Sunday, 17 November 2013

Tuesday 12th November 2013. Lesson 4.

AMANDA.
Today we were given our lines for the abstract play 'Amanda' by Theatre Uncut. 

Throughout the 4 hours we worked on 2 performances working on politicians to help us understand the play better, as Amanda in the play is a politician, performing the completely human and natural act of taking a bath. Therefore we used this to create 3 short scenes showing the politician as a politician, a human and a victim. 
In our first performance my group decided to focus on the educational side of politics. In particular the act of making the exams harder for the younger generation.

  •  POLITICIAN. In the first scene it is a television broadcast of the news where they scene is handed over to a correspondent who interviews the politician on his views on making the exams harder. He is completely for it and gives reasons such of the youth of today don't care unlike in his time, and they just spend their time drinking and having fun so the harder exams will force them to pay more attention and care more. 
  • HUMAN. In the second scene it is a flashback to the time when the politician himself was doing his exams and it focus' on his friend studying hard but then he comes in and distracts him with alcohol and music, the scene then progresses to a large number of friends all drinking and having a good time and completely disregarding the fact there exams are in 2 weeks because they were easy enough not to revise for.
  • VICTIM. The last scene shows the politician at home with his wife and children but his children are struggling with their exam preparation because their father had just made the exams harder. It shows his children upset with him and angry and blaming him for the way the exams turned out. In the end the father is upset and ashamed of the pain and upset he inflicted on his children. 



In the second performance our group had to make a performance similar to 'Amanda' in the fact that the politician has to be doing something very human and natural (like in 'Amanda' her taking a bath) but add narration of different voices to get an input of what he's thinking and what worries had followed him home. 
  • We chose to put our politician on the toilet. We chose this because its something so simple that everyone does everyday. Although i though it would be comical we managed to portray it with a very serious tone.
  • The politician walks into the bathroom and has a reflection mirroring him, the side of himself that puts him down. The other voices are part of the bathroom, the reflection being the mirror, the sink being his failing son, the flusher being a voice of all children taking exams, the toilet paper being a man who can't get a job because he failed and the plunger being someone who had to retake all her exams again and again. 
  • We chose to focus on the same political problem as before because we all felt passionate about it as we were all effected when the grade boundaries were put up.
  • We had a sound-scape pf abuse coming from the narrators as the politician George was going to the toilet. As if the narration was his thoughts they ended up making him sick from all the terrible things he had done.
  • We added in lines such as 'you can't flush this mess away' and 'you can't wash away your problems' for irony and to make it clear of where we are.
  • Overall I think it was a successful performance as it portrayed the inner thoughts of a politician like in 'Amanda'. 

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