SM6061 - Writing for Theatre and Performance (2022/23)
Module specification | Module approved to run in 2022/23 | ||||||||||||
Module title | Writing for Theatre and Performance | ||||||||||||
Module level | Honours (06) | ||||||||||||
Credit rating for module | 15 | ||||||||||||
School | School of Art, Architecture and Design | ||||||||||||
Total study hours | 150 | ||||||||||||
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Assessment components |
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Running in 2022/23(Please note that module timeslots are subject to change) |
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Module summary
This module is intended to develop skills in writing for theatre and performance and to consider the ways in which texts shift, enlarge, contract and transform once they are performed. It will combine analysis of existing written and performed texts with creative writing exercises to develop informed, critical, creative writers. Students will also view theatre and performance in London and consider the relationship between the text-as-written and the text-as-performance. The work will be firmly embedded in the contemporary theatre industry – drawing on links with new writing/live art venues in London. Students will develop a portfolio of work and a completed short script. This module will make links with Identity and Performance, Society and Performance and where possible Dramaturgy.
• To assist students in the development of tools necessary to undertake their own critically-informed script making for performance
• To explore the role of the writer within the collaborative nature of theatre-making
• To encourage students to connect their creative lives to global and local and personal events.
• To encourage students to reflect critically on the implications of theatrical appropriation, as it is practised by others and by themselves
• To encourage students to reflect critically on the relationship between texts and staging of text
• To continue to explore the relationship between performance, identity and society.
Syllabus
Students will be expected to view and analyse theatrical performances from the writer’s viewpoint, thus placing their own work in context. LO1,LO3
The module leader will facilitate workshops that will explore existing written and performed texts and teach skills and techniques of writing. LO2,LO4
In addition students will be expected to lead roundtable and work-in-progress sessions where ongoing script making work will be shared and discussed. There will be an emphasis on students exploring their own experience and the communities’ to which they belong. LO3,LO5
Each week students will be set creative writing tasks that will help them to develop their own skills in writing. Over the semester, they will build up a portfolio of creative pieces and be required to analyse the work of other students. The major writing project will be a text that they develop and stage in a reading for the class. They will be encouraged to consider the venue/site of performance for their writing. LO4,LO5
Classes will address such issues as:
• Selecting source material and environments
• Building a writing archive
• Performance dramaturgy—reading, writing, and structuring narrative
• Plot, story and character
• Justifying choices and “responsibility”
• Editing performance scripts
• Presenting the performance script
• Solo creation and group collaboration LO1,LO2,LO3,LO4,LO5
Balance of independent study and scheduled teaching activity
The teaching of this module will combine tutor and student-led practical and theoretical seminars. There will be a good balance between the analysis of the work of professionals and the exploration of the students own work with each other. There will be a focus on the industry and an introduction to the ways in which writers get employment and collaborate with others, therefore visiting lecturers and speakers will be brought in where possible.
Learning outcomes
On completing the module the students will be able to:
Knowledge and Understanding
LO1 Develop active theatre viewing
Cognitive Intellectual Abilities
LO2 Critically analyse the writing and staging of written texts
Transferable Skills
LO3 Participate in roundtable discussions about their own and others’ work
Subject Specific Skills
LO4 Develop a short text for a staged reading
LO5 Compile a portfolio of developmental and final scripts
Assessment strategy
This module has a pass on aggregate requirement
Coursework consists of:
1) A portfolio, which includes critical and creative tasks.
2) A completed 15 minute script and a stage reading of that script.
Bibliography
There is no core text for this module.
Other
Aristotle (1996) Poetics, Penguin Classics
Craze, T. Write a Theatre Script in 25 Days (& 10 hours)
Edgar, D. (2009) How Plays Work, Nick Hern Books 2009
Egri, L. (2003) The Art of Dramatic Writing: Its Basis in the Creative Interpretation of Human Motives, Simon Schuster
Fountain T So You Want to Be a Playwright?: How to Write a Play and Get It Produced, Nick Hern 2007
Gooch, S. (2001) Writing a Play, A & C Black
Greig, N. (2004) Playwriting: A Practical Guide, Routledge
Lojos, E. (2003) The Art of Dramatic Writing: Its Basis in the Creative Interpretation of Human Motives, Simon Schuster
Spencer, S. (2003) The Playwright's Guidebook, Faber and Faber
Waters, S. (2010) Secret Life of Plays. The Paperback, Nick Hern
Yeger, S. (1990) The Sound of One Hand clapping: A Guide to writing for the theatre Amber Lane