Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Medieval Dramaturgy Post #9.

Below you will find a video link that will take you to a video which I feel is the way in which most people are told about Noah's Ark. Where Noah and his family built a boat and took two animals of every kind aboard the boat and then it rained for forty days and forty nights and flooded the land for one hundred and fifty days. Then all evil people were gone and Noah and his family helped to rebuild and populate the land.

Although I agree with the facts behind the story, such an Ark was built, it flooded and Noah's family and animals were saved. I also feel that it had to have been a stressful ordeal and a horrific time with lots of time  to worry and second guess their decision during the entire process. 

With this production I don't want to have that Sunday school feel I want to portray real human emotion. Second guessing, desperation and the fact that they should be unsure about what they are doing.

Video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kq3JyAg7ZjM

Monday, December 6, 2010

Medieval Dramaturgy Post #8.

I found an interesting article recently put out by CNN, it describes how a religious attraction group is planning on building an exact wooden replica of Noah's ark as described in the Bible. The project is estimated to cost 24.5 million dollars and is planning on drawing in 1.6 million visitors per year. Although this project is a bit over kill in my opinion, especially in this economy why aren't they giving that 24.5 million to the national debt of helping good people who have lost their homes in what is said to be the richest country in the world. Waste in my opinion!!

Although I don't agree with Answers in Genesis, the company behind the project, it does prove that these stories are deeply embedded in our culture and that our show and the whole cycle are likely to be well received.  Also this article may expose new people to the story of Noah who may have never heard it before.

If you would like to read it the full article is available at:  http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2010/12/01/full-scale-replica-of-noahs-ark-planned-for-outside-cincinnati/

Posted:
Dec. 1, 2010 at 11:35 a.m. ET.

Medieval Dramaturgy Post #7.

Pageant Wagons:
 According to Encyclopedia Britannica:

" [a] wheeled vehicle used in the processional staging of medieval vernacular cycle plays. ...associated with the English cycle plays performed from about 1375 until the mid-16th century in such cities as York and Chester as part of the Corpus Christi festival, but it was also common in Spain, Belgium, and the Netherlands. Each play in the cycle may have been mounted on an individual pageant wagon and performed at different locations throughout the vicinity. The pageant wagon may also have been drawn alongside a scaffold wagon, using the scaffold as a temporary stage, or been pulled up to a fixed platform stage for the duration of the play.

The pageant wagons, or large carts, each containing from one to three mansions, or scenic locales, were constructed by the trade guilds and were dismantled at the close of the season each year and stored. As no detailed description of English pageant wagons or the particulars of staging plays on the wagons had survived, there is considerable scholarly controversy both as to the actual appearance of the wagons and as to the method used for staging the plays."

I am looking to build a simple replica pageant wagon, we have come to a final decision as a production team that we do not want to spend to much time or energy on building an elaborate wagon we would rather spend more time and resources on the set, set dressings and costume aspects of the short play. I have ordered plans for a simple wagon design similar to the one pictured below.

Picture: Google images, pageant wagon newport. First picture.

Medieval Dramaturgy Post #6.

I noticed some discrepancies between the "Shipwrights Play: The Building of the Ark" and the Bible concerning the measurements of the Ark. In the play God says, "Five hundred feet it shall be long, and eighty wide, all for your bliss. The height, of fifty feet along. Be careful to remember this." However in the Bible it states that god said, "This is how you are to build it: The ark is to be 450 feet long, 75 feet wide and 45 feet high."

I think the reason that the dimensions were changed from the Bible for the play was to keep with the Iambic octameter. For if the dimensions were to be taken from the Bible as written it would have ruined the rhythm in which the lines were written. Honestly they were not changed enough to probably really draw any attention from the audience, it is only noticeable when analyzing the two side by side.

Medieval Dramaturgy Post #5.

These two photos show Noah and his three sons working on the Ark. I chose to include these photos because they are the type of costumes I was looking for for Noah and his sons.

Picture 1 from: http://etc.usf.edu/clipart/65600/65695/65695_noah_ark_lg.gif
Picture 2 from:http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_R4bDDgSUj2g/SIVBmL1NU_I/AAAAAAAAGaE/lBXClwz2sNk/s400/NoahBuildsArk2.jpg

Medieval Dramaturgy Post #4.

 I chose this picture for a couple of reason, first off, when I originally read the script I was thinking of how to stage the events displayed in the play. I was thinking of a semi completed Ark similar in style to the one pictured above, sort of forced perspective style and two dimensional. With an above built in just above the top of the top of the ark. I like this style cause it would set the period in which these plays were first preformed. Also I chose this picture because I like the idea of having a large pile of wood at the beginning that slowly goes away as more of the ark is revealed as being constructed.

Picture from: http://www.maritimequest.com/misc_ships/noahs_ark_3000bc/noahs_ark_2.jpg

Medieval Dramaturgy Post #3.

I decided to look into the events prior to the Flood from the primary source. Although I know that these mystery/morality plays stem directly from the Bible and stick very close to the story told there, minus a few liberties taken as regards to language and rhythm to help move the play on and allow for an easier understanding of the events in general.

The primary source I am talking about is the Bible, more specifically Genesis Chapter 6 and 7. These two chapters are about God telling Noah how and why to build the Ark, which is exactly what the Shipwrights Play: The Building of the Ark shows. I was excited to find a few more exact details that the playwright may have skipped over. Some details which may help us to better represent the message to the audience.  Examples might include the fact that Noah is said to have been six hundred years old at the beginning of the building of the Ark and the exact overall dimensions of the Ark. Just facts that helps our production team understand every aspect of the show so that we can decide on the best way to represent the ideas to our audience.

Cited
The Holy Bible, Genesis Chapter 6 and 7, NIV Translation.

Medieval Dramaturgy Post #2.

In my research for various types of topical information to help further my understanding of the events surrounding the flood of biblical times; I just happened to find a peer reviewed scholarly article titled, "Noah and Disaster Planning: The Cultural Significance of the Flood Story" by Russell R. Dynes.

This article discusses the various types of natural disasters that are told about in the Bible and the preparedness or lack there of, of the people involved. It focuses in on the Flood or Deluge and the differentiations between the Christian and Jewish interpretations of the event. It also offers more varying veiw points on why the Flood was actually took place back then.

The article serves as a source of information to help guide our thoughts on how and why to get this message across to the audience, through our production. A great source of useful information showing the cultural significance behind the pre-Flood events and Flood events.

Cited:
Dynes, Russell R. "Noah and Disaster Planning: The Cultural Significance of the Flood Story." Journal of Contingencies & Crisis Management 11.4 (2003): 170-177. Academic Search Complete. EBSCO. Web. 5 Dec. 2010.

Link:http://web.ebscohost.com.ezp.lib.cwu.edu/ehost/detail?vid=4&hid=108&sid=5b62ff6b-b311-4dbe-93ce-46c6789b32d5%40sessionmgr104&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=a9h&AN=11680111

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Medieval Dramaturgy Post #1.

My theatre company has decided to add on of the plays from The York Cycle, titled The Shipwright's Play: The Building of the Ark. We are combining our talents with other local theatre companies in the area to put on a few of the plays from The York Cycle in as close to the traditional production techniques that were used during the time. 

Just to give you a bit more information about cycle plays, in general.  According to ORO, cycle plays are, “a group of works, usually narrative poems, that either share a common theme or subject (e.g. the Trojan war, Charlemagne, the Knights of the Round Table), or are linked together as a sequence. In addition to epicssagasromances and chansons de geste , which scholars have categorized into different cycles, the mystery plays of the Middle Ages that were performed as a sequence during the same festival at a particular place are referred to as the York Cycle, the Chester Cycle, etc. The term is also applied to sequences of sonnets by the same author, and sometimes to sequences of novels or stories.” (ORO, cycle plays 1st definition)


Here is a link to a digital copy of the script we will be using. https://courses.cwu.edu/webapps/portal/frameset.jsp?tab_tab_group_id=_4_1&url=%2Fwebapps%2Fblackboard%2Fexecute%2Flauncher%3Ftype%3DCourse%26id%3D_56297_1%26url%3D