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Section 4 Drama Forms
Drama forms
Drama Forms
Drama orms are composed within specic drama structures that dene, shape, and dierentiate ways in which drama is explored. Drama orms oten ollow an established design. Dramatic structures are movement, speech, improvisation, and scene work. Within these structures, the orms o drama are listed and dened below.
Movement
Clowning
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The act o clowning draws upon skill-based exaggerated movements and gestures, in order to create humour or the audience.
Dance
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Choreographed dance is a prepared, rehearsed series o movements with or without music.
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Creative movement is ree and exploratory movement, with or without music.
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Dance drama tells a narrative through dance and movement.
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Movement to music may be used as a warm-up activity. It is an exploration o how we use our bodies to explore space and communicate meaning in a narrative orm.
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Stories to music involve general movements to communicate a narrative to the audience.
Mask Work
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Exploration o movement using masks to bring ocus to the physical expression o the body.
Mime
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Pantomime is acting without words through acial expression, gesture, and movement. Communication is rendered through the silent acts o the actor. One who perorms in this convention is a mime.
Stage Fighting
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Choreographed movements designed to simulate ghting between actors.
Drama 2206 InterIm CurrICulum GuIDe
Drama forms
Tableau
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Improvisation
A silent and motionless scene created by actors to draw ocus to the main theme o the drama. The use o this genre is intended to draw upon audience refection or to intensiy the emotion o the scene. The plural o this genre is tableaux.
Character in Role
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A person role-playing a character in a particular situation. Sometimes teachers take on a role to assist with the drama process.
Improvisational Drama
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A spontaneous style o theatre in which there is no set script and where scenes are created without advance preparation.
Role Play
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Activity in which individuals assume identities other than their own.
Spontaneous Stories
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Speech
Verbal warm-up activity in which narratives are created.
Choral Work
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Ensemble speech or singing. Chanting could be also be used.
Monologues
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Long speeches by a single character.
Radio Drama
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A drama that is intended to be listened to instead o viewed.
Reader’s Theatre
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Drama 2206 InterIm CurrICulum GuIDe
A perormance created by actors reading a script.
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Drama forms
Recitation
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The oral presenting o a scripted piece o work. It oten involves monologues, rhymes, ballads, etc.
Soundscape
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The use o various overlapping sounds to create an atmosphere.
Storytelling
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Scene Work
Relating stories to an audience.
Collective Creation
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The group process o writing an original script.
Docudrama
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The use o dramatic devices to illustrate a real lie situation through perormance. It could also be used to describe an imaginary event as i it were an actual event.
Puppetry
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Includes a broad range o props: almost anything brought to lie by human hands to create a perormance. Types o puppets include rod, hand, and marionette.
Story Theatre
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A theatrical perormance o an existing story where every line o the story is spoken by the characters.