantic to cold war. Act two then followed the same timeline, although it was presented from the female narrator’s point of view, where she was proving that women had infinite variety. The S Beijing M Calderdale H S visual arts classes created art pieces that were projected in each scene that were inspired from artists of the time periods, the choir and strings classes explored music from the various time periods and the performance class explored acting styles. It included over 80 students and the school supported the project by providing three in house rehearsal days when the ‘full cast’ could come together to put the project onstage. There were, of course, elements that needed to be ironed out as all the pieces of the puzzle came together, but, working in this way provided an incredible depth of learning for the students and teachers alike. Rob Warren & Sherry Weeks – Atlanta International School, USA 24-HOUR PLAYS Over a 24-hour period of time, working with 6 Guest Directors and 5 Guest Designers with various theatrical backgrounds (clowning, improvisation, comedy, dance, puppetry, tragedy, set design, costume design, light design, publicity & prop design.) High School students had been divided into either performance or production groups on a sign up first come first sever basis. Beginning at 7:00pm Friday night with a family dinner each performance group was given a Shakespearian sonnet to create into a 5-10 minute production using the Guest Director’s background in theatre. At the same time each production group worked on designing, building or creating their relevant production area. During the first 12 hours scripts were written, rehearsed and staged. The set, costumes, props, lights and posters had been designed and construction was taking place. At 7:00am Saturday morning both performance and production groups were putting final touches to their areas ready to perform a dress rehearsal after lunch at 12:00pm. From 1:00pm onwards students were brought into the theatre to begin staging the opening and closing of the show in addition to running a tech/dress rehearsal. Little time was left for final changes however some groups managed to fit time in. All production work had stopped and these students began working on technical positions needed to run the show, for example backstage crew, light & sound operators, ushers, tickets & concessions. At 6:00pm the audience arrived at the theatre to take their seats for a night of Theatre. What they didn’t expect was what 24 Hours of little sleep, constant pressure to taking risks and a Shakespearian Sonnet could create. At 7:00pm the curtain rose on 50 eager performers and 30-inspired production crew who had created something out of nothing in 24 hours. This project is truly a remarkable experience that shows the power of ensemble and student’s imaginations. My only criticism of this project is the final productions can focus too heavily on “in-house jokes” or “things that only the 24-Hour participants know about” and therefore the final product can often be not as clean or un-finished. However, to see a production where no one gets cut, every student is welcome and the amount of creativity that occurs over 24 Hours is well worth trying. THE DEAD MAN WALKING Project by Tim Robbins The DEAD MAN WALKING School Theatre Project (the Play Project, for short) is an opportunity to broaden discussion about the death penalty and involve schools and their local communities in an inter-disciplinary dialogue about this major social issue. What is the Play Project? Check it out at http://www.deadmanwalkingplay.org Any description we give you would not do justice to the experience our students had on this project. It was truly a remarkable experience all around. JUNGLE BOOK by Edward Mast This was a production I did with our Middle School students a few years ago. Although the script describes the production as being set “not in a jungle, but a jungle-gym”, we decided to take this opportunity and research how Rudyard Kipling’s writing was influenced by the time he spent living in India. Allowing the students to research Hindu myths and making connections between their Jungle Book characters and the Hindu God’s & Deities we decide to develop our production on Indian culture and traditions. Using this to guide us our design team who were made up of IBDP Visual Art and Theatre Art students, who had been influenced by a Julie Taymor production we had seen in New York, decided to design the production using masks and puppets. What later became the set and the actors’ costumes began as mock sketches of an Indian jungle, a study of animals at the Atlanta zoo, and research done on Hindu art and artefacts. This final production was a huge success both visually and through the process we took. Giant animal puppets roamed the stage, characters with masks hanging over them, traditional Indian dancing and music, and finally a group of Upper and Middle School students who had learned the true nature of theatre as an ensemble art form. Tom Wilkinson – Dresden International School, Germany (formerly at Colegio Roosevelt, Lima, Peru) From Lima We began the year wondering how to have as many students on stage as possible and not do a musical. Having always had a burning desire to visit Friedrich Durrenmatt’s THE VISIT and trusting other choices would not provide the stage time necessary for forty to fifty budding actors, Todd Welbes, who taught and directed with me, and I decided the time was right. His comment, “It’s so dark and devilish,” pushed the decision even further. We cast the show with a marvelous pair of actor lovers, Claire Zachanassian and Anton Ill, but surrounded them with a cast of villagers who managed to control the audience through almost three hours of performance. We even added song and dance as we wrote in parts for a pair of Harlequin narrators who led the Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 27 audience through the stage transitions. The effect on the IB and MYP theater courses was to provide a practical context, allowing set, lights and sound, and costuming as well as acting to be the focus for many of the students. As well, the idea of building a cast around two ensembles, one of villagers and the other of the evil visitors, proved the cement around the performances success. With a small group of actors, we explored the ideas of CHILD LABOUR – thanks to M. Pasternak for the push – in the very real context of Lima and the street kids who cluster at every street corner waiting to sell gum, juggle, do flips or simply beg. Based on research and real discussions and using Boal image theater techniques, the students explored the problem realizing that who they were and what they brought to their street corner encounters was as important as understanding street children themselves. They developed a short Forum theater piece for elementary school children as part of CAS where the actors followed their performance with discussions about child labour with the elementary students. The investigation and performance led to students working in orphanages sponsored by a local Limian group called Lima Kids, using drama games and discussion techniques to get to begin to understand the complexity of the issues surrounding being a child and alone in Lima. The year ended with the graduating seniors who had been part of the original group spearheading a fund-raiser to support Lima Kids which included performance and hands on work with the schools and orphanages associated with Lima Kids. Last, Todd and I with our Limian Spanish theater colleague, Jose Luis Meijia, produced a truly bilingual production of Marivaux’s THE DISPUTE. Based on a script developed in English from a Neil Bartlett production of the play (the script is available through the National Theater in London) at the Lyric Hammersmith a few years ago and a French version translated into Spanish, we provided our small cast – 12 maximum – with the task of making their own bilingual script from the two. As Colegio Roosevelt is a bilingual school this was in a sense easy. Allowing the student actors to tell the 28 | Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 Calderdale HS story, a simple one, in Spanglish, a combination of English and Spanish, the local Babel on campus, allowed them to create a piece of theater that in the end was essentially scriptless. The original is equally delicious and is a wonderful script for physical theater as well as character work. And, compared to THE VISIT, it lasted only one hour. Plus it gave our students experience with real improvisation, physical acting and movement as well as scripting skills. Maggie Young – Pechersk School International, Kiev MORE LIGHT by Bryony Lavery This play is a wonderful vehicle for a group of girls. I used a group from grade 9 to grade 12, second year IB Theatre Arts. It has challenging content and the chance for the production team to shine also. One student designed the set and another, a series of dances for their Individual Projects. We rehearsed over a sixweek period and performed for two nights. It is a about the Emperor’s childless wives and concubines who are buried alive with him when he dies. The only way to stay alive is to eat him. The interesting thing in the play is the concept that in their dire captivity they find personal freedom. Each woman and child discovers talent within themselves that was stifled by the confined life of the ‘harem’. When the food runs out MORE LIGHT, the warrior, goes out of the central chamber to find more and finds more than she bargained for!!! There is love interest! MORE LIGHT, now published as a separate edition, appeared firstly in the Shell/National Theatre collection Connections. A new set of plays is commissioned each year. At last there is a fund of challenging texts that are relevant to the 14 – 18 age group. I have produced four plays from the collections over the last few years that include THE CHRYSALIDS and SPARKLESHARK. THE GOLDEN DOOR by David Ashton, is described as a ‘twelve shot myth’. It is a great opportunity for a group of 13-16 year olds not only to act but to create wonderful soundscripts and scenery. It is set underground and involves two opposing ‘tribes’ who are struggling to find both resources and a sense of a future. It contains big issues and yet its world-under setting allows for both technical and artistic innovation. It was the final piece for my Grade 10 drama class and provides the opportunity for everyone to get involved. You could rename it ‘a hundred and one ways to use a camouflage net’! We worked on it for six weeks, mostly in class until the final week and they designed both the set, makeup and costume as part of their course. It is also part of the New Connections collection. THE VISIT by Frederick Durrenmatt is a great script for senior students. It is about an old woman, forced to leave a small town because of pregnancy, who returns to exact revenge on the man who betrayed her. It has lots of opportunity for a big cast, good character development and interesting set. It is flexible enough to allow for wide ranging directorial visions and lots of opportunities for IB Theatre Arts students to flex both their Performance and Production muscles. We rehearsed over a seven-week period and gave three performances. Parts were filled from lower grades where interest dictated. ISTA PROFILE The ISTA Consultancy Service... By Doug Bishop, Taipei American School and ISTA Board of Trustees It took me years to recognize the obvious: I can’t know it all; however, I can get stuck in a rut. Although ISTA festivals and TAPS helped expose some students to other professionals and expertise, the majority didn’t get a chance. The ISTA consultancy programme has proven to be a godsend to address this need. I remember becoming a more vocal proponent of the idea of bringing expertise home several years ago when rising travel costs and perceived danger caused increasing numbers of my students to reject a trip abroad. However, with the consultancy programme, the expert came to us. The beauty of this arrangement is simple: instead of traveling to an event set up by someone else, my students stayed home and attended events tailor made for them. In January 2005, Greg Pliska visited the Taipei American School for a week long consultancy, as we embarked on a script devising project called Moxie, to raise funds for a tsunami-relief effort. Greg helped theater classes begin the process of developing script ideas; he worked with mythology classes on adapting stories to the stage; he worked with HS and MS play casts in character development; he worked with teachers after school on weaving drama techniques into the classroom. His work was a wonderful jumpstart to the Moxie project, our production process, and the second semester. Two years later, in November 2006, Sherri Sutton spent three days presenting a very diverse range of events. Her IB Theater class work centered on styles; she also had individual conferences with my six year 2 students about their research commission. With beginning theater and advanced English classes, Sherri worked on both ensemble building and character building. She developed specific lesson plans with teams of grade 6 and 9 humanities teachers, while offering two open after school improvisational theatre comedy workshops, as well as meeting with the cast of Woody Allen’s God to begin the character building process. Sherri left a wake of enthusiasm and energy. In both cases, my kids and I felt we’d been on holiday. The routine was broken. New energy was palpable. The ripple effects across the school˜through teachers, through theater students, through non-theater students was certainly noticeable. Thus, not only did my students and I get a wonderful boost through the experience but the status of theater was raised in the eyes of the community. I can hear your thoughts: yes, there are obvious advantages, but it is pricey. True, expertise has a price. I couldn’t have afforded it out of an annual budget, to be sure. Unless you have a very generous administration, you probably need to do as I have: seek help from your school’s support groups. In my case, the PTA has been amazingly generous in its efforts to provide students and the community with as much enrichment as possible – particularly in the arts and writing. Here we have a chance annually to submit proposals to the PTA for funding. For both Greg and Sherri, I submitted a proposal in the spring of the year before. Often, you can connect with ISTA staff who will be at an ISTA event in your region, saving travel costs. For example, Greg went on after Taipei to Michael Thomas at Pattaya in Thailand, and Sherri stayed on a day for a consultancy with the Taipei European School, reducing costs for both schools. By early March, ISTA will publish sites for next year’s events. Check them out. Contact Sally Robertson about a potential consultancy that piggybacks on another event. Prepare those funding proposals this spring... and next year you will reap the benefits of expertise that energizes both your students... and yourself! Go to www.ista.co.uk > consultancies for more information. ...geared up to help you on home ground Scene | 2006-7 March Issue 3 | 29 SHANGHAI TAPS Shanghai American School, China – October 26-28 2006 Photographs: Courtesy of Julie Ladner, Geoffrey Duffield and Giel de Groot. www.ista.co.uk