Online: 2 hours / 5 x 1 hour In person: Half / Full Day
Would you like to gain confidence in teaching physical theatre and comedy?
We can help you develop a tool kit of techniques to take into the classroom to ensure you anchor your students, inspire their devising work and enable them to access texts from a performance perspective.
Commedia dell’Arte is taught in most drama schools as a movement foundation for all styles of acting. It is a brilliant, inclusive style that will stretch and challenge every student. This practical workshop explores the origins and physicality of the Commedia dell’Arte stock characters, a range of comic techniques and practical staging considerations. We also look at how the Commedia archetypes can be found in classic texts.
Learning Commedia dell’Arte helps:
Awaken the physical performer inside you, gaining confidence to model physical theatre in class
Develop a range of transferable techniques for teaching any type of comedy
Equip you with historical knowledge to feed into your teaching
Inspire you with new ideas for teaching classic texts, such as, Shakespeare
Benefits for your students:
They will gain confidence to be physically and vocally expressive, aiding any form of public performance
They will learn to practise and refine their expressive capacity to communicate ideas and dramatic action
Improved ability to work collaboratively, using effective communication and improvisation, to generate, develop and communicate ideas; devising narrative structures and developing storytelling skills
Discover a way to access classical texts through the study of archetypes
Learn transferable skills that will increase their physical awareness of stage dynamics and how to control their presence with it
Understand the theatrical conventions that emerged during the Renaissance and in turn, understand aspects of the social, cultural and historical context in which Shakespeare and his contemporaries were writing
Make artistic choices, considering the impact on an audience, through a process of peer- and self-evaluation
What we will cover:
The historical context of Commedia dell’Arte; the origins and theatrical relevance of each character; the influence of this Renaissance style
Specific exaggerated movement repertoire, voice and mannerisms for the characters, using the breath, grammelot (gibberish language that mimics dialects), masks and props
The key principles of mask work, staging considerations and the actor-audience relationship
The relationships between the characters, exploring classic lazzi (comic gags) or meccanismi (rehearsed comic sequences between two or more characters) as ways into improvisation and devising