Abstractionism (136–40)
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<I>Ensemble-Made Chicago</I>
The Journal of American Drama and Theatre (JADT) https://jadt.commons.gc.cuny.edu Ensemble-Made Chicago Ensemble-Made Chicago: A Guide To Devised Theater. Chloe Johnson and Coya Paz Brownrigg. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 2019. Pp. 202. Chloe Johnson and Coya Paz Brownrigg’s Ensemble-Made: A Guide to Devised Theater (2019) is a valuable resource for theater educators and practitioners, particularly those who wish to deepen their knowledge of the craft variously known as devised theater, ensemble-based performance, and collective creation. Each short chapter of the book focuses on a distinct Chicago-based theater company (15 in total)—which range from large, nationally-renowned companies such as Lookingglass Theatre and The Second City to smaller, community-based collectives. Each chapter includes a brief history of the company alongside descriptions of games and exercises emblematic of their process and pedagogy. The co-written book also includes an Introduction which places the field of devising in its larger cultural and historical context, as well as a Time Line of the field and List of Exercises By Type, which function as the book’s conclusion. The authors’ methodologies are informed by their own relationship to devised theater in Chicago: Johnson is an ensemble member of the Neo-Futurists and Paz Brownrigg is the Artistic Director of Free Street Theater and cofounder of Teatro Luna—both of which are featured in the book. In this regard, they write as scholars and practitioners of devised theater but also as colleague- critics within the expansive but close-knit network of the Chicago theater community. -
CELEBRATING SIGNIFICANT CHICAGO WOMEN Park &Gardens
Chicago Women’s Chicago Women’s CELEBRATING SIGNIFICANT CHICAGO WOMEN CHICAGO SIGNIFICANT CELEBRATING Park &Gardens Park Margaret T. Burroughs Lorraine Hansberry Bertha Honoré Palmer Pearl M. Hart Frances Glessner Lee Margaret Hie Ding Lin Viola Spolin Etta Moten Barnett Maria Mangual introduction Chicago Women’s Park & Gardens honors the many local women throughout history who have made important contributions to the city, nation, and the world. This booklet contains brief introductions to 65 great Chicago women—only a fraction of the many female Chicagoans who could be added to this list. In our selection, we strived for diversity in geography, chronology, accomplishments, and ethnicity. Only women with substantial ties to the City of Chicago were considered. Many other remarkable women who are still living or who lived just outside the City are not included here but are still equally noteworthy. We encourage you to visit Chicago Women’s Park FEATURED ABOVE and Gardens, where field house exhibitry and the Maria Goeppert Mayer Helping Hands Memorial to Jane Addams honor Katherine Dunham the important legacy of Chicago women. Frances Glessner Lee Gwendolyn Brooks Maria Tallchief Paschen The Chicago star signifies women who have been honored Addie Wyatt through the naming of a public space or building. contents LEADERS & ACTIVISTS 9 Dawn Clark Netsch 20 Viola Spolin 2 Grace Abbott 10 Bertha Honoré Palmer 21 Koko Taylor 2 Jane Addams 10 Lucy Ella Gonzales Parsons 21 Lois Weisberg 2 Helen Alvarado 11 Tobey Prinz TRAILBLAZERS 3 Joan Fujisawa Arai 11 Guadalupe Reyes & INNOVATORS 3 Ida B. Wells-Barnett 12 Maria del Jesus Saucedo 3 Willie T. -
Issue 24 Spring / Summer 2016
ISSUE 24 SPRING / SUMMER 2016 DEMOThe Alumni Magazine of Columbia College Chicago YEARS OF COLUMBIA Albert “Bill” Williams (BA ’73) has made a planned gift to Columbia through his estate. Have you considered including Columbia College Chicago in your estate plans? Provide for future generations. For more information, Make a bequest to Columbia contact Development and Alumni and support tomorrow’s creative Relations at [email protected] industry leaders. or 312-369-7287. colum.edu/plannedgiving ISSUE 24 The Alumni Magazine of DEMO SPRING / SUMMER 2016 Columbia College Chicago INTRO 1890–2015: CELEBRATING 125 YEARS 7 DEPARTMENTS VISION 5 Questions for President Kwang- Wu Kim ALUMNI NEWS & NOTES 53 Featuring class news, notes and networking When the Columbia School of Oratory opened in 1890, the founders couldn’t have imagined the school’s evolution from scrappy elocution college into a powerhouse arts and media institution. FEATURES 1890–1927: 1961–1992: FOUNDING AND BEGINNINGS 8 RENEWAL AND EXPANSION 26 As Chicago prepared for the World’s With flailing enrollment and few resources, Columbian Exposition of 1893, two orators Columbia could have folded. Instead, and educators chose the Windy City as the President Mike Alexandroff decided to break home of a new public speaking college. the mold of what an arts education could be. 1927–1944: 1992–2015: 16 COLUMBIA IN TRANSITION 16 CONTINUED GROWTH 37 Columbia went through a period of great An ever-increasing focus on the student change following the deaths of its founders. experience and a permanent home in The birth of radio created a completely new the South Loop continued to transform way to communicate, and Columbia had Columbia. -
Improvisation for the Theater: a Handbook of Teaching and Directing Techniques Pdf, Epub, Ebook
IMPROVISATION FOR THE THEATER: A HANDBOOK OF TEACHING AND DIRECTING TECHNIQUES PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Paul Sills, Viola Spolin | 416 pages | 28 Jul 1999 | Northwestern University Press | 9780810140080 | English | Evanston, United States Improvisation for the Theater: A Handbook of Teaching and Directing Techniques PDF Book Improvisations move through fear, boredom, laziness, and distraction to a sustained awareness of creative options. It then focuses on how we can use creativity, with a particular focus on co-creativity, to pave the way for new visions of the future and innovative solutions, and explores how storytelling can be applied to teamwork and presentations. With 53 specific, usable tools this book will improve your improv coaching, directing or teaching right away. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world , and other notations in the work. Northwestern University Press , - Performing Arts - pages. My improv training has helped me more in my life and my career than most of my formal training. Improvisation acting journal, perfect to wear to acting class at school, during acting exercises and acting games. This in-depth look at the techniques, principles, theory and ideas behind what they do is both authoritative and entertaining. Max Schaefer is a distinguished full-time teacher, actor, programmer, and president of Underdog Educational Software company. The result is both an ideas book and a fascinating exploration of the nature of spontaneous creativity. Sort order. This new edition of a highly acclaimed handbook, last published in and widely used by theater teachers and directors, is sure to be welcomed by members of the theater profession. -
Theater Artist
K. Brian Neel REVIEWS king (at) kbrianneel (dot) com "K BRIAN NEEL brings a dextrous, knowing innocence to his roles, something between vaudeville and Beckett." – The Stranger (Seattle) ACTING "I was rivited. Neel rocked." – National Public Radio Waiting for Godot Estragon One World Theatre Tom Miller, Jená Cane Zirkus Fantasmo Signore Zupa Teatro Zinzanni Liz Bunior "Memorable, pure, live theatre." – The Advertiser (Adelaide, Australia) 14/48 Festivals Many Roles One World/Three Card Monty Misc. 99 Layoffs Orson ACT Theatre David Gassner "A one-man panorama. Virtuoso performing." – Seattle Post-Intellingencer A Mouse Who Knows Me Romeo, Roland Annex Theatre Kristina Sutherland "Neel rules the stage. dynamic, engrossing, funny, heartbreaking, poignant, unique – all those things The Milosevics Dragoslav Ognjanovic Paradise Theatre Pattie Miles that make a night at the theater the thrillingly consuming experience that only a couple shows in a The Happy Ones Walter Wells Seattle Public Theatre David Gassner The River Why Titus, Rodney Book-It Repertory Theatre Myra Platt hundred can create." – Charleston City Paper My Body Lies Over... Person On The Boards Mike Pham "You gotta love the sweat on K. Brian Neel's face. Neel's onto something." – Washington Post True North Ensemble Ontological-Hysteric Theater R. Hynes, M. Pham Trickster Tales Coyote Book-It Repertory Theatre Annie Lareau "The star of the show is K. Brian Neel... In a production with a number of strong performances, I Feel Fine Nikola Tesla Helsinki Syndrome R. Hynes, M. Pham his stole the show and was delightful to watch. He is one of the most expressive comedic Three Sisters Rodey INTIMAN Theatre Bartlett Sher actors around with excellent comic timing and facial expressions which kept the audience Vera Wilde Oscar Wilde Bedlam Theatre, Edinburgh Kibby MacKinnon completely entertained." Noises Off Tim Algood Village Theatre M. -
Contemporary Improvisational Theater in Poland and the United States
ACTA UNIVERSITATIS LODZIENSIS FOLIA LITTERARIA POLONICA 2(40) 2017 http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/1505-9057.40.05 Magdalena Szuster* “Alchemy and smoke in a bottle” – contemporary improvisational theater in Poland and the United States Part 1: (Re)defining Improvised Theater – the American and Polish Perspectives What Does Impro(v) Mean Anyway? The origins of improvisation are indistinct, and for most part untraceable. An academic endeavor to establish its beginnings would go unrewarded, as there is no one distinct inventor1 of improvisation. This technique, or method, had been used as means of expression in art long before Spolin or Johnstone, and far away from Chicago or London. The Atellan farce (1 BC), secular entertainers and court jesters in China (10 BC), or the frenzied improvisations in Ancient Greece (600 BC) had preceded the 16th century commedia dell’arte2 the Italian improvised per- formance based on scenarios and/or sketches. The renaissance of improvisation in the 20th century was largely brought about by experimental artists who used it as means of expression, communication and representation. As a tool, a vessel or foundation improvisation existed in theater (both formal and popular), painting, poetry and music. It was an important substance, and an interesting addition to avant-garde art. The early avant-garde theater welcomed improvisation as a means in the pro- cess of developing plays and productions, or as a component of actor training, yet an independent improvisational format was yet to be devised. In the mid-twentieth * Dr, University of Łódź, Faculty of Philology, Department of American Literature and Cul- ture, 91-404 Łódź, ul. -
Instructional Materials 2021–22
INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS 2021–22 Arithmetic A SPORK Arithmetic A, SPORK LLC Saxon Math Course 1 ISBN: 159141783X Author: Stephen Hake Title: Saxon Math Course 1 Publisher: Harcourt Achieve, Inc. & Stephen Hake Arithmetic B SPORK Arithmetic B Curriculum, SPORK LLC Civics, History, and Science Foundation • Youtube Videos (https://www.youtube.com/) • Educational Books and Children’s Literature • BrainPop Jr (https://jr.brainpop.com/) • Liberty’s Kids (DIC Entertainment Corporation) • Magic School Bus (Scholastic) Classics • Archaeology Magazine • AIRC (American Institute of Roman Culture) educational videos and other resources • Epic of Gilgamesh Code of Hammurabi • Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey The Republic (Plato) • The Politics (Aristotle) The Melian Dialogues Vergil’s Aeneid • Ovid’s Metamorphoses • The Twelve Tables • Kleiner, Fred S. 2007. A History of Roman art. Victoria: Thomson/Wadsworth Sear, Frank. 1983. Roman architecture. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. • Pedley, John Griffiths. 2007. Greek art and archaeology. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson/Prentice Hall. Connections 1 • YouTube Kids (https://youtubekids.com) • BrainPop Jr (https://jr.brainpop.com) • National Geographic for Kids (https://kids.nationalgeographic.com) Connections 2 • Scholastic (https://www.scholastic.com/home) J • ustbooksreadaloud (https://www.justbooksreadaloud.com/) • Brainpop (https://www.brainpop.com/) • Youtube (https://www.youtube.com/) • National Geographic for Kids (https://ngkidsubs.nationalgeographic.com) Engineering & Technology 1–4 • BrainPopJr: -
Student, Player, Spect-Actor: Learning from Viola Spolin and Augusto Boal: Theatre Practice As Non-Traditional Pedagogy
STUDENT, PLAYER, SPECT-ACTOR: LEARNING FROM VIOLA SPOLIN AND AUGUSTO BOAL: THEATRE PRACTICE AS NON-TRADITIONAL PEDAGOGY by EMILY GAMMON B.A., University of Maine, Orono, 2006 M.A., University of Colorado at Boulder, 2012 Advisor: Dr. Bud Coleman A thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Colorado in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of Master of Arts Department of Theatre 2012 This thesis entitled: Student, Player, Spect-actor: Learning from Viola Spolin and Augusto Boal: Theatre Practice as Non-Traditional Pedagogy written by Emily Gammon has been approved for the Department of Theatre and Dance Bud Coleman Oliver Gerland Date The final copy of this thesis has been examined by the signatories, and we find that both the content and the form meet acceptable presentation standards of scholarly work in the above mentioned discipline. Gammon, Emily (M.A., Theatre) Student, Player, Spect-actor: Learning from Viola Spolin and Augusto Boal: Theatre Practice as Non-Traditional Pedagogy Thesis directed by Dr. Bud Coleman This thesis explores the possibility that by adapting a model of disciplined improvisation, the secondary classroom will become an engaging learning environment where a wider variety of student learning preferences and styles will be honored and cultivated. I believe that effective pedagogical theory and structure aligns with that of improvisational theatre models and by examining these models more closely and by comparing them with the theories of predominant educational theorists and psychologists, we will find both commonalities and effective teaching models and strategies. The theory and practice of Viola Spolin and Augusto Boal, supported by the theory of Lev Vygotsky and of Paulo Freire, respectively, provide two examples of non - traditional pedagogy for the secondary classroom. -
College Essays
College Essays Contents [hide] 1 Common Application Essays 2 Brown University o 2.1 2010 and 2011/2012 Essay Topics 3 California Institute of Technology o 3.1 2010 and 2011/2012 Essay Topics 4 Columbia University 5 Cornell University (2010) 6 Dartmouth College (2010) 7 Duke University (2009) 8 Emory University (2010) 9 Harvard University (2010) o 9.1 Harvard Business School 10 New York University o 10.1 2010 Essay Topics o 10.2 2011/2012 Essay Topics 11 Northwestern University o 11.1 2010 Essay Topics o 11.2 2011/2012 Essay Topics 12 Princeton University o 12.1 2010 Essay Topics o 12.2 2011/2012 Essay Topics 13 University of Chicago o 13.1 Past Essay Questions o 13.2 2010 Essay Topics o 13.3 2011/2012 Essay Topics 14 University of Michigan o 14.1 2010 Essay Topics o 14.2 2011/2012 Essay Topics 15 University of Pennsylvania o 15.1 2010 Essay Topics o 15.2 2011/2012 Essay Topics 16 Stanford University o 16.1 2010 Essay Topics o 16.2 2011/2012 Essay Topics 17 Yale University (2010) o 17.1 Yale School of Management 18 Essay Help Common Application Essays Please write an essay of 250 – 500 words on a topic of your choice or on one of the options listed below, and attach it to your application before submission. Please indicate your topic by checking the appropriate box. This personal essay helps us become acquainted with you as a person and student, apart from courses, grades, test scores, and other objective data. -
One Way to Create Educational Games
International Journal of Role-Playing - Issue 6 One Way to Create Educational Games Popular abstract: Improv games, which are used to train actors in how to do improvisational theatre, may be used to train other professions as well. The games assist in the development of simple skills and also give context for the skills’ use. The director chooses a series of these quick and simple games, tailoring the games to the already existing skills of the students. The skills built through the games may assist with further exercises, which may vary widely depending on the field in which they are taught. Instructions on how to create improv games, and hazards to avoid, are also included, should a teacher or director decide to create some games. Graham MacLean [email protected] Academics often make theoretical connections serious in its potential consequences (Goffman between their own fields, such as sociology, and 1973, 17). Usually people find one or the other more theatre studies (Goffman 1979, 124). So why not take difficult. Improvising well involves cultivating a more than theoretical inspiration and take theatre range of skills to overcome this sort of difficulty training methods as well? Improv games teach how (Berger 2009, 118). When I say skills, I use the word in to socialize better through practicing aspects such its broadest definition, including a range of teachable as talking, manners, observing or listening, without behaviors as well as how to accomplish tasks. These eliminating context (Spolin 1963). As a training skills are taught together, for acting does not lend method, improv games were first designated as itself to isolating individual skills. -
Drennan Barbara Phd 1995.Pdf
PERFORMED NEGOTIATIONS: The Historical Significance of the Second Wave Alternate Theatre in English Canada and Its Relationship to the Popular Tradition by Barbara Drennan B.F^., University of Windsor, 1973 A Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in the Department of Theatre We accept this dissertation as conforming to the required standard Michael R. Booth, Supervisor (Department of Theatre) Juliapa M. Saxton (Department of Theatre) Murray D. Edwards (Department of Theatre) Stephen A.C. Scobie (Department of English) Dr. Malcolm Page, External Examiner (Department of English, Simon Fraser University) © Barbara Drennan, 1995 University of Victoria All rights reserved. This dissertation may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopying or other means, without the permission of the author. Supervisor: Michael R. Booth ABSTRACT This doctoral project began in the early 1980s when 1 became involved in making a community theatre event on Salt Spring Island with a group of artists accomplished in disciplines other than theatre. The production was marked by an oiientation toward creating stage images rather than a literary text and by the playful exploitation of theatricality. This experiment in theatrical performance challenged my received ideas about theatre and drama. As a result of this experience, I began to see differences in original, small-venue productions which were considered part of the English-Canadian alternate theatre scene. I deter mined that the practitioners who created these events could be considered a second generation to the Alternate Theatre Movement of the 70s and settled on identifying their practice as Second Wave. -
Funny Feminism: Reading the Texts and Performances of Viola
FUNNY FEMINISM: READING THE TEXTS AND PERFORMANCES OF VIOLA SPOLIN, TINA FEY AND AMY POEHLER, AND AMY SCHUMER A Thesis by LYDIA KATHLEEN ABELL Submitted to the Office of Graduate and Professional Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS Chair of Committee, Kirsten Pullen Committee Members, James Ball Kristan Poirot Head of Department, Donnalee Dox May 2016 Major Subject: Performance Studies Copyright 2016 Lydia Kathleen Abell ABSTRACT This study examines the feminism of Viola Spolin, Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, and Amy Schumer, all of whom, in some capacity, are involved in the contemporary practice and performance of feminist comedy. Using various feminist texts as tools, the author contextually and theoretically situates the women within particular feminist ideologies, reading their texts, representations, and performances as nuanced feminist assertions. Building upon her own experiences and sensations of being a fan, the author theorizes these comedic practitioners in relation to their audiences, their fans, influencing the ways in which young feminist relate to themselves, each other, their mentors, and their role models. Their articulations, in other words, affect the ways feminism is contemporarily conceived, and sometimes, humorously and contentiously advocated. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would briefly like to thank my family, especially my mother for her unwavering support during this difficult and stressful process. Her encouragement and happiness, as always, makes everything worth doing. I would also like to thank Paul Mindup for allowing me to talk through my entire thesis with him over the phone; somehow you listening diligently and silently on the other end of the line helped everything fall into place.