Education.com

Reading Drama Study Guide: GED Language Arts, Reading (page 5)

By LearningExpress Editors
LearningExpress, LLC
Updated on Mar 9, 2011

Stage Directions

The next component of drama concerns the physical element: what the actors do while they are on stage, what props are on stage, how the set is lighted, and so forth.

Stage directions are instructions from the author on how to conduct the drama. These instructions might state what an actor should do, how the actor should deliver his or her lines, what the set should look like, what sort of music might be playing, what the lighting should be, and many other details.

The passages from Peter Pan that we looked at earlier included some stage directions. The playwright opens the scene with specific instructions on how to light the set. He includes details within characters' lines that instruct the actor what to do physically—such as his instruction that the actor portraying Captain Hook should be fiddling with a deck of cards while speaking his lines. Playwrights even instruct the actors on how to deliver their lines—suddenly in Peter Pan, airily and stiffly in The Importance of Being Earnest.

When you are reading a dramatic script, such as a play by Shakespeare, the stage directions can help you to picture in your mind what is happening visually during the performance. But keep in mind that Shakespeare wrote his plays for performance, not to be read from a book in a college classroom. This is, as we've noted already, the chief difference between drama and other forms of fiction: Drama is intended to be performed. Stage directions, therefore, are intended to assist the actors, directors, stagehands, and others in producing the drama as the author envisioned it.

These stage directions are a very important tool when you are reading a play, rather than seeing it acted out on stage. They tell you what the set looks like, what the actors are wearing, what the lighting is like—the atmosphere that is being evoked on stage. All of these details will be important as you are reading dramatic passages and answering the questions that you will encounter on the GED exam. Remember to watch for the stage directions!

Specific directions are also written to help the actors on stage and the many other people involved in creating a stage (or screen) production. You may encounter directions such as stage right or down left. These directions specify where exactly on the stage to stand or perform some action. Left and right, however, refer to the actor's left and right, which is the opposite of the audience. So stage right actually refers to the left side of the stage from the audience's perspective. The stage itself is divided into center, right, left, as well as front and rear. The wings are the sections to the sides of the stage (right and left) that the audience cannot see. This is where actors wait until their cue to come on stage.

Here is a typical set of stage directions that you might find at the beginning of an act:

Curtain opens on comfortable living room. Large sofa stands center; small tables either end. An overstuffed wing chair sits front right, with a matching chair front left. Rear is lined with bookcases and occasional tables and lamps. Rear backdrop shows view out large window, overlooking a small pond. Sound of clock ticking. Enter CONSTANCE, right wing.

In this set, a sofa is standing center stage, with an overstuffed chair at center left and another at center right. Bookcases are at the rear of the stage. A backdrop pictures what is situated outside the house. The character named Constance comes onstage from the right wing, which means that she will enter from the audience's left.

The Audience

The third component of drama is the audience. As a general rule, all drama is intended to be performed in front of an audience—those people who are listening to the plot.

Originally, drama was intended to be performed live, with real people performing the roles in front of a real audience who was present. The early dramas of medieval England were performed in the public street, not inside buildings with a large stage and lighting. By the time of Shakespeare, permanent theater buildings had been constructed, and the audience sat on benches or stood on the floor in front of the stage and watched the play.

We still use this convention today, as there are countless playhouses that perform drama on a stage in front of a live audience. But the advent of electronic communications such as film and television expanded the definition of an audience to include people who are not actually present during the performance. We might refer to these people as the viewing audience or the listening audience or the Internet audience—those people who will watch the performance on film at a later date, or who will be watching it live from a long distance over the internet or on television.

This element of the audience brings up a final distinction between reading drama and seeing it performed. When we read the written script of a play, for example, we can understand what the dialogue means, and we can appreciate some of the humor or tragedy of the plot, but we cannot experience the reactions of other people as they watch the drama with us.

This is an intangible but vital element of drama. Stage plays, for example, are often intended to build upon an audience's reaction. A comedy such as The Importance of Being Earnest delivers one humorous line after another, but what makes the comedy really come to life is hearing the laughter of the entire audience building up to a crescendo as the characters throw out their wit.

Types of Drama

There are many different types (or genres) of drama, just as there are many genres of poetry and fiction. But for purposes of the GED, we will concentrate on the two major, overriding genres within drama: tragedy and comedy. (Other, more modern genres such as realism and theater of the absurd still generally fit within the category of tragedy or comedy.)

The Hero's Fortunes

Before we begin, however, let us review briefly the overall plot structure of drama that we have discussed previously. You will remember that a plot generally consists of some form of conflict, and that there is some complication of that conflict, followed by a climax and a resolution.

The conflict, as we have discussed, is generally between a protagonist and an antagonist. The climax is the point in the play where some great decision is made or some great action is taken; the protagonist might finally decide to do something decisive about the antagonist's troublemaking, or the antagonist will finally gain the upper hand over the protagonist. At this point in the plot, we say that the protagonist's fortunes shift in one way or another. The resolution then finally resolves the conflict once and for all. Generally, the fortunes of the protagonist are the opposite of what they were when the story began.

This concept of fortune refers to a character's circumstances, whether good or bad—whether the character is lucky or unlucky. It is a very important element in drama, because the characters' fortunes are central to most plot structures.

The Greeks and the medieval British playwrights and poets personified the concept of fortune, depicting Fortune as a woman who stood next to a spinning wheel or mill wheel. Men and women were riding on that wheel, like an ancient version of a Ferris wheel, and Lady Fortune stood by, spinning the wheel whatever way she saw fit. This was the subject of much art and poetry, as well as drama, during the Middle Ages and beyond; and the phrase Wheel of Fortune has been kept alive in a modern television show.

The personification of Lady Fortune included the concept that she was fickle; she would show favor to a person one moment, then suddenly throw him into disfavor. The person who was pictured on the top of Fortune's wheel was experiencing comfort and success and good luck—but he or she needed to keep in mind that Lady Fortune might spin that wheel at any moment, plunging the person from success into failure and despair. The reverse was true, of course, for the poor sap who found himself at the bottom of the wheel of Fortune.

View Full Article

Add your own comment

Ask a Question

Have questions about this article or topic? Ask
Ask
150 Characters allowed

Washington Virtual Academies

Tuition-free online school for Washington students.