Saturday 17 September 2016

jackie or first scrip work

                                               Meaning of scrip: script is a written version of a play or movie. If you're auditioning for a movie, you'll get the script to practice a scene or two. Script comes from the Latin scrībĕre, meaning "to write," and all its meanings have to do with something written. Your handwriting is your script


Fallout: is a script it was writing by Roy Williams, it a winner at the Evening Standard’s most promising. Playwright award, in 2001.
Roy Will decided to write fallout bass on the story that happened to the young boy called (Damilola Taylor).

Damilola Taylor was born on the 7th of December 1989 and was found dead on November 27th 2000, at the age of 10. By several young boys that were cleared of murder charges after a lengthy trial, and later two brothers were convicted of manslaughter.
Although the play isn’t exactly like what happened to the late (Damilola Taylor). However Roy William was inspired by his story and decided to write fallout bass on what happened to him.
Moreover fallout, is about a young boy who was found dead. A police who is called, (Joe Stephen) had to move back to his old neighbourhood for the investigation, on what happen to the young boy who got murdered. (Shanice) who’s one of the mean characters thought she was the last one to him, studiously avoid his enquires into her boyfriend (Emile’s gang of friend). Meanwhile her best friend (Ronnie) which is the character I play, saw something she swears she will never tell. But when a £30k reward is offered and Ibiza beckons, the girls and boys face the biggest test of street loyalty in their young lives. Fallout provides a terrifying insight into a council estate with a gang murder of a kind all too familiar in our inner cities. Roy Williams writing snap and made a rapid success, with his characters emotion and contradiction.



Friday 16 September 2016

joa dance

Day one: we learned our first  routine and watch a video from frantic assembly, and learned we was going to be doing a duet chair challenge, we was put in a group of two and practice the move from the video she show us. me and Temwanie repeated it until we got it right. we had 15 minute to come up with extra move we added at the end.

It seemed really challenging at first whilst watching it but and the end it turned out much easier then it seems. i have a finishing video of our routine! am going to link it down below.

Our future target improve in our moves.


videos
   
ME AND TEMWANIE

joa: dance, frantic assembly

Steven Hoggett


Steven Hoggett
Bornc. 1971
OccupationChoreographer
Years active1994–present
Steven Hoggett is a British choreographer and movement director. He has won an Olivier Award as well as an Obie Award, has been nominated four times for a Drama Desk Award and three times for a Tony Award.

Early life

Hoggett was brought up near Huddersfield, England. As a youth, he participated in the Huddersfield Choral Society Youth Choir and held jobs at Boots UK and a restaurant.He studied at Swansea University, where he studied literature.

Career

Hoggett gained early experience at a workshop with Volcano Theatre Company, based in Swansea. He then founded a physical theatre company in Wales called Frantic Assembly, with his friend and fellow student Scott Graham. The company's first production was a 1994 revival of John Osborne's classic Look Back in Anger,which Hoggett directed, produced, and performed in.
The company staged numerous productions in their early years, especially at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Their unique blend of theatre and movement began to attract attention, and soon Frantic Assembly were producing large scale touring work and collaborating with some of the UK's biggest theatre companies. Hoggett would go on to direct and choreograph several shows for the company, including "Beautiful Burnout" (with the National Theatre of Scotland), an adaptation of Shakespeare's "Othello", "pool, no water", "Stockholm", "Little Dogs" (with National Theatre Wales).
He first worked with childhood friend John Tiffany while Tiffany was Associate Director at the Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh on a production of Gregory Burke's "The Straits" in 2003. The pair then went on to collaborate on what would be their biggest success to date, Gregory Burke's Black Watch, which was first produced by the National Theatre of Scotland at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2006 The piece was an instant success, and would garner Hoggett the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Theatre Choreographer at the 2009 Laurence Olivier Awards, Along with a slew of other awards. The show undertook several extremely successful international tours, including a stint at the St. Ann's Warehouse in Brooklyn, which would lead to Hoggett working on many new productions in the USA. These included American IdiotPeter and the Starcatcher and Once, the musical adaptation of the hit independent film, directed by John Tiffany.
Once earned more Tony nominations (11) than any other production for the 2011-12 season. Hoggett also received a 2012 Obie Award special citation (along with Once colleagues Tiffany and Martin Lowe).
His other recent productions include choreography for the National Theatre production of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time (with Scott Graham), which garnered the pair an Olivier nomination. With Tiffany, an adaptation of the Swedish vampire novel Let The Right One In for the National Theatre of Scotland, Tony Nominated Fight Choreography for Rocky The Musical and Sting's new musical The Last Ship.,
Hoggett provided choreography for a computer animated sequence in the Dreamworks feature film How To Train Your Dragon 2. On June 26, 2015 it was announced that he would be working on the Harry Potter stage playThe Cursed Child with long time collaborator John Tiffany.

Major theatre credits


Start yearProductionRoleCompany / VenueNotes and awards
2006Black WatchChoreographerNational Theatre of Scotland* Won - 2009 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Theatre Choreographer
2010Beautiful BurnoutDirector & Choreographer, with Scott GrahamFrantic Assembly / National Theatre Scotland* Nominated - 2011 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Choreography
2010American IdiotChoreographerBroadway / US tour* Nominated – 2010 Astaire Award for Outstanding Choreographer of a Broadway Show
2011Peter and the StarcatcherMovementBroadway / US tour* Nominated – 2011 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Choreography
  • Won - 2011 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Choreographer
2011OnceMovementNYTW / Broadway / West End* Nominated – 2012 Tony Award, 2012 Astaire Award, 2012 Outer Critics Circle Award for Choreography, 2010-2011 Joe A. Callaway Award for Outstanding Choreography
  • Won- 2012 Special Citation Obie Award, along with Martin Lowe & John Tiffany, 2012 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Choreographer
2012The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-TimeChoreography, with Scott GrahamNational Theatre / West End / Broadway* Nominated – 2013 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Theatre Choreographer, with Scott Graham
  • Nominated – 2015 Tony Award, 2015 Astaire Award, with Scott Graham
2013The Glass MenagerieMovementAmerican Repertory Theatre / Broadway
2013The Light PrincessChoreographyNational Theatre
2013What's It All About? Bacharach ReimaginedDirectorNYTW / Menier Chocolate Factory / West End
2013Let the Right One InAssociate Director with John TiffanyNational Theatre of Scotland / West End / St. Ann's Warehouse
2014Rocky The MusicalFight ChoreographyStage Entertainments Hamburg / Broadway
  • Nominated – 2014 Tony Award (with Kelly Devine), 2014 Astaire Award, 2014 Drama Desk Award, 2014 Outer Critics Circle Award for Choreography
2014The Last ShipChoreographyBroaadway
  • Nominated – 2015 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Choreography, 2015 Astaire Award
2015BrooklyniteChoreography

Vineyard Theatre
2015The TwitsAssociate Director/MovementRoyal Court
2016The CrucibleMovementBroadway
2016Harry Potter and the Cursed ChildMovement DirectorWest End  




   

reacher on stanislavski

Konstantin Stanislavski



                                     Stanislavski is the pioneer of naturalistic acting.
Meaning of Naturalistic acting: " Naturalism is a movement in European drama and theatre that developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It refers to theatre that attempts to create an illusion of reality through a range of dramatic and theatrical strategies. "


Stanislavski, original name is Konstantin Sergeyevish Alekseyev, he was born on January 17 1863, in Moscow, Russia and died on august 7 1938. he was a Russian actor, director, and producer. Moreover he is also the founder of the Moscow Art Theatre, opened in 1898.


He was widely recognised as an outstanding character actor and the many productions that he directed, garnered a reputation as one of the leading theatre directors of his generation. His principal fame and influence, however, rests on his 'system' of actor training, preparation, and rehearsal technique. Stanislavski witch is his stage name, performed and directed as an amateur until the age of 33, when he co-found the world-famous Moscow Art Theatre (MAT) company with Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko, following a legendary 18-hour discussion, he had a influential tours of Europe (1906) and the US in (1923—4) and its landmark productions of The Seagull in (1898) and Hamlet in (1911—12) established his reputation and opened new possibilities for the art of the theatre. By means of the MAT, Stanislavski was instrumental in promoting the new Russian drama of his day—principally the work of Anton Chekhov, Maxim Gorky, and Mikhail Bulgakov—to audiences in Moscow and around the world; he also staged acclaimed productions of a wide range of classical Russian and European plays.