Monday, 6 January 2014

Danielle Hind
Theatre Studies

“As a director, discuss how you would stage the following extract from ‘Blood Wedding’ in order to bring out your interpretation of it for an audience.”

I have chosen to keep my adaption of Blood Wedding in early 20th century Spain because I feel that this will allow my production to display all the strong themes that are highlighted throughout the play. The main themes which I am going to include throughout the duration of the play will be: love, death, conformity/non-conformity, tragedy and blame. My acting style will be naturalistic because I think by doing this I will be able to create the suspense that Lorca intends, also it will allow my audience to build relationships with each character, giving them the opportunity to make their own decisions about how they feel about the characters. My staging choice will be a Proscenium arch because by doing this I will be able to create a big, elaborate set to ensure that the audience are fully aware of the scenery changes. As well as this I want my audience to be able to see what is going on all the time, by using this staging layout it will allow me to do so. My setting will be quite surreal and not really follow what people will expect. One of Lorca’s inspirations for the play was the work of Salvador Dali and Picasso, who were both surrealist and cubist artists. I am going to use ‘surrealist style’, block coloured props and set design, as this will reference to Picasso’s tonal qualities, this will help the audience to understand the mood and tone of the scene’s, this will also be accompanied by lighting to ensure the correct feel is created. Their inspiration’s to the play are strongly are strongly shown towards the end of the play, when characters such as the moon are introduced.

Throughout Act Three, Scene Two, Lorca prolongs the suspense about what has just happened to the Bride, the Bridegroom and Leonardo. He does this by focusing on the little girls and gradually starts providing the audience with information, through the townspeople who pass. Rather than portraying the murders first hand, Lorca want the readers and audience not to focus on the violence, but to instead focus on the devastation these deaths have had on the people in the community. On of the most important things which I am going to show is the lack of privacy in which the Mother, the Wife and the Bride have throughout the scene.

The extract begins with a neighbour entering during a heated argument between the Mother and the Bride. This happened three times throughout the extract to highlight the invasion of the privacy which Lorca intends to imply. The setting of the room will imply the intended emotions, in which I want my audience to feel throughout the ending of the play. Lorca wrote that the room will be all white, and I am going to follow this direction because by using the white to wash out all the colour it will create the idea of emptiness that the present characters will be feeling. Also to contrast the white the present characters, apart from the Bride, will be wearing black, traditionally linked with death, the Bride will remain in her blood splashed wedding dress to show the intended irony. The actor playing the Mother will be a s short, helpless looking lady, I would want my actor to look like this in order to emphasise her personality, as throughout the play she is shown to be very angry yet helpless. I would want my Bride to be tall, beautiful and dark haired and the Wife to be the complete opposite, so short and blonde, I would do this so it would create a clear contrast between the two. There will be very minimal props and setting in this scene to reinforce the emptiness of  the characters, a table and four chairs will be present at downstage left, where the neighbours will sit throughout the scene.

The mother's first line of the extract is "She isn't to blame! Nor me! Who is then?" , Lorca wrote that whilst saying this she appears to be being sarcastic, I would want my actor to turn her back on the Bride, walking towards down stage right facing the audience, in order for the audience to see her facial expression, which will resemble her sarcasm. Her body language will imply her sarcasm further, I would want my actor to speak the line as she shrugs her shoulders as she saunters over to downstage right. The lighting throughout the opening of the extract will be natural to help emphasise the emptiness of the room.  

When the Bride begins to speak, “Be quiet! Be quiet! Take your revenge on me!”, a sudden lighting change will help to highlight her anger, at the moment she begins to shout the lighting will suddenly rise so the attention is brought away from the mother on  to the Bride. As she speaks I would want my actor playing the Bride to drop to her knees and put her hands in her hair and clench her fists. On the line “Here I  am! See how soft my throat is; less effort for you than cutting a dahlia in your garden!”, as she speaks this line, I would want her to speak with a pitiful tone and open her arms to the Mother whilst kneeling on the floor, to imply the offer to strike her dead there. I would want the audience to feel some sympathy for her at this point, even though she is the one who caused this situation. While the Bride is speaking this lines, I want the actor playing the Mother not to even turn around or acknowledge the Bride, I want her just to face the audience with her arms folded.

On the Mothers next line “What does your honour matter to me? What does your death matter to me? What does anything matter to me?” I want my actor to sharply turn round to face the Bride and throw her arms vigorously towards her  in a gesturing manner and to speak in a very loud,harsh tone to show her anger. I want her to stand over the Bride slightly to create levels and the idea of her being more superior to the Bride. But as she reaches the third rhetorical question, I want her to soften her tone and drop to her knees facing the audience, this will resemble her giving up as she has nothing left. “Blessed be the wheat, for my sons lie beneath it.” as the Mother says this line, I want her to run her hands along the floor in front of her to resemble what she is saying about her sons, as she does this I want her to insinuate her crying, so the audience will pity her. I want the audience to feel sorry for all of the characters throughout the extract but the Mother more than any other of the present characters.

As the Bride says “Let me weep with you.” I want her to stand up and edge towards the Mother and put her arm around her to comfort her. However, the Mother reacts by pushing her arm away gently as she says “Weep. But by the door”. I want the Bride to then stand up slowly and make her way to the door at upstage left, turning back to look at the Mother, who doesn’t even lift her head to look at her, then stands by the door facing the mother. The Mother remains on the floor, looking blankly out into the audience.

As the Wife enters from upstage left, where the Bride remains at the door, soft guitar music will begin to play to resemble what the Bride is saying. As she enters the Bride and herself exchange glances but apart from that do not interact with each other at all, this will show the tension between the two. The Wife slowly walks towards downstage as she says “He was a handsome horseman, Now frozen in a heap of snow”, whilst speaking she I want her to  keep her head down and speaks in a soft, depressive tone to relate to how she is feeling. “Now the dark moss of the night, Form a crown upon his brow” while she is saying this line the lighting will become very dim to represent the depressing atmosphere that is being created. The music will end when the Little Girl begins to speak.

When the Little Girl enters saying “They are bringing them now.”, she remains at the door whilst speaking, the lighting the returns to natural lighting, after the Mother and Wife have finished speaking. I’m not going to have the bodies of the Bridegroom and Leonardo on stage, I’m going to have the shadows of the bodies behind a gores tab at the back of the stage to create a slightly disturbing atmosphere.  

The Mother’s final poem for her son is unlike any other poem in the play, it features violent imagery, this suggests she has stopped following what everyone expects her to say and do and returns back to her original opinions from earlier in the play. “With a small knife, That barely fits the hand, But that slides in clean, Through startled flesh”. As the Mother  says this line I want her to be central stage and have the Bride and the left side and the Wife at the right, all facing forward. The lighting will be a red/orange colour to resemble death and love which are the two strongest themes towards the ending of the play. When the Mother speaks she speaks with a harsh tone at first but slowly softens her tone towards the end of the poem.

“So that on a day appointed, between two and three, With this knife, Two men are left stiff, And lips turned yellow.” while the Bride is saying her final line the soft guitar music slowly fades back in to soften the atmosphere. As she speaks all the women stand facing forward staring to the audience, this will hopefully make the audience feel slightly uncomfortable.

“Where trembles enmeshed, The dark root of a scream.” As the Mother says her final lines, she falls to her knees, puts her head in her hands and all the characters which are on stage turn by their left shoulder and walk off to upstage left, leaving the Mother alone on stage. This will create the final idea that the Mother is now totally alone, the shadows of the Bridegroom and Leonardo will remain on stage until the lights slowly fade to black.

In conclusion, the overall themes which I want to put across throughout this scene is betrayal of the Bride to the bridegroom and the mother, love which the Bride had for Leonardo and the Mother for her son. Also I want my audience to feel sorry for the women at some point during the scene because they have all suffered some sort of hurt at some point in the play.


Music

Thursday, 7 November 2013

“As a director, discuss how you would stage Act 2, Scene 1 from page 25 – Voices: let the bride awaken now. –To- page 27- Leonardo: Don’t worry, in order to bring out your interpretation of it for your audience.”

In my production of Blood Wedding, I am going to set it in 21st century Spain, making the set more modern and the mannerisms of the younger generation in the play more up to date. I will also represent the present day through the set design and the costume choices. As well as this, I have no intention to change the text, but the way in which the characters are going to speak will represent modern day. For example, the older characters such as the mother and the servant will speak with a faint Spanish accent and the younger generation like the bride, Leonardo and the bride-groom will have more common accents to show the different generations. My staging choice will be a Proscenium Arch, this will allow my audience to have a good view of everything going on, and also I want to have an elaborate set and this staging will allow me to do this. I want clear set changes to represent the different scenes because this will contribute to the modern take on the play.

Throughout this scene I want to represent the intensity of the relationship between Leonardo and the Bride, but also the importance of this scene, because this is an important scene in the play in which the idea of betrayal and passion. The servant in this scene plays a bigger role than meets the eye, during the whole scene she’s stood awkwardly between the bride and Leonardo however she is a representation of the obstacle between the bride and Leonardo’s love and passion for each other. The first line of the extract, “Voices: Let the bride awaken now. On this her wedding day.” I want this to be said from the side of the stage so they aren’t visible to the audience. As the line is spoken, I want the servant to react to the voices by, heading upstage left and implying she is looking out of the window for the arriving guests, leaving Leonardo alone down stage right, sitting on a chair at the dressing table. Whilst the servant remains up stage, he softly and quietly speaks his line “Let the bride awaken now. On this her wedding day”, as he speaks he drops his head in a sad manner to show how he is feeling, he will speak the whole line with emotion putting emphasis on the words ‘wedding day’. While he is saying this line, the lighting will change from natural lighting of the whole stage to just down stage right being lit in a pool of white light to show his isolation on stage. When he has finished speaking and the servant begins to speak again, the lights will come back to up, lighting the whole stage with natural lighting again.


On the line “Did the bridegroom bring the orange blossom so she can wear it on her heart?” I want Leonardo to make his way further down stage left facing away from the servant as he speaks. I want his tone of voice to be very low and for him to sound as if that line was hard for him to say, to create the sense that he wishes it was him who was giving the bride the orange blossom. The reason he will be facing away from the servant so he can hide the emotion on his face and also so he is unable to see the entrance of the Bride from upstage right, as he speaks his line, so she over hears him. As she says “what are you hinting at?” I would like the bride to forcefully push past the servant heading down stage centre towards the Leonardo. Her tone of voice sounding angry towards Leonardo, and as she strides forwards her posture will remain upright and proud, to show her anger and frustration. In contrast to the bride Leonardo’s tone of voice remains soft and calm, as he realises the bride has entered. I want him to turn suddenly when she begins to speak, but not move until he begins to speak. 

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Creative Overview


My production of Blood Wedding:

To begin with my major themes which will be demonstrated throughout the duration of the play will be: Love, Death, Conformity/Non-conformity, Tragedy and Betrayal.

Setting:
In my production of Blood Wedding, I want the setting of my play to remain in Spain. However, I would want to bring it up to date, too the twenty first century. I would do this through the set design, in some costume choices, the mannerisms of the characters, also the way in which they speak. For example the older characters in the play such as the servant will still speak with a weak Spanish kind of accent, however the bride, who will be younger, will speak with a more common accent to show the different generations.

Casting Choices:
Bride: Young, beautiful, dark haired, well spoken.
Bride Groom: Blondemiddle height, fairly attractive.
Leonardo: Tall, Dark hair, handsome.
Servant: Older Spanish lady.

Themes:
There is one main theme which is presented throughout the play which is "LOVE". The love that the Bride has for Leonardo.

Staging:
I want a traditional Proscenium arch stage form for my production, because I want quite an elaborate set so having a end on stage form will allow me to do this successfully.



Lighting:

Props:

Set Design:

Costume:




Tuesday, 8 October 2013

Major Themes

Physical &  Emotional isolation: 

Conformity & Non-Conformity: 

Social Pressure: The wife doesn't really want to marry the Bridegroom. She is marrying him because she is being pressured too by her father and society rather than because she wants too.

Death: its there and present throughout.

Passion: Lack of control over it. Lorca suggests that passion doesn't always mean its good, he represents it too lead to bad consequences. e.g. mothers passion for dead family. bride and leonardo's passion for each other.

"Scared of Social rejection" - Liv

Monday, 30 September 2013

Youtube Clips Homework



4 Things I liked & Would include in my production


  1. Costume choice for the bride. Its traditional and I thought it worked.
  2. The use of the fan. Reinforces spanish themes.
  3. The spirit of the Servant, cheerful and happy. Contrast with the brides bitter attitudes. 
  4. Singing of the servant.
4 Things I didn't like & Would adapt in my production

  1. I would want the bride to move around more, instead of being so static. 
  2. Servants costume: I want my costume for the servant to be more traditional gypsy - bright and colourful.
  3. Leonardo's attitude: I want him to be more aggressive yet passionate towards the bride, to show his love for her. 
  4. To make more of the argument between them both. To create a tense moment.

Act Two, Scene Two