domingo, 27 de septiembre de 2015

Looking for the future - Alice in Wonderland

Description:
“Alice: How long is forever? White Rabbit: Sometimes, just one second.” -Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland. 

On Friday, September 11th we went to the Gran Teatro Nacional near Javier Prado where we saw a ballet style adaptation of Lewis Carroll's world wide acclaimed novel Alice in Wonderland. It was directed by the costume designer Pepe Corzo and coreographed by the costa rican dancer Humberto Canessa which focuses on a silent ballet performance where focuses upon the design elements arises and intrigues the audience. The play "Alicia" echoes Lewis Carroll's prestigous novel, illustrating through ballet the story of a sensible girl who's innocent dreams drived her from reality to an everlasting journey, Wonderland, a world ruled by fantasy and imagination. By seeing this ballet style play, it served us as inspiration to record our first impressions and our creative approaches that can be staged  in next year's school play, coincidently about Alice in Wonderland. 


Analysis: 
The ballet of Alicia was presented in the Gran teatro nacional. We went to see it since it is the same play we want to do for next year's play except for one difference, the theatre style. Rather than presenting it in ballet style, we will do it on the basis and conventions of surrealism theatre. From observing this interpretation of alice, we used it as a guideline to record our first impressions about the play and evaluate if they are appliable for next year's schoolplay which is a adaptation of Alice in Wonderland mixed with Alice through the looking glass.


Firstly, we could observe and qualify the scenery and use of the space in the Alicia ballet as a potential source of inspiration for next year's school play. The use of the hyper-dimensional cyclorama contributed in the painting the stage, creating unreal atmospheres without necessarily using exaggerated props and actual scenery to illustrate the magical and distorted world of wonderland, Alice's childhood adventure. The design of the cyclorama varied according to the scene presented. For instance,  scene XII focused on the Queen of hearts' courtyard garden as the cyclorama displayed a garden filled with white roses. To make the scene more interactive and fictional, the queen's gardeners were using paintbrushes with red paint poured out of a metal bucket as if they were actually painting the white roses red like in the actual novel when the queen commands it. Therefore, the displayal of a white rose bush turning magically into freshly red painted roses contributed to the fictitious scenery of the garden by not necessarrily placing literaly bushes or a water pilette to connote the environment of the courtyard garden in the queen of hearts' palace.  For our play, perhaps we could find a gif of white roses turning red while the queens' gardeners paint unethusiastically the bush since it will be surrealistic theatre, demonstrating their boredom of painting useless roses for a selfish and unwanted queen. In case if we couldn't find a gif displaying a lively bush of white roses, we could play with the lights by using the frontal fresnels covered with red coloured filtres with a strong intensity of light to represent the red roses. Continuosly, if the angle of the lens is closed, it can focus on giving colour to the cyclorama, especifically to the colourless roses while the queen gardener characters with paintbrushes are doing a sequence as if they were colouring the roses themselves. Thus, this will contribute to one convention of surrealistic theatre which is the action is going beyond a realistic situtation , transforming into a dream-like fantasy sequence. 

Continuosly, another interesting usage of the cyclorama was after alice's fall through the rabbit hole when reaching the hall of doorsto demonstrate Alice's random and ilogical size changing when drinking the Pishsolver potion to shrink and eating the Upelkuchen cake to grow. The cyclorama displayed the coloured doors increasing in size when Alice drunk the potion to attempt an entrance into the small portal that leaded her into Wonderland. By the use of the cyclorama displaying the increasing size of the doors in comparison to the microscopic size of Alice helped creating this sense of entrapment in a distorted reality of simple colorful doors growing with no logical explanations. However, when Alice tried eating the Upelkuchen loaf, she grew enormesly; making the cyclorama display rather than large doors, extremely diminute doors she couldn't even fit in. Therefore, the cyclorama contributed to the spacial setting of the hall of doors, illustrating Alice's perspective  in constant change regarding her surroundings. In order to create this moment, we could use two relative sized doors and one smal door to mark the entry of Wonderland. The two relatively sized doors could go each on one side of the stage while the small door can be closely attached to the cyclorama displaying a gif of doors increasing and decreasing in size. Otherwise with the use of fresnels, by opening the angles of the lens they could give a wider ilumination to the cyclorama showing the doors or reflecting specially the two colorful wooden doors to emphasize there huge size. Perhaps, there could be a mini blackout where backstage changes the regular table found in the hall into a tall legged table to demonstrate the microscopic size of Alice kneeled down in comparison to her surroundings which they are unattainable for her to reach .When eating the Upelkuchen, the cyclorama could display a hall of diminute doors where Alice is extremely big sized. Therefore, during the growth there could be another blackout where the tall legged table is changed for the regular table once again while Alice is perhaps in a stretched position.In terms of the light, the fresnels could close their angel of lens to shorten the size of the doors.   



For the school play, we don't need to necessarily in every scene use a specific and exaggerated scenery, instead corporal movements and body expressions can express more than words. In scene II, the fact that there was minimalistic stage use and  no physical scenery was literally staged gave emphasis upon the formation of circles and spirals  the silhouete characters performed to create a distorted reality, an unwaitened fall into a rabit hole which is the secret passage to the mad and illogical world of Wonderland. The absence of a structured scenery was covered by the use of black and white lights blacking out while there were silhouetes observed surrounding Alice, forming spirals and doing spins to create a disorder in the stage. For the silhouettes to portray the fall of Alice formed with their body close to one another building  stairs as if Alice when climbing it falls literally into the hole. As effect, it made Alice's fall magical and unique which catched the audience's immediate attention and placed them at the same time, in the same confused state of mind as Alice herself. Therefore, the used of silhouetess produced a confusion beyond reality, distorting it completely and renacting Alice's inlogical fall through a rabbit hole which with her conscious, she created the mysterious and mad world of Wonderland. For our play, I believe it would be effective in not doing a literal hole but accompanied with a turbulent and magical tune or several blackout of the fresnels, cenital and cans lights in order to mark the contrast between the real world near the river creek and Alice's unconscious creating her insane childhood adventure in Wonderland.   






domingo, 20 de septiembre de 2015

Director's notebook

Description:
During this week, we began discovering and learning about one of the projects of our Drama IB course, the director's notebook. This task gives the student the ability of becoming a director, making decisions regarding the overall practical and creative interpretation of two specific moments or scenes of an established script of a play. In our case, we will do a demo version of the social realistic play "A streetcar named Desire" written by the American playwright Tennessee Williams, a play recently studied in the English IB course.

Analysis:
From the beginning of our course, the main aim we desire to accomplish by the end of the IB is to become remarkable theatre makers. We have been carrying this out by working hard in each of the three areas of Theatre: Acting, Producing and finally, Directing throughout the school play, one act play and others. In this task, we will demonstrate our talent of being competent directors by directing a published play text and recording our own artistic responses and creative ideas as if we would stage it. By having this task, we are putting in practice our abilities as potential theatre makers since we are placing our creativity as input in order to produce an outcome of our own. However, in this task we have encountered an obstacle that will challenge us particularly, the inability of making changes to the script of the published play selected. I must admit, we will have a slight disadvantage in this task since most of our plays, when we make them, are usually based on  improvisation, adaptation and own creation. Last year's ensemble project is an example reflecting this skill. In this final project, we were directors creating our own play, deciding a concept and vision of our own. In fact, we had complete control of the decision making of the play. We were able to create an own unique script and had liberty in choosing the design elements and acting style that would transmit our concept and vision to the audience, in my case "Everything happens for a reason, whether you wished for it or not". An example is that our inspiration was the butterfly effect, one small change can result large differences in the future. We illustrated this vision by having the stage divided in half; each side had the exact scenery (half of a yellow couch, a blue table and a prescribed bottle of pills to cure their daily impulsivity). One was responsible and drunk it while the other one did not, echoing the butterfly effect we originally wanted to transmit to the audience. Even though the ensemble project and directors notebook sound alike, they differ in some properties as demonstrated above. By fact, we must have recorded in our brains that this time, we are not creating the play but we are applying our concept and vision without removing essential motifs, themes or symbols reflecting the playwrights original thoughts and ideas. 

The director's notebook is taking us to a whole new level. It is true, directing is not as easy as it seems. I learned that as a director, you must acknowledge amazing research skills into the inner and outer context of the play in order to make relevant design and acting choices to echo the playwright's main ideas but adding with your own creative vision also. We were able to prove this semi- experience (we were not directors, we were producers and actors but practically we adjusted the original play) by doing this year's school play, "Retorno a Ayodhya". We had to do a further digging into the outer and inner context of the Ramayana, our inspirational play. Additionally, we had to investigate on the Kathakali dance-drama theatre tradition and its different conventions such as the mudras, exaggerated costumes, colorful makeup, moral beliefs (no showing death scenes), kalaripayattu body movements and more. Although, we made an extensive research upon the context of the play, we adapted it and did slight changes that would satisfy our concept and vision we wanted to transmit to the audience "el destino no esta escrito, cualquiera puede guiarlo". From this experience, I learned that directing is not that easy after all because you have to do a complete background research of the outer and inner context of the playtext in order to take the correct decisions regarding the design elements and acting style you wish to use to transmit your concept and vision. Nevertheless, without ignoring the ethical stance and ideas the playwright wants to transmit in his play.  

Connections:
This remembers me of the ensemble project, when we had our brainstorming journals where all our recordings of our artistic and creative ideas were written to contribute to the building-up process of our unique masterpiece. Like in this task, it is required to record every single artistic response, first impression or creative ideas regarding the play text in a brainstorming journal but then the relevant ideas will go within the official director's notebook that will eventually feel alive as our journals of our ensemble projects did. The difference was that we staged the ensemble project while the director notebook will not; however, directors must imagine in their mind as if their plays would be coming to life on stage. Since in the ensemble project we were actors, producers and directors simultaneously; it reminded me the feeling of being in control, sitting in the director’s position and seeing through his very own eyes how his creative annotations and ideas come to life on stage. 

Reflection:
Even though we have just started officially this project, I am enthusiastic about it but at the same time, it worried me a bit. It is because directors usually get excited and want to transmit their vision and concept with the different design elements and acting styles of their cast. However, what happens if their enthusiasm overthrows their reasoning?  How does the director notice if he has gone beyond his imagination and ignored the context and the important themes the playwright wants to transmit since the beginning of his play since he has been benighted by his artistic desires?