In "The Last Night of Ballyhoo", is an outstanding play written, by Alfred Uhry, around the 1996 and premiering in Olympic Arts Festival in Atlanta, Georgia. Ballyhoo's living room is big part of the playwright and the play setting was created to give a visual for the audience. The scene that where held in a small play setting that allow the audience to get more of an intimate experience of the play. The actors did a phenomenal job bringing their character to life. The play scenes where very minimalistic which help the actors with their scene transitions go more smoothly and keep the audience engaged. This paper will be a critique of the "The Last Night of Ballyhoo" directed by Carolyn Houston Boone.
Alfred Uhry wrote "The Last Night of Ballyhoo"
…show more content…
From the beginning of the play you see Lala and her mother Boo having a discussion of Ballyhoo and who was going to take her to the dance. Boo was pressuring Lala to call a boy that lives in Lake Charles, so he would ask her to the dance. It was important for Boo that her daughter had date to the dance because she was not as popular as the other girls her age, and she was hoping that if a Peachy took her to the dance it would change Lala's reputation and become popular. I do not completely agree with this kind of social standing, but Lala's mother actions where coming from a place a love and she did not want her daughter to end up alone. The second theme was about anti-Semitism, the actors had very light conversion about the subject, but it seem that was something that they did not want to be part of or even talk about. For example, on the night of I do not agree with this because they you treat each other equally no matter what side they are born from.
Furthermore, The Quintero Theater is a 50'x 50' black box theatre with re-configurable seating risers and 185 seats. It was a small set that had living room/ dining room area. The set was simple, and it had a lot old fashion furniture that you don't see that much unless you have grandparent that still have old style furniture. The theater was small and minimalistic and help the audience feel closer the
Haley Boyd Introduction to Theatre-1000-602 Reflective journal entry #2 In the play entitled Dog Lady, the author Milcha Sanchez-Scott uses a thought provoking approach to share the ideas of a Catholic culture trying to blend into an American cultural system. The play is written in a comedic fashion but causes the reader to think seriously about changes that occur in the lives of the various characters in the play. This reflective journal writing will look at the elements of drama, and how Rosalina transitioned to find her identity.
While a decaying plantation can be represented in a backdrop on a traditional stage, placing the production in front of an actual surviving plantation would add a heightened effect, putting the audience in the scene. The production would be staged at night, not only to emphasize the secrecy of the first scene, but to present the play at a time when the heat of the day as begun to cool. For placing the audience, typical risers and chairs would never fit, for it would ruin the old Southern aesthetic. Instead, a semi-circle of tables and chairs, would line the production, as if set for an outside banquet. The tables would have to fit the time period, as well as the full table-setting on them.
The scenes consist of the many techniques mentioned above, there are two main characters are shown and the play is set in contrasting between the past and the present. There are two real locations that are the TV studio and Melbourne hotel, however the interplay of the techniques in the scenes works together to create a wartime setting. The audience awareness is developed through the historical information from each scene. Theatrical devices a re combined to create various features and have a great dramatic impact. The structure promotes the audience to watch the play because the structure of this storyboard is contrasted between the past and present that will attract audience attention, as it is an historical play set between different times.
The set design was interesting in the fact that it they could make many scenes just off six doors and a building in the back. I am not sure what was flying in and out, but the guess is that soft goods were attached to a fly system to help reinforce the idea of different places. Everything in the design aspect was a period piece. Nothing stood out of this period and really put me in the 18th century period. Overall, this production was enjoyable and would be worth experiencing in a playhouse rather than a computer
“One the television screen were ballerinas”(Vonnegut, Jr. 1) with this use of ballerinas at almost the beginning of the story Vonnegut tries to give a foreshowing of were the climax will happen. The setting in where everything is a studio set “Two of of the eight ballerinas had collapsed to the studio floor” (Vonnegut, Jr. 2). The studio is where Harrison a.k.a. the Emperor meets his end by the Diana Moon Glampers, “the Handicapper General. Came into the studio with a … shotgun.
Trees were placed at either side of the set to frame the setting. Logs were also placed DSR and DSL, this was a representation of where the younger version of Alice would commonly go to play and look at the mountains with Nugget. There was a see through curtain at the back of the stage where each character placed themselves when not in the scene, this gave the characters purpose on stage. The table placed centre stage provided the main space for characters to communicate and connect. An example of the use of the table was when Nugget and Alice would sit around the table - he would tell her stories and helped Alice with her schoolwork.
I believe that the physical elements of the performance were effective in demonstrating the setting in every scene perform by the actors of the play. Sometimes the actors will carry a hat, a pig nose, or a giant eye in their forehead to personalize the characters that they were playing. For example, an actress wore a giant eye on her forehead, which help the audience to identify her as the cyclops. Tables, chairs, lights, and speakers were the main physical elements on the stage. The setting was being manipulated by the actors, sometimes they will move the table to one side, or towards the middle in order to build a particular setting.
While both stage and screen portrayals were highly acclaimed there are some similarities as well as some marked differences in each interpretation. On the surface, the first difference noted between the stage and screen versions are the sets. The stage version describes the setting of the play, the Younger family living room, as a
The stage design gives the impression of the characters being in two separate rooms, the positioning of blocks and pillars helps again to demonstrate this. This intricate attention to detail enables the performance to be compared so similarly to the movie adaptation of Shakespeare’s classic, although the ‘big screen’ enables more room for a fast change in setting and shots, Rourke does a phenomenal job trying to create this illusion which works so brilliantly. The night before the wedding or you could refer to it as the ‘stag and hen do’ was an unexpected twist that the audience definitely did not see coming. Again, the revolving stage was used to represent the divide between the women and the men and to compensate for the lack of space that the stage could carry.
1. Several motifs in the first pages of this chapter present a real sense of theater: •Mr. Smith flapping his wide blue wings on the roof of Mercy Hospital •Red velvet rose petals spilled in the snow •The woman (Pilate) singing the song, “O Sugarman” They will reappear frequently in the novel. What contrasts do they present to the world Macon Dead would like to build?
The productions of this play were successful through stage design, lighting crewing, and acting. Those three aspects made the quality of the play stand out to me, as an audience member. The production of the set design of the play was a good effort. The set design for the play staging aims for the sweet spot between feeding adult nostalgia and satisfying a new generation of children.
This essay will discuss how the film uses these two techniques, in reference to the film, and to what ideological and political ends are the techniques used in the films with specific references from the film to support the argument. A Man with a Movie Camera is based around one man who travels around the city to capture various moments and everyday
To summarize this essay, there are several points that highlight differences between the two films, yet the overall context of the film remains the same. One common theme that tends to drive the force between the reasoning in why the two films have varying aspects is because they were made for slightly different audiences at different times in society. Though both versions of the movie have small portions that vary from one another, the main emphasis is the same and both versions are loved by the
The décor of the film is done perfectly with the time, having the furniture and decorations fitting the time of the movie. If the movie did not fit the décor during the time it would not make the movie feel the same way. You really see the décor in the bar lounge with how it was set up, and in their hotel suite with the curtains and couches. One of the properties I noticed was definitely the piano mans, piano that was a very important part of the movie, you saw the significance of the instrument. The elements of design look the way they do, because you need to be able to believe that the movie is actually portrayed during the time of the 1940’s.
In the Movie and the play the characters look a lot different from each other. In the play they were dressed in more fancy clothing such as suits and other older looking clothes. IN the movie they were not as fancy