Saturday 27 November 2010

On the 10th of December our year 10 performing arts class are putting on a show and everyone is welcome!
There's no need to worry about the cost of tickets as they're completely free. There will be a range of refreshments for you as well.  Our class of just twelve members will be performing a variety of dances that we have been working on in school time with Miss Dolan.

However, its not just practical that we have been working on over the past couple of months, we have also been very busy at work with our costume construction classes with Miss Hearne. There will be a gallery set up of all of our work that we have been doing with her.
I hope that you have time to read this and think about coming to watch us show off our skills that we have learnt in these past 3 months!

(written by Ellie Goodchild)

Saturday 30 October 2010

Matthew Bournes 'Cinderella'

Sadlers Wells from 30th November 2010


'Cinderella' Matthew Bourne - 
CLICK on shoe
for a video clip!


"Set in London during the Second World War, Matthew Bourne's interpretation of Prokofiev's haunting score has, at its heart, a true wartime romance and his storytelling has never been more passionate and touching. A chance meeting results in a magical night for Cinderella and her dashing young RAF pilot, together just long enough to fall in love before being parted by the Blitz." (source Sadlers Wells website).



Matthew Bourne
Matthew Bourne is one of the most famous and successful UK choreographers of today, and boasts a variety of amazing performance pieces and awards under his belt.  Matthew started training to be a dancer at the comparatively late age of 22.  He studied Dance Theatre and Choreography at The Laban Centre graduating in 1985 but spending a further year with the college’s performance company Transitions.  Matthew danced professionally for 14 years creating many roles in his own work.  In 1999 he gave his final performance playing The Private Secretary in the Broadway production of Swan Lake.

Matthew Bourne is a Resident Artist at Sadlers Wells Theatre. His company, New Adventures, has enjoyed a special relationship with the theatre and its audiences for many years and was invited to be Resident Company in 2006.

Sunday 17 October 2010

A lesson in developing the choreographic process!

"It's the heart afraid of breaking that never learns to dance. It is the dream afraid of waking that never takes the chance. It is the one who won't be taken who cannot seem to give. And the soul afraid of dying that never learns to live.” (Bette Midler)

This week in BTEC performing arts and GCSE dance, students will be expected to start to question their choreographic process.  Irrelevant of what you are working on  in dance, it is always so important to understand how to use stimulus and develop ideas through the use of MOTIF and tracking the strengths and weaknesses of your piece.  Sometimes, having the courage to reject something 'pretty' in your choreography to help progress to that next level can really start to set you apart from your peers. 

Holding onto that dramatic stag leap into an ariel barrel roll just because your audience will gasp with wonder at you won't do any favours to the greater good of the dance if it doesn't fit with your theme or stimulus!

Choreographic Process broken down:

Below is a past students written plan for her choreography.  Although this piece of written work was used for assessment purposes, I don't see why we can't still use this process to help ground our choreography as an exercise in good practice?  It obviously did something for her as she scored top band for her choreographic process and outcome (final performance).



Title of Dance: The shape of life
Title of Music/Composer: HIDE AND SEEK-IMOGEN HEAP
Stimulus: DYNAMICS-OVER, UNDER, AROUND

Theme of Dance/brief statement:
A solo dance to show the determination and games you play to reach your goal.

My initial idea for this piece was that I wanted my dance to show my dancer reaching for a goal in their life. So it would have to have movements showing a struggle.

I wanted to use all the space provided and different directions and phrasings to show diversity. I also knew I wanted it to have a modern and contemporary style to it, as that it what I imagine when I listen to the music.

Section 1- Dancer on the floor, her head down. Music starts she does a contraction up and down then looks up to start her journey. As the section ends the dancer runs around to find her way.

Section 2- The dancer starts to fight for her goal but is knocked down by others. She gets up and shows her frustration through dance.

Section 3- She starts to play the games, going slow put with power, making sure she is noticed and it looks as if she will get her goal or will she?




My dance is a solo, and the dancer’s aim is to reach her goal. She starts off thinking her goal will be easy to reach but then find she has to play games and need a lot of determination to succeed. I start the dance with her on the floor to show that she is starting from nothing, with fluid movement. This suddenly changes when she gets up with movements that are sharp. The size of the movements also follow the same pattern that, as the movements get sharper so does the size of the movements.

As the dance progresses the space diameter used is changed constantly. I worked on different lines and levels with the arms, legs and body to show barriers she comes up against. I have done this to represent the dancer at a variety of stages towards her goal.

Changes made- Once the dance had been choreographed there were only a few changes made in the relation of movement or dynamics. My original beginning movements of my dance were very jerky and syncopated, but then once looking at it I decided that my first section was all one dynamic and there was no light and shade to the movement. I also changed my ending to the dance. Instead of leaving my dancer reaching out for her goal with an arm on the floor I had her standing up with her feet in jazz fourth and arms in jazz second, but I felt it was left unfinished and didn’t fit into the piece.

Staging- I mainly kept to original plan of how I used the space. I knew I wanted to start in the centre but use as much space as possible to show the long journey. I changed the odd direction of movements that the dancer would deliver for the atheistic reasons for the audience. But considering this, the majority of the dance mapped out as I planned.

Direction and improvement-
I blocked the dance into three contrasting sections and worked out the motivation of the dancer. From the outset I wanted to show a story through my dance, as I feel when dancing an emotion is always needed to show you the difference between a good dancer and a great dancer.

Use of music-
The song “Hide and Seek” is entirely vocal, so it let me play around with pace and where the movement syncopation would be. Even though it does keep a constant time signature throughout (4/4) but the pace of the voice changed in certain parts.  At the beginning of the song it has a breath I incorporated this as if it was the dancer breathing getting ready for what is about to come.

In the title/chorus line “Hide and Seek” the phrase is prolonged I wanted to emphasises this part of the dance like no other section, so I used a repetition of an arm movement. When choreographed I took many words from the song and linked to the movement.

Rejected material-
I rejected some little movements in my middle section, as I felt it made the phrase of movements lose the flow and momentum. There was a part where the dancer was lying on her back with her knees held to her chest then would rock forward and stand up then fall to the floor again. But when I rehearsed it, it stood out as a movement not needed and just awkward to look at. I ended up still lying on the floor but with my knees parallel on the floor and rolling up through my spine.

Sunday 3 October 2010

Time to create!

This week DV8 wannabes we will start to look at how we develop and choreograph in the style of DV8!  This will be broken down into the following stages:

Section 1:

Get The Box’ Sinking & Rising Duet
[Never lose contact]

  1. Partners push against each other – no hands

  2. Hang around the shoulders

  3. Sink to the floor    

  4. Grab & pull leg

  5. Racing start

  6. Lift onto the back

  7. Go over/under swapping places

  8. Crawl to object in slow motion

  9. Roll over each other

  10. Raise object without using hands

Section 2:
You Can’t Have It’ Teasing/Bullying Trio
1. Tap on shoulder causing change of direction with development
2. Travelling/stepping gallop, chasée, pas de bourée, run, walk, hop, jump, skip, leap, turn, tip-toe, roll
3. Repeat tap & travel (1 & 2) twice more with different partners
4. Signal drop, fall/catch & lift over to side
5. Over/under, around, through ducking & diving x3
6. Run around partner chasing object 
7. Throwing object x 4
8. Pushing through the blocking group to get to the parcel
9. Passing the box along a long line
10. Make a bar and swing/rebound off it

Monday 27 September 2010

DV8 'Dance that means something'

Lloyd Newson was born in Australia and has worked with the DV8 dance company since 1996.  His radical and innovative ideas are often hard hitting and really do mean something in the emotion it evokes in the audience.  Straddling dance, text, theatre and film, Newson work’s refuses to be defined. He is interested in conceiving original work rather than performing existing plays or reinterpreting classical ballets.





Enter Achilles:

What a relief it is to be shown a piece of dance where the audience doesn't spend the first ten minutes thinking: 'what the hell is going on?' Instead, DV8's 'Enter Achilles' is drawn from everyday life with instantly recognizable references. Now cut to a 'marmalade' of eight 'straight' men, confined within the four walls of a typical pub; pint in hand, football on screen, the jingle of a fruit machine underneath a cacophony of karaoke and screeching wolf whistles to the blondes outside. Choreographer Lloyd Newson creates an extremely clear interpretation of the typical British 'norms' and its stereotypical views towards the male sex, male behaviour and above all, male relationships. He asks you to consider: 'why is it acceptable for men to do footwork around a football but not to do footwork in dance? 

Friday 10 September 2010

How do I?

Construct a Portfolio?


Your Performing Arts portfolio is what will help you either gain a:

• Pass
• Merit
• Distinction

So it needs to be used and added to throughout the course. There are three things you need to remember as you go through this course and they are:


Task
Evidence
Portfolio


If you remember TEP you can’t go wrong! There are four steps to ensure you are doing the right things and we are going to look at them in more detail now …

Remember, don’t panic! Once you get your head around the way you record your evidence for Performing Arts you will be flying!

Step one: PORTFOLIO

Miss Dolan will be starting the course with:      Unit C14 Dance Development

Assignment 1 (DV8 Dance Style)
Task 1, Task 2, Task 3, Task 4


Assignment 3 (Research Project)
Task 1, Task 2

Miss Hearne will be starting the course with:  Unit D15 Costume Construction

Assignment 1 (Fabric construction)

Task 1, Task 2, Task 3

Step 2:  ONLINE BLOG (which you are already doing)

Step Three: PRACTICAL PORTFOLIO


Throughout your course you will be undertaking a lot of practical work in all three units. For this reason we have purchased for you an A2 art portfolio that you can keep together ALL your mood boards and costume designs. You can also keep flat posters for productions and anything else that may not fit neatly in your A4 lever arch file!

This A2 folder can be kept in school and will form part of your final assessment portfolio.


STEP 4: CROSS REFERENCING!

It is important to remember that your A4 lever arch folder is your main portfolio and the BLOG and the A2 PRACTICAL folder will compliment your work and act as the EVIDENCE. Therefore you have to make sure you can cross reference your folder to show your examiners where to find things you say you have done to pass!

For example, if you are working on assignment 1, task 2 of Costume Construction and in your portfolio you say:
  1. ‘I have produced a mood board showing different types of fabric’,
  2. You then need to make sure that in your portfolio it says ‘SEE practical folder for evidence’
  3. And then label your mood board in your practical folder as ‘evidence for assignment 1, task 2 D15’




Wednesday 8 September 2010

Welcome Performing Arts BTEC Students!

If you are reading this post then you have added 'follow' BTEC Performing Arts as requested by your teacher!  Hope you have enjoyed your induction this week, here is the induction timetable to help you remember what to 'blog' in your first post at the end of the week:

  • Monday - Welcome to the course!
  • Tuesday - Introduction to 'Costume' with HEA & Blog set up with DOL
  • Wednesday - Mixing a Soundtrack!
  • Friday - Setting up your portfolio!
What has been your favourite part of the induction? 
What do you think is going to be a challenge for you?