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Sound review

This is a current production of ‘Macbeth’ in London staring David Tennant (ex-Dr Who)

It is noticeable for it’s creative use of sound (especially 3D Headphones – binaural headphones) – where sounds seems to come from different directions – someone might be whispering into your left ear very close or a door creak might seem to come from behind you – all designed to make the theatrical experience more IMMERSIVE – you, the audience, are IN the action.

How might these ideas be applied to your Sound Design ideas for ‘Metamorphosis’?

Have a read!

Lighting vocab – help

Lighting terminology 

Your ability to write using the correct terminology will not only show the examiner that you understand Lighting, but it will save you time and allow you to write more in the LIMITED TIME. 

Lighting/light is often similar to liquid – therefore these terms are used: 

Flood lights (lights that literally ‘flood’ all areas without being focused into a specific area.

YOU WRITE: “ I would flood the stage with blue light because…”

General wash – Covering a large part of the stage 

YOU WRITE: “ I would use a general wash of pink to indicate that this is a ‘rosy’ memory.”

Light locations: 

  • Front 
  • Floor  
  • Side 
  • Top 
  • Back 

YOU WRITE: “ I would use up lighting from down stage to create grotesque shadows on the character’s faces because…”

Intensity:  dim, full, bright,  

Duration: 

Snap (a sudden change), fade over ? seconds

YOU WRITE: “I would fade up the spotlight to full over 10 seconds and once X has stopped speaking I would snap the light off…” 

Each lighting effect is called a state.

YOU WRITE: “the lighting state for this point in the extract would be ….” 

Operation: 

Fade up, fade down, Cross-fade, fade to black (out), fade up from black (out) 

YOU WRITE: “I would X fade the 2 states to from memory to reality to …”

Colours 

Open white (no colour) 

Warm (eg: straw / yellow )

Cool (eg: blues) 

Colour symbolism:

Usually you want to avoid changing the colour of the lights JUST to indicate an emotional change.

However, this is an expressionistic play where the rules of NATURALISM don’t always apply. [Dreams/ Nightmares/ Memories / Story-telling moments.

You can say, “I would use a blood red wash to symbolise Mr Samsa’s anger…” BUT your JUSTIFICATION needs to be something like, “This symbolic use of colour is justified as it is an expressionistic play / moment / happening in a dream/ nightmare…”

Avoid weak colour claims: e.g. “Gregor will be lit in blue to accentuate his transformation and emotional distress.”

Types of lights 

Flood lights (no ability to shape or change the beam) All you can do is colour them with a gel. 

Small/Soft profile (sometimes called a FRESNEL – pronounced ‘fre-nel’ You can modify the beam slightly, shape them with barn doors and colour them with gels 

Spotlights/Profiles: The most versatile light. You can change the beam from a wide, soft edged beam to a sharp, narrow beam. You can shape the beam with barn doors or internal shutters, they are good for gobos and you can colour them with gels. 

Follow -spot (a spotlight on a stand at the back of the theatre operated by a person – follows anyone and places them in a pool of light. 

Sound question

As a designer, outline your ideas for sound for this extract. Explain and
justify how these would help to create your preferred effects at this point in the play.
[10 marks]

Use Pages 101, 102, 103

Above is the Sound Question you will be doing inclass next week.

At Home, I want you to prepare for this question – read the extract several times, think about sounds present and sounds you can add (diegetic and non-diegetic)

The extract has been chosen because there’s a lot you can do with your SOUND DESIGN.

Plan what you would say in an Introduction (it’s a very OPEN question so you need to set out your aims) and in 3 subsequent paragraphs. [I won’t be directing you to the ‘best bits’ so choose wisely.]

Use the Internet to discover what a Leitmotif is. (You could also call it a theme tune or signature sound.

https://www.studiobinder.com/blog/what-is-a-leitmotif-definition/

Find out what sampling is. (Vocal and Instrumental)

Look at the 1st minute of this.

HOW COULD SAMPLING (NOT DONE BY THE ACTORS THEMSELVES BUT BY THE SOUND DESIGNER LIVE) BE USED IN ‘METAMORPHOSIS’?

What is Reverb?

What is surround sound?

SOUND IN METAMORPHOSIS

The ACTIVITIES below need to be in your Journals and ready for next week’s lesson.

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ACTIVITY 1 = Begin a MIND-MAP in your Journal

  1. What does sound do for /bring to a theater production?
  2. What ways are there to create ‘sound’? (think Live or Recorded)
  3. How does the audience ‘hear’ sound?

TIPS= How to write about Sound: (vocabulary)

Think about when the sound:

  • starts/stops,
  • its intensity,
  • sound effects applied live or to a recorded sound
  • speakers, microphones

Read this for an understanding of 2 key terms when discussing SOUND!

The clue is ‘originating for the film’s/ play’s world’

LIGHTING ‘METAMORPHOSIS’ -Deconstructing an answer

LIGHTING ‘METAMORPHOSIS’ -Deconstructing an answer

QUESTION: As a designer, outline your ideas for lighting this extract. Explain and justify how these would help to create an appropriate mood and atmosphere at this point in the play

 Cut ‘n’ Paste this into a word doc and then Highlight/Underline

  • RED = references technical vocab,
  • GREEN for any pearls of wisdom (LINKS TO Social/Historic/Cultural)
  • BLUE = references to MOOD /KEY WORDS from the Question and/or Designer’s Intentions /Aims
  • Put a Q in the margin for quotes- count them! (Be aware of how they are used to justify or focus.)

The mood when Mr Samsa starts hurling apples at Gregor is violent and extreme. It’s as if all Mr Samsa’s pent up frustration comes out. As a lighting designer, I would cover the stage in a blood red wash on the line “Apple for you Gregor!”This would symbolise the anger being demonstrated by Mr Samsa. Being an expressionistic play, this symbolistic use of colour is justified. At the point when the apple hits Gregor (It’s sunk in”) I would follow Berkoff’s stage directions and have a strobe light flash on and off quickly- ‘strokes of lightning’. This would catch the family and Gregor in different poses: father triumphant, Mother and Greta distraught, Gregor in agony. It would also have the jumpy, jerky, non-naturalistic feel of a silent movie which would support the 1900s period I feel.

In the next scene, Berkoff puts ‘lights up on the FAMILY.’ In this scene, we see Greta practicing French and father sleeping. As a lighting designer, I would want to convey a more naturalistic mood by using a dim top light in warm yellow to indicate the gas light that would have been used in the 1910s. [See diagram]. I would focus a small profile at ground level onto the down stage right stool and have a flickering red fire effect created by a motorised gobo to create the illusion of a fire. This would link to Berkoff’s idea of total theatre where the audience is using their imagination without the need of an elaborate set. This naturalistic lighting would create an evening mood and a calmer atmosphere several days after the apple throwing.

In this part of the scene, Gregor is absent from the dialogue but there are still references to him when Mrs Samsa asks Greta ‘What’s he doing?’ Berkoff says in his Introduction ‘Gregor is always watching’so I would keep a dim pin spot on Gregor’s room. This would pulse larger then smaller several at the times when the family mentions him and keep reminding the audience of his presence in the scene.

In the last part of this scene, Gregor’s dream, I would want to emphasise the surreal mood that is present. Berkoff describes the family ‘as if under water’ and ‘twisting ‘around in their sleep’. I would use dim footlights coloured blue, which would up-light the facial expressions that the family have. This would have the effect of making facial shadows increase and emphasise the ‘horrified’ expressions Mrs S. is pulling, ‘Father – do something’. Gregor would be lit from the front by a tightly focused spotlight of white light which would gently pulse when he is not speaking. Its low angle also cast large shadows onto the cyclorama upstage – making the actor’s gestures and limbs look larger and more grotesque making this scene quite nightmarish in atmosphere.

What band is this and what number out of 10.

Name 2 things this example does that you didn’t do.

SET DESIGN – METAMORPHOSIS

Other set designs

Original Production – Berkoff

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Homework [after looking in detail at these set designs (below), Explain and Justify them in words (about 200 words per set design)- use all the specific vocab you can = see last post]

Look for other set design ideas on the Internet

Production 1 (Philip Engleheart.com)

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2 –Icelandic Production – Lyric Hammersmith 20

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 “I set the production in the American 1950s”
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3- Dance Production – Royal Opera House – UK

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Expressionistic design

Berkoff’s acting style and his design of sets has often been described as “Expressionistic”.

German Expressionism in cinema (take some notes in your Journal) – what can be translated into a theater style?

Look at the 3 pictures and identify the ‘expressionistic’ elements of the set.

Pick 2 moments EACH where these ‘expressionistic elements’ could be used in the play ‘METAMORPHOSIS’

How can symbols and emotions be represented on a set ?- think Gregor’s Room – The Samsa’s living room – what do these places symbolise – how do you show that in materials, colours, set dressing and props?

  1. Shadows
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  1. Canted angles
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  1. Silhouette
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What do designers do?

In Pairs (in Journals)

Divide up a page into quarters.

Identify the 4 different design jobs that could come up in the exam.

Why is EACH aspect of design necessary? [What does it do for the audience or production?] SPEND A FEW MINS CONSIDERING EACH.

FUNCTIONAL design – ?

EXPRESSIVE design – ?

What is the difference?

List as much specialist vocab as you can to help when discussing EACH design area. (E.g: spotlights, cue, instrumental sound, backdrops, etc)

Where/How could it be used in the play? [Find 3 moments where a design element would really help the story telling – eg: when Gregor finally opens the door a shaft of light can pour into the living room.]

Read P 72 & P77 of the Introduction and Stage Setting (at the beginning of the play) to discover ideas for Set, Music, Lighting, total theatre – Record quotes in Berkoff’s own words

Explain the original set design (Hwk)

(Explain it) Draw the set and label it on plain A4 paper and stick in.

Justify it (using Berkoff’s own words and yours)

Specialist words

Set location (upstage etc)

Style: Expressionistic / Naturalistic / Non-naturalistic

Set construction:

  • Raised platform – 2 storey set
  • Box set
  • Scaffold structure

Set dressing (things you add to the basic structure (shelves, pictures etc)

Cyclorama (white cloth across back of stage – for lights to be projected against.

Shadow screen

Gauze (material that is transparent if a light is shone from behind but which is opaque if light is shone from in front (can be painted or projected upon)

How to improve writing like a Director

Think about what a Director does.

It is more than just placing actors on the stage. (stage picture)

They are the audience in the rehearsal room – ( what meaning will the audience understand from a line delivery or a piece of action)

They are responsible for the Overall Concept

They are responsible for the casting (what look – shape of actors do the characters suggest)

Here are some sentence starters to quickly GET WRITING ABOUT BEING A DIRECTOR.

COPY THESE INTO YOUR JOURNAL AND MAKE UP SOME OF YOUR OWN

  • The main idea in this extract is….
  • My directorial concept is to …..
  • My aim as a director is (EXPLAIN)… revealing [Insert your justification] for the audience.
  • By placing the characters (explain)….. the audience would understand [reveal something about the play/extract/character(s)…..]
  • I would instruct the actor playing X to……[insert something about physicality, voice or proximity]
  • This would reveal…….[explain what the audience would understand]

14 general points for improvement.

  1. Read the Question carefully and the Extract even more so. [10-15 mins to read/prep for all 3 Questions]
  2. No lengthy introductions – this is not your Standard Essay – Only in 1 answer should you plan to use the name/date/practitioner/ source material/ style info.
  3. Avoid any lengthy explaining of PLOT or Themes – Only relate plot in so far as it creates a context for the EXTRACT given and what has happened just before. (No general plot of the whole play as the examiner will know this is a play about a man who transforms into an insect.)
  4. Engage with the question in the 1st few lines. (know exactly what the question’s focus is) – “attitude of Lodgers to family” NOT family to Lodgers.
  5. Zoom in ONLY after you establish the focus of your answer and the context of the moment you are focusing on.
  6. Choose the ‘best moments’ – The Lodgers 1st entrance, interacting with Samsa’s, eating (as there’s lots of ideas already on the page)
  7. Use paragraphs for EACH new moment you ‘go to!’
  8. Start each paragraph with a strong statement: “I want to suggest that the Lodgers are greedy so I will direct them to sniff around the living room like pigs as if looking for food. On the line…. I would have them grunt before saying X and their ‘looking’ will be quick and jerky, with them occasionally going on all 4s to flag up this animalistic impression.
  9. Look at the Stage Directions as much as the spoken words. As Berkoff is highly physical there’s a good chance that ideas, and action is hidden in the Stage Direction italics (e.g: mime…pig faces…greedy…copy each others movements.)
  10. Time keeping – you won’t have a teacher calling out when to move on – 20 mins of writing PER Berkoff question (about 3 paragraphs) DO NOT STEAL TIME AWAY FROM OTHER BERKOFF QUESTIONS
  11. Aim to use quotes (about 5-8 per Berkoff question) in the form of lines BUT also Stage Directions, and interviews with Berkoff
  12. Don’t spend too long on one example – and don’t repeat the same skills or justification in multiple examples – SHOW THE EXAMINER YOUR RANGE OF UNDERSTANDING
  13. Make sure your interpretation of the role can be supported by what the characters do and say.
  14. Be more creative (add value to Berkoff’s ideas) – don’t just repeat what is implied in the stage directions. If you don’t do it like Berkoff sets it out then have another idea that is BETTER! [Justify your NEW idea]
  15. Use some of the BIG terms (expressionism / total theatre) and knowledge of the whole play for your Justification.

This is in keeping with the expressionistic style of the whole piece and would highlight the idea that their attitude to the family is one of ‘wants’ and ‘greed’ – they are out to exploit the Samsa’s as it is my director’s interpretation that they know how much the family need the money they can provide.”

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Berkoff on Mime

How would you direct the text and action on P81-84 to reinforce the idea that this play is non-naturalistic?

View the clip at 03:35 to get an idea of the ‘style’ described by Berkoff as ‘animated marionettes’.

Word bank to use:

action mime, staccato {jerky} movement, “animated Marionettes”, slow motion (lyrical – smooth – seamless) , heightened /exaggerated characterisation, tableau or freeze frames, mie, narrative voice, character voice, tone, direct address, 3rd person narration, contrapuntal speaking, split stage, cross-cutting, chorus work, sound effects by actors,

USE QUOTES FROM THE STAGE DIRECTIONS Eg: “In time to the ticking” or “resembling automatic figures in a wax-work”.

Paragraph structure: Statement (director’s aim) What will it look like? How will the actors do it? Why this idea works (link to aim, Berkovian style, the question, audience response).

“so they became like mechanical dolls – eating away. Why I wanted to make it mechanical was that when the beetle wakes up he also is in a sense mechanical.”

“I used this idea of mechanistic, robotic theatre because by changing the rhythm of what we see in naturalism, we make people re-look at people.”

Berkoff on Mime film

Watch the whole film clip of Berkoff on Mime and hear how a course in Mime in Paris in 1965 shaped his ideas about how the body could be used in theatre (ideas which were radical in the UK in the 1960s – 80s. Now it’s more mainstream and accepted).

SAMPLE PARAGRAPH (Explain and Justify structure).

My aim, as director, would be to show the Samsa’s breakfast routine as a monotonous activity that they do without thinking every day

I’d have each family member sit on their stools down stage (except Gregor who is still up stage in his room) eating  breakfast using action mime to suggest the food, drink and table.

Mr Samsa will stab at a sausage in a staccato rhythm, making big movements, Mrs Samsa will dap her napkin to her mouth, Greta will make small bird-like movements lifting a cup of tea to her lips.

Berkoff has said in interview that he chooses sometimes to direct his actors in a robotic and mechanistic way, “because by changing the rhythm of what we see in naturalism, we make people re-look at people.” By using this technique for this meal, it would remind the audience that this is a non-naturalistic play.