Will_Sparky
Left BOS 8/7/2005...
Well as much as I'd hate to admit it, HSC exams are coming up and we need to get together some practice essay questions. Here are the ones from a few HSC's to get us started. Please keep this thread on topic and spam free .
Australian Drama
Absurdism
Meyerhold
American Drama
Irish Drama (Only 2003 Available)
Brecht (Only 2003 Available)
Australian Drama
- How does the Australian drama you have studied use particular forms and conventions to explore significant experiences of living in this country?
- 'Australian plays make ordinary situations and issues more interesting by the way they are staged.’
Discuss to what extent theatrical techniques and styles are used to entertain and challenge an audience in the Australian drama that you have studied.
- ‘The weakness of Australian drama is that it relies on stereotyped characters to explore serious social and personal issues.’
Discuss this statement, considering the challenges and opportunities for people staging productions of the plays you have studied.
- "The function of Australian Drama has always been the development of a unique Australian identity. This identity is inextricably linked to the land"
Discuss this statement with reference to Summer of the Seventeenth Doll and Mother and Son (Try for Cont. Aust.)
Absurdism
- ‘Most plays in the Theatre of the Absurd include elements of the violent, the
illogical and the hopeless — this is what makes them so funny.’
Discuss this statement, referring to the style and dramatic techniques of Waiting for Godot and TWO other texts set for study.
- ‘Nothing to be done.’
The first line from Waiting for Godot could be said to sum up the Theatre of the
Absurd, except that there’s always something happening.
Discuss this statement with reference to the theatrical features and dramatic action of theTheatre of the Absurd as realised in performance. You must refer to Waiting for Godot and TWO other texts set for study.
- ‘Human interactions are central to Absurdist drama, but the plays show that these are ultimately meaningless.’
Discuss this statement, showing how the performance of the plays you have studied might present optimistic and pessimistic images of the human condition. In your answer, refer to Waiting for Godot and TWO other plays set for study.
- "Absurd Drama is the theatrical expression of intellectual ideas"
Imagine that you are a director and have been employed to direct two absurd plays. One is Waiting For Godot, the other is either The Zoo Story or The Dumb Waiter. Explain how you would use the stylistic devices inherent in absurdism to express the fundamental philosophies behind the style. in your answer, refer to key practioners and theorists.
Meyerhold
- Identify the most important theatrical innovations in Meyerhold’s work and discuss their significance for today’s theatre.
- Discuss how Meyerhold used physical actions to express emotional relationships between characters, with reference to Figure 1 and other examples you have studied, including relevant contemporary theatre.
- ‘Meyerhold worked to tear down the boundaries that separate theatre from life.’
Discuss this statement, highlighting the ongoing relevance of Meyerhold’s theatrical innovations for the contemporary stage.
American Drama
- ‘American drama examines moral dilemmas that are real but the dramatic styles used are not realistic.’
Discuss this statement with reference to TWO of the texts set for study.
- The American plays set for study use expressionist and symbolist techniques in order to change people’s perceptions of the world.
Discuss the dramatic techniques that might be used to produce TWO of these plays in 2002 so as to create relevant and challenging theatrical experiences.
- ‘American drama has always found new theatrical forms to explore the changing American identity.’
Discuss this statement, showing how dramatic techniques can be used to present images, on the stage, of living in America. In your answer, refer to TWO of the plays set for study.
Irish Drama (Only 2003 Available)
- ‘Irish theatre always deals with conflicting ideas about what it means to be Irish.’
Discuss this statement, showing how the plays you have studied could be staged so as to produce a range of ideas and images of Ireland and the Irish. In your answer, refer to TWO of the texts set for study.
Brecht (Only 2003 Available)
- ‘Brecht’s theatre was designed to prevent the spectators from remaining passive observers.’
Discuss how Brecht used his practice of epic staging and other dramatic techniques to jolt audiences into thought and action. In your answer, refer to TWO of the plays set for study.
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