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Modern Theatre History Realistic Drama Realist sought to convince their audiences that stage action represented everyday life. Unlike drama that featured larger-than-life characters, was written in verse, and had supernatural figures such as witches and ghosts, realistic drama mirrored life. The action onstage resembled what people could observe around them o Characters behaved, spoke, and dressed like ordinary people. In the late 19th century many theatregoers and critics were scandalized by realism in the theatre. o One reason is that realism touched a raw nerve. In the attempt to portray daily life, realist argued, no subject matter should be excluded from the stage. Among the taboo subjects dramatized by realists were economic injustice, the sexual double standard, unhappy marriages, and religious hypocrisy. In fact, many realists believed that the purpose of drama was to call the audience’s attention to social problems in order to bring about change. o Realist refused to make simple moral judgments or to resolve dramatic action neatly. Instead of stock characters, realists created complicated personalities who would seem to have been molded – as real people are – by heredity and environment. o Today’s equivalent is the profanity, obscene language, explicit sex, and extreme violence sometimes seen in films, and in TV shows. Hernrik Ibsen The Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen is often said to be the founder of modern realism. As a playwright, he is known for his mastery of dramatic technique, his psychological insights into human nature, and his poetic symbolism. Realistic Acting Konstantin Stanislavski o The most famous system for training performers to act realistically – that is, to be believable – was developed by Konstantin Stanislavski, who was the co-founder of the Moscow Art Theatre. The Stanislavskian Technique o Before the realistic drama of the late 1800s, no one had devised a method for achieving true-to-life believability onstage. Through their own talent and genius, individual actresses and actors had achieved it, but on one had developed a system whereby it could be taught to others and passed on to future generations. o The person who eventually did this most successfully was Stanislavski. o We might assume that believable acting is simply a matter of being natural; but Stanislavski discovered first of all that acting realistically onstage is extremely artificial and difficult. He wrote: All of our acts, even the simplest, which are so familiar to us in everyday life, become strained when we appear behind the footlights before a public of a thousand people. That is why it is necessary to correct ourselves and learn again how to walk, sit, or lie down. It is essential to reeducate ourselves to look and see, on the stage, to listen and to hear. o To achieve this “reeducation,” Stanislavski said, “The actor must first of all believe in everything that takes place onstage, and most of all, he must believe what he himself is doing. And one can believe only in the truth.” To give substance to his ideas, Stanislavski studied how people acted in everyday life and how they communicated feelings and emotions And then he found ways to accomplish the same things onstage. He developed a series of exercises and techniques for the actor which had the following broad aims: To make the outward behavior of the performer o Gestures, voice, and rhythm of movements – natural and convincing. To have the actor or actress convey the goals and objectives – the inner needs – of a character. o Even if all the visible manifestations of a character are mastered, a performance will appear superficial and mechanical without a deep sense of conviction and belief. To make the life of the character onstage not only dynamic but also continuous. o Some performers tend to emphasize only the high points of a part’ in between, the life of the character stops. o In real life, however, people do not stop living. To develop a strong sense of ensemble playing with other performers in a scene. Stanislavski’s Techniques o Relaxation When he observed the great actors and actresses of his day, Stanislavski noticed how fluid and lifelike their movements were. They seemed to be in a state of complete freedom and relaxation, letting the behavior of the character come through effortlessly. He concluded that unwanted tension has to be eliminated and that the performer must at all times attain a state of physical and vocal relaxation. o Concentration and Observation Stanislavski also discovered that gifted performers always appeared fully concentrated on some object, person, or event while onstage. He referred to the extent or range of concentration as a circle of attention. This circle of attention can be compared to a circle of light on a darkened stage. The performer should begin with the idea that it is a small, tight circle including only himself or herself and perhaps one other person or one piece of furniture. o Importance of Specifics One of Stanislavski’s techniques was an emphasis on concrete details. A performer should never try to act in general, he said, and should never try to convey a feeling such as fear or love in some vague, amorphous way. In life, Stanislavski said, we express emotions in terms of specifics: An anxious woman twists a handkerchief An angry boy throws a rock at a trash can A nervous businessman jangles his keys. Performers must find similar concrete activities. The performer must also conceive of the situation in which a character exists – what Stanislavski referred to as the given circumstances – in terms of specifics. In what kind of space does an event take place: formal, informal, public, domestic? How does it feel? What is the temperature? The lighting? What has gone on just before? What is expected in the moments ahead? o Inner Truth An innovative aspect of Stanislavski’s work has to do with inner truth, which deals with the internal or subjective world of characters – that is, their thoughts and emotions. Some plays have less to do with external action or what the characters say than with what the characters are feeling and thinking but often do not verbalize. Stanislavski had several ideas about how to achieve a sense of inner truth, one being the “magic if.” “If” is a word which can transform our thoughts; through it we can imagine ourselves in virtually any situation. o “If I suddenly became wealthy…” o “If that person who insulted me comes near me again…” The word “if” becomes a lever for the mind It can lift us out of ourselves and give us a sense of absolute certainty about imaginary circumstances. o What? Why? How? Another important principle of Stanislavski’s system is that all action onstage must have a purpose. This means that the performer’s attention must always be focused on a series of physical actions (also call psychophysical actions) linked together by the circumstances of the play. Stanislavski determined these actions by asking three essential questions o What? Why? How? o An action is performed, such as opening a letter (the what). The letter is opened because someone has said that it contains extremely damaging information about the character (the why). The letter is opened anxiously, fearfully (the how), because of the calamitous effect it might have on a character. o These physical actions, which occur from moment to moment, are in turn governed by the character’s overall objective in the play. o Through Line of a Role According to Stanislavski, in order to develop continuity in a part, the actor or actress should find the superobjective of a character. What is it, above all else, that the character wants during the course of the play? What is the character’s driving force? If a goal can be established toward which the character strives, it will give the performer an overall objective. From this objective can be developed a through line. o Another term for through line is spine. To help develop the through line, Stanislavski urged performers to divide scenes into units (sometimes called beats). In each unit there is an objective, and the intermediate objectives running through a play lead ultimately to the overall objective. o Ensemble Playing Except in one-person shows, performers do not act alone; they interact with other people. Stanislavski was aware that many performers tend to “stop acting,” or lose their concentration, when they are not the main characters in a scene or when someone else is talking. Such performers make a great effort when they are speaking but not when they are listening. This tendency destroys the through line and causes the performer to move into and out of a role. That, in turn, weakens the sense of ensemble – playing together of all the performers. Jump to the Great Depression The Federal Theatre Project o During the depression, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt established the Works Progress Administration (WPA), which organized government-subsidized agencies to put the unemployed back to work. o The Federal Theatre Project, headed by Hallie Flanagan Davis, a college professor, was one of these agencies. For four years, the Federal Theatre Project supported theatrical ventures throughout the United States and helped to revitalize interest in theatre outside New York City. One of the most popular forms developed by the project was the living newspaper Dramatizations of current events, such as bread lines and rising unemployment. For political reasons, the government discontinued funding the Federal Theatre Project in 1939 – Many legislators had said that the project was sympathetic to communism Today, federal, state, and local governments provide some support to theatre companies, but the Federal Theatre Project is the closest the United States has come to establishing a national theatre. College and University Theatres o Another noteworthy development in the United States at this time was the emergence of theatre departments in colleges and universities across the country. George Pierce Baker at Harvard and Yale Thomas Wood Stevens at the Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie Mellon) in Pittsburgh, And Frederick Koch at the University of North Carolina started the study of theatre at academic institutions. o This unprecedented movement was to become important in preparing playwrights, performers, directors, designers, and technicians for both professional and nonprofessional theatre. Postwar Realistic Drama Selective Realism o The leading postwar American playwrights, Arthur Miller and Tennessee Williams, wrote realistic works but were also successful with selective realism, A type of realism that heightens certain details of action, scenery, and dialogue while omitting others. o Miller and Williams have had a strong impact on the development of American drama o They are considered perhaps the most important playwrights in the history of American theatre.