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The Experience of Theatre
How Theatre Happens
Directing Theatre
The Relationship Between Engineering
and Audience
-- Introduction
-- The Space
-- Technical Conditions
-- Climate Conditions
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-- Theatrical Conventions
-- Performance Conventions
-- Style Conventions
-- Creativity
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Directing Theatre
by Debra Bruch
Ultimately,
theatre needs three elements: actors, play, and audience. But for theatre
to actualize its potential, a person would need to impose a point of
view that would penetrate all aspects of the production. That person
is the director. A director is not only in charge of all aspects of
production, as an artist he or she has a vision that ties all performance
elements together. That vision is often the result of creative collaboration
with designers, but, ultimately, it is the director's responsibility
to decide what that vision would be.
While
directing as an art truly came into prominence during the late nineteenth
century, a director in one form or another existed since the classical
Greek era. In ancient Greek theatre, the didaskalos, meaning
teacher, instructed the performers. The Medieval age employed stage
managers called conducteurs de secrets. Shakespeare may have
directed his company at the Globe Theatre during the Elizabethan age.
And Moliere coached his company.
From
1750 to 1850, the manager/director or actor/manager/director came into
prominance. Forces which helped shape the need for a director at this
time are public interest in antiquarianism, the development of scenery
and scene shifting, and the focus on production over playscript. In
Directing the Play, Cole and Chinoy further explain this era
as a preparation for the director's domain.
As production more and more usurped the power
once held by the play itself, they perfected the implements with which
the director would work -- the rehearsal, the coordinated acting group
and the external paraphernalia of archaeological sets and authentic
costumes and props. Their activities revealed the creative contribution
to be made by a single autocrat in charge of production.(1)
The
director as a separate and important entity impacted the theatre world
in 1874 when the Duke of Saxe-Meiningen toured Europe with his troupe
of actors. The tour showed theatre artists the value and artistic opportunity
a director could have. For six years prior to the tour, the Duke of
Saxe-Meiningen implemented basic directing principles which continue
to be used, if modified, today. His principles included intensive rehearsals,
the demand for disciplined and ensemble acting, historically accurate
sets and costumes, extensive use of stage business, the directorial
need for vision and total control over all aspects of the production,
and the value of minute detail.
Overall,
the practices implemented by the Duke of Saxe-Meiningen continue today.
The director has two basic charges: (1) to implement a collaborative
unified vision within the finished production, and (2) to lead others
toward its ultimate actualization. To meet these charges, the director
must organize the realization of vision. The director must decide upon
the interpretation to be given the play, work with the playwright (if
possible), designers, and technicians in planning the production, cast
and rehearse the actors, and coordinate all elements into the finished
production.
To
decide upon interpretation, the director must analyze the script to
discover the play's structure and meanings. Without understanding, the
director cannot make choices. He or she seeks to know what the play
is about and to understand each character in terms of both the script
and the demands that character places upon the actor. The director must
be able to envision the play's atmosphere or mood and know how to actualize
in terms of design and theatrical space. And, finally, the director
must be able to see the play in terms of both physical and verbal action.
Before
rehearsals begin, the director meets with the designers. At this time,
the director not only promotes his or her vision, but also listens to
ideas from the other artists. This highly creative intercourse results
in a compromise which often is better than the original vision, for
creative ideas interact with other creative ideas. Ultimately however,
the director decides upon the interpretation to be used. The director
may have specific requirements that would need to be presented to the
designers before their work begins. The director must be aware of actor
movement when viewing a design. Also, the director must have an idea
of what kind of lighting would help enhance the mood of the production.
When
casting a play, the director is aware of the physical demands of a character.
Physical appearance must fit the character. For instance, a thin Falstaff
would probably not work well. Physical appearance must also be seen
in relation to other characters in order to perceive that person's suitability
to the ensemble as a whole. The director also tries to discern acting
potential. In his book, Theatre, Robert Cohen describes traits
that a director often looks for:
Depending on the specific demands on the play
and the rehearsal situation, the director may pay special attention
to any or all of the following characteristics: the actor's training
and experience, physical characteristics and vocal technique, suitability
for the style of the play, perceived ability to impersonate a specific
character in the play, personality traits which seem fitted to the
material at hand, ability to understand the play and its milieu, personal
liveliness and apparent stage "presence," past record of
achievement, general deportment and attitude, apparent cooperativeness
and "directability" in the context of an ensemble of actors
in a collaborative enterprise, and overall attractiveness as a person
with who one must work closely over the next four to ten weeks.(2)
The
director's most time-consuming task is to rehearse the actors. His or
her main role is to serve as the conduit between performance and audience.
The director constantly sees and hears the actors through the eyes and
ears of an audience member. The director must be organized, for he or
she focuses the entire cast during this time. The director's medium
is the actor in space and time. Space is defined by the acting area
and the setting while time is defined by the duration of the production
and the dynamics of the drama.(3) The director must be able to see the
actor as a person and strive to draw out that person's potential. Consequently,
the director constantly must be sensitive to both the needs of an actor
and at the same time think of ways to meet those needs in positive ways.
Directors
tend to follow an established process during rehearsals. Initially,
the director usually has the actors read through the script. The read-through
allows the director to discuss his or her vision, character motivation,
and interpretation which will help the actors begin to see their characters
in terms of a unified understanding. The director then blocks the actors.
Blocking are an actor's basic broad movements which serve as the physical
foundation of the actor's performance. The director indicates movement
such as entrances and exits and positions actors onstage. Often, this
step takes preplanning. During this stage, interpretation begins to
be worked out, for blocking is linked to a character's motivation to
move or position.
The
next step would be to work on detail, which helps an actor discover
his or her character. Detail includes working out stage business, which
is an actor's small-scale movement. For instance, making coffee, answering
a phone, putting on shoes, or adjusting a tie are pieces of stage business.
Hopefully, the actor will originate much of his or her own stage business.
Motivation
and detail continue while time is spent devoted to lines. Interpretation
of dialogue must be connected to motivation and detail. During this
time, the director is also concerned with pace and seeks a variation
of tempo. If the overall pace is too slow, then the action becomes dull
and dragging. If the overall pace is too fast, then the audience will
not be able to understand what is going on, for they are being hit with
too much information to process.
Also,
eventually, the actors will need to be off script. Once off script and
the lines are memorized well enough that the actor is not thinking "What
is my next line?" then the rehearsals enter into a very rewarding
stage of development, for actors cease to read their part and truly
make it living. They also discover new avenues of interpretation once
off script.
Late
in the rehearsal process, the director often has the actors run through
the production. A runthrough gives the actors a sense of continuity
from one scene to the next. At this stage, the director usually does
not stop the actors but takes notes to give after the scene is finished.
Nearly
all elements of the production -- actors, scenery, lights, sound --
come together at the technical rehearsal. The stage manager, prop crew,
running crew, light and sound board operators all rehearse their various
parts to play. Hopefully, light and sound cues will be set before the
first technical rehearsal begins. A dress rehearsal is a technical rehearsal
with costumes and makeup. At this time, the director must give over
the production to the actors and technicians. The final dress rehearsal
should be the same as a performance.
Nobody
is more useless on opening night performance than the director. The
director's job is over at this time and often feels lost and alone.
The best the director can do is to wish people well, sit, watch the
performance, know every flaw during that performance, and sweat it out
without having a heart attack.
(1) Cole, Toby and Helen Krich Chinoy, eds. Directing
the Play (1953)
(2) Robert Cohen, Theatre, 2nd ed. (Mountain View, California:
Mayfield Publishing Company, 1988) 455.
(3) Cohen 458.
Copyright 1990 Debra Bruch
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