The Fundamentals of Drama
There are a number of fundamental qualities that need
to be inexistence for drama to be created. This section highlights some
of the critical elements that are typically part of a dramatic or a
theatrical performance. Different types of performances emphasise different
elements.
Three Basic Elements for Theatre to be Produced:
It can be argued that there are three basics
elements that must be present in any performance.
1. Something that is performed.
This might be a formal script or it could be a
general scenario or even just a basic plan or sketch of what is going
to happen. Many different types of activities can be regarded as ‘Performance’.
If a performance adheres to certain principles of form and style, audiences
can easily identify action as performance rather than spontaneous events.
Here is a list of some forms of drama/theatre which you may be familiar
with:
Comic routines as seen at Comedy Clubs.
Shakespearian Tragedy performed by the major theatre companies with enormous casts.
New Australian plays performed at La Boite with 5or 6 actors.
Vaudeville
Pantomimes like Disney on Ice.
Musical Plays like Les Miserables.
Street Carnivals like the Racecourse Road Fair or the Spring Hill Fair.
Agricultural carnivals like the Brisbane’s EKKA or the Sydney’s Royal Easter Show.
Parades like Brisbane’s Christmas Twilight Parade at South Bank, Sydney’s
Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras, or Melbourne’s Moomba.
As this list demonstrates, theatre is not always a
staged performance of a written text. It does not require a script,
dialogue, or even drama. For example, juggling and acrobatic displays
can be regarded as theatre but there is no script, no dialogue, and
no drama.
2. The performance
There needs to something that can be identified
as a performance. It typically involves many different processes. The
creation and presentation of a production often include all or some
of the following features:
Set |
Lighting |
Costumes |
Music |
Sound effects |
Actors/Dancers/Singers |
All the components should be integrated to create
a unified performance piece. Sometimes, however, one overshadows the
rest. For example, spectacular stage effects dominate popular musicals
like The Phantom of the Opera and Les Miserables. Here
the music, singing, dancing, and acting are all subordinated to the
scenery.
The performance is the site for the transformation
of the script, the scenario, or the plan into reality. The normal process
for the creation of performance is the fleshing out of a script or plan
by applying specific aspects of the theatrical process. The performance
must take place in some sort of SPACE. (For some extra reading you should
see Peter Brook’s The Empty Space). Performances take place in:
Purpose built theatres |
Tents |
Streets |
Parks |
Pubs |
The
size of the space can vary between holding less than 10 or more than
20,000.
3.
The audience
Someone needs to see the performance before
it can really be recognised as a performance. Until something is presented
before an ‘audience’ we do not usually consider it to be theatre. According
to Peter Brook:
“The only thing that all
forms of theatre have in common is the need for an audience”
Audiences affect performances in many ways: