Plays, Scripts, Videos and Specials Fifteen
American One-Act Plays
A collection of plays by such authors
as: Christopher Morley, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Gerge S. Kaufman, Booth
Tarkington, Zona Gale, and Stephen Vincent Benet, among others.
David Mamet, Beth Henley, and
August Wilson are just some of the contemporary dramatists whose work is
featured in this book, the first anthology of two-character scenes that
exclusively includes plays from the mid-sixties to plays currently running
on and off Broadway.
A
HUGE COLLECTION OF PLAY SCRIPTS AVAILABLE HERE
Truly a publishing event, this outstanding and unique collection
of modern one-act plays and monologues features writers both young and
old, foreign and American. From acknowledged American masters to new, lesser-known
voices, Plays in One Act is a dazzling collection sure to be a standard
reference for anyone interested in contemporary drama.
Quidam revolves around an Everychild, living with self-absorbed
(and deliberately archetypal) parents, who's whisked away to a vividly
surreal world where Cirque's remarkable acrobats and artists take literal
flight. Their tools are often prosaic--oversized flying rings, an open
steel wheel large enough for a single inhabitant, skateboards, ropes--yet
the resulting images are stunning. Injecting further drama and atmosphere
is the score (here by musical director Benoit Jutras), which is as far
removed from traditional circus music as Cirque's "acts" are from Barnum
& Bailey. Performed with synthesizers, electric guitar, solo reed instruments,
percussion, and voice (often singing in a kind of Esperanto that's tantalizing
yet foreign), Cirque's music can be dismissed as New Age only until heard
in its intended context.
Also available as a
DVD
Fifteen
American One-Act Plays
A collection of plays by such authors
as: Christopher Morley, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Gerge S. Kaufman, Booth
Tarkington, Zona Gale, and Stephen Vincent Benet, among others.
A
HUGE COLLECTION OF PLAY SCRIPTS AVAILABLE HERE
David Mamet, Beth Henley, and
August Wilson are just some of the contemporary dramatists whose work is
featured in this book, the first anthology of two-character scenes that
exclusively includes plays from the mid-sixties to plays currently running
on and off Broadway.
For big laughs, comedy relies
on exaggeration, incongruity, automatism, character inconsistency, surprise
and derision. Now a book that defines and demonstrates each of these devices
with twenty-two short sketches and one-act plays. This unique overview
of high and low comedy defines all comedy genres: absurdism, tragicomedy,
farce and melodrama. Following each sketch or play are notes reviewing
what must be considered for acting the roles and preparing the total production.
The book explains why references to events, places and people, both past
and present are so important to each play or sketch. The reader will find
many insights along the way about how to write and perform each comedy
style successfully.
A ten-minute play is a streak
of theatrical lightning. It doesn't last long, but its power can stand
your hair on end. This splendid anthology contains enough wattage to light
up a small city. For in its pages, thirty-two of our finest playwrights
hone their skills on a form that has been called the haiku of the American
stage. The plays that Nina Shengold and Eric Lane have collected in this
volume range from monologues to an eight-character farce. Eminently producible,
ideally suited for the classroom and audition, Take Ten is a marvelous
resource for teachers and students of drama, as well as a stimulating read
for lovers of the theatre. Contributors include: John Augustine, Cathy
Celesia, Laura Cunningham, Joe Pintauro, Mary Sue Price, Megan Terry, Jose
Rivera, Romulus Linney, David Mamet, Jane Martin, David Ives, and many
others.
The seven full-length and ten
one-act selections in "Plays for Actresses" range in tone from the unabashed
theatricality of Edward Albee's Pulitzer Prize-winning "Three Tall Women"
to the blistering black comedy of Laura Cunningham's "Beautiful Bodies".
Gather any group of actresses,
from students to stars, and someone will inevitably ask, "Where are all
the great roles for women?" The roles are right here, in this unprecedented
and magnificently diverse collection of plays with all-female casts, each
of which represents the answer to any actress's prayer. The seven full-length
and ten one-act selections In Plays for Actresses range in tone from the
unabashed theatricality of Edward Albee's Pulitzer Prize-winning Three
Tall Women to the blistering black comedy of Laura Cunningham's Beautiful
Bodies. Their characters include uprooted Japanese war brides, outrageously
liberated Shakespearean heroines, an avenging African American housewife,
and nuns who double as Catholic schoolgirls. Whether you're looking for
a script to produce, a scene for acting class, or a new audition speech,
this book will provide you with a wealth of juicy, challenging female roles
- even as it introduces you to some of the finest playwrights at work today.
While this book
may not be obviously linked to Drama or Arts education I thoroughly recommend
it to everyone. A tremendous read that will get you re-examining
your own life and the way you deal with people - if that isn't Drama then
I don't know what is!!
Truly a publishing event, this outstanding and unique collection
of modern one-act plays and monologues features writers both young and
old, foreign and American. From acknowledged American masters to new, lesser-known
voices, Plays in One Act is a dazzling collection sure to be a standard
reference for anyone interested in contemporary drama.
This book applies directly to the experience of theatrical
production; students will immediately be able to relate the concepts and
procedures they learn to their artistic work. The author's procedural method
is detailed and precise. The parts of a play are learned progressively,
which fosters an understanding of the concept of artistic unity. Examples
are clear and comprehensive. Actors, directors, and designers will benefit
from end-of-chapter questions and summaries meant to stimulate their creative
process as they engage in production work. Updated to include examples
of contemporary plays * End of chapter questions and summaries stimulate
creative process * Formalist approach provides an excellent foundation
for using a wide variety of critical approaches Based on the premise that
plays are objects of study in and of themselves, Script Analysis for Actors,
Directors, and Designers teaches a traditional system of classifications
that examines the written part of a play, excluding such considerations
as performance, scenery, or costuming.
Two dozen classic dramas by some of the finest and
most famous playwrights of the last hundred years--Anton Chekhov, Noel
Coward, Oscar Wilde, Arthur Miller, and A.A. Milne.
VIDEO
The "new" Globe is now one of the most outstanding landmarks
on the south bank of the Thames in London. This video documents the
process of it's construction.
The Living Theatre was an institution in contemporary
and avant-garde theatrical experimentation. Conceived by Julian Beck
and Judith Malina, it experirmented with actor/audience relationships and
through the concept of theatre into a new light. Renowned for its
"happenings" it made a mark on contemporary theatrical practice.
Harold Clurman was a legend in American theatre.
He founded the Group Theatre in the 1930's and went on to become a well
regarded director and an inspiration to an age of actors. This film
documents his life and includes footage of the man himself at work in rehearsal.
Narrated by Meryl Streep this film covers Clurman's work in theatre until
his death in 1980.
Rated: R Not for sale to persons under age 18.
From the heydays of Hardy Boys and National Velvet through
to the mature comic antics and sometimes poignant drama Mickey Rooney has
created a video to share his knowledge of perfromance. One might
think that this is a dinky little video, the truth is that Mickey Rooney
has sustained a performing career for longer than most of us will live.
This is a simple, not simplistic, approach to acting and could benefit
anyone getting started in drama.
Though Shakespeare is heralded as the world's most
influential and admired writer, little is known about the man himself.
That didn't stop A&E Biography from weaving together a substantial
birth (in 1564) to death (in 1616) portrait from spotty documentation,
historical accounts, and interpretations of the master's work itself.
GLOBALSTAGE series - Introducing theatre
to children. This theatrical adaptation of Mary Shelley's novel,
written specifically for Globalstage by Nick DiMartino, is part of a series
designed to introduce children to classic works of world literature. Frankenstein
is produced by the Stage One Children's Theatre of Louisville, Kentucky.
The actors portray their characters with intensity and just the right touch
of humor (especially the monster), making up for the lack of special effects
kids may be used to from film versions of this tale. Actually, this production
benefits from the lack of such distractions, as it allows the story itself
to take center stage.
Children's theater is not represented well in the world
of video. Many stage classics become video presentations with either realistic
settings or mind-bending effects. The Globalstage folk look to change that
with a series (six per year) of plays filmed on stages around the
world. Except for a maddening opening with host Professor McNamer tooling
around Louisville, Kentucky, talking to a youngster about the city and
the play before entering the theater, kids age 6 and up should be entranced
with this stage production. Set in Pinocchio's original time and place--the
Italian Renaissance--the play starts with actors talking and scurrying
on stage trying to set up the story for their audience. One curious problem--some
actors are in the wrong play! After sorting out our actors and costumes,
the play unfolds.
Like the other videos in the Globalstage series (which
offers various worldwide theatrical productions), this Cyrano is richly
layered, offering many avenues of discussion for viewers young and old.
The Belgian theater company, Blauw Vier, offers up a fresh rendering of
Edmond Rostand's classic story of Cyrano, who believes he is too unattractive
to win the heart of his beloved Roxanne and helps a rival win her
through Cyrano's own words of Love. Through the inspired performances of
only three actors (whose accents are slight enough not to distract a young
audience), the play and characters come alive. Using miming instead of
props (with the actors providing sound effects), this well-done, inventive
production tells a powerful and still timely tale: if one doesn't believe
in one's self, neither will anyone else.
This taped theatrical adaptation of H.G. Wells's classic
fictional pondering on the nature of humans is aimed at mature kids.
The play's themes of animal experimentation, transplantation, and related
subjects are discussed explicitly in the 113-minute video's introduction
and conclusion.
Cirque
du Soleil
Cirque's creative brain trust, including "guide" Guy
Laliberte and director Franco Dragone, have crafted each production as
an extended performance piece framed by recurrent characters, unified production
design, and underlying themes. Already mesmerizing visual tableaux and
astonishing illusions are given an added poignancy (and, occasionally,
true gravity) by the productions' underlying comments about society, conformity,
beauty, and emotion; even without such conscious motifs, however, Cirque's
sheer artistry is never less than riveting.
Quidam revolves around an Everychild, living with self-absorbed
(and deliberately archetypal) parents, who's whisked away to a vividly
surreal world where Cirque's remarkable acrobats and artists take literal
flight. Their tools are often prosaic--oversized flying rings, an open
steel wheel large enough for a single inhabitant, skateboards, ropes--yet
the resulting images are stunning. Injecting further drama and atmosphere
is the score (here by musical director Benoit Jutras), which is as far
removed from traditional circus music as Cirque's "acts" are from Barnum
& Bailey. Performed with synthesizers, electric guitar, solo reed instruments,
percussion, and voice (often singing in a kind of Esperanto that's tantalizing
yet foreign), Cirque's music can be dismissed as New Age only until heard
in its intended context.
Also available as a
DVD
A film event inspired by Cirque du Soleil. Alegria
is the touching story of Frac (Rene Bazinet), a street mime who has lost
all love for his art and life, deciding to end it all by lying in
front of an oncoming train. When his 11-year-old friend Momo (Clipper Miano)
insists on joining the suicide attempt, Frac must save them both. The train
carries a traveling circus, and when it stops, Frac catches sight of Giulietta
(Julie Cox), the troupe's beautiful lead singer and performer. Frac falls
instantly and rapturously in love, but to pursue Giulietta, he must overcome
her father, Fleur (Frank Langella), the circus leader who disapproves of
Frac. When Giulietta abandons the troupe to be with Frac and help save
Momo from an abusive taskmaster who forces young children to sell flowers
on the street, the wonderful cirque falls apart. Realizing that Giulietta
must return, she and Frac help Fleur understand that the mission of the
cirque is to console a suffering world. The show, like life, must go on.
93 minutes.
Check out the fantastic music that has helped Cirque du
Soleil become so highly regarded.
This is one of my favourite performances of all time.
This video is a tremendous teaching tool - observant students with a sensitive
teacher will begin to see the shades and subtleties of the production.
An excellent showcase of grand scale performance. Can be useful to
Drama, Music, Dance and Circus students.
Other titles available are:
Wildly popular and critically acclaimed celebrity (and
Oprah!(tm)-appearing) photographer Veronique Vial is also the official
photographer for Cirque du Soleil, the widely adored theatrical troupe
that mixes traditional circus performance tropes with imaginative mysticism
and exotic storytelling in sold-out performances worldwide. Vial captures
the vivid color, breathtaking special effects, and mesmerizing costume,
set design, and troupe performances--in and out of water (eau)--that are
the hallmark of Cirque's new Vegas venue at the Bellagio. Vial's unique
capacity to distill the childlike mystery and awe of 'O,' the most elaborate
Cirque du Soleil production ever mounted, creates in effect a wonderfully
transcendent book for kids and adults alike, complete with fantasy narrative.
Harry Potter would approve.
'Wings'
: Backstage With Cirque Du Soleil!!!
Scramble Squares are nine-piece tessellation puzzles
that are "Easy to Play, But Hard to Solve", for ages four to 104 in 56
styles of brilliant original art on topics of nature, sports, history,
culture, science, technology, hobbies and activities. You can unscramble
the nine 4" x 4" square pieces by perfectly matching the beautiful illustrations
on the squares' edge, while forming a 12" x 12" square. Sound easy? It's
not! Can you unscramble the squares without scrambling your brain? Each
puzzle comes with a panel of fascinating facts on its subject and a trivia
quiz and answer in convenient three-hole punched resealable clear vinyl
pouch for easy storage and travel.
by
Paul Kozelka (Editor)
The
Actor's Book of Scenes from New Plays
by Eric Lane (Photographer), Nina Shengold (Photographer)
Plays
in One Act
by Daniel Halpern (Preface)
Quidam
(1999)
by
Paul Kozelka (Editor)
The
Actor's Book of Scenes from New Plays
by Eric Lane (Photographer), Nina Shengold (Photographer)
Funny
Business : An Introduction to Comedy With Royalty-Free Plays and Sketches
by Marsh Cassady, Theodore
O. Zapel (Editor)
Take
Ten : New 10-Minute Plays
by
Eric Lane (Editor), Nina Shengold (Editor), N. Sheilgold
Plays
for Actresses
by Eric Lane (Editor),
Nina Shengold (Editor), N. Sheilgold
Friedman's
Fables/With Discussion Questions (Book and Manual of Questions)
by Edwin H. Friedman
Plays
in One Act
by Daniel Halpern (Preface)
Script
Analysis for Actors, Directors, and Designers
by James Michael Thomas
Encore
: More Winning Monologs for Young Actors : 63 More Honest-To-Life Monologs
for Teenage Boys and Girls
by Peg. Kehret, Arthur
L. Zapel (Editor)
24
Favorite One-Act Plays
by Van H. Cartmell (Editor),
Van Cartwell, Bennett A. Cerf (Editor)
Goldberg
Street : Short Plays and Monologues
by
David Mamet
Shakespeare's
Globe Theatre Restored (1998)
The Shakespeare Globe project is an amazing tribute to
both Shakespeare's reputation and that of contemporary philanthropist Sam
Wannamaker. The very structure of Elizabethan theatres is significant
to appreciating the development of plays from the era.
Signals
Through the Flames: The Story of the Living Theatre (1983)
Harold
Clurman - A Life of Theatre (1988)
Marat
Sade (1966) DVD
Starring: Patrick Magee, et al.
Director: Peter Brook
Also available on VHS
While somewhat dated - this piece has some strong performances
from the leads with an interesting Brechtian approach to characterisation
and performance. Students of theatre could benefit from viewing sections
of this film in the study of the play, Brechtian techniques and the work
of Peter Brook. Those interested in the work of Peter Brook might
also be interested in Empty
Space.
Biography:
William Shakespeare - Life of Drama (1996)
Cirque
Ingenieux
Climb aboard Cirque Ingenieux's whimsical flight of
fancy into an inquisitive young girl's imagination. You'll encounter breathtakingly
beautiful -- and sometimes bizarre -- sights and sounds: music by Golden
Globe-Winner Kitaro conjures a landscape of curious creatures who
appear and disappear in the blink of an eye. Dreams and dramas unfold as
you're transported to a world where the unknown reveals unexpected treasures
of joy and adventure. Cirque Ingenieux deftly weaves the artistry and magic
of the French "cirque" tradition with the rich history of the theatre into
an exquisite and irresistible tapestry of beauty, comedy, fantasy,
and stunning human prowess. Young and old alike will be mesmerized by the
fun: the spectacle and the mystery that is Cirque Ingenieux!
Far
From the Madding Crowd (Globalstage) (1998)
This videotaped stage production by England's Snap
Theatre is a broadly comic presentation of Thomas Hardy's 1874 novel. Mark
Ryan's adaptation of farmer Bathsheba Everdene's vexing choice among three
very different men is aimed squarely at young people. The tape opens with
a young teenage boy and a teacher discussing Hardy's life and visiting
his boyhood home in the British countryside, which serves as a visual textbook-style
introduction. (A pamphlet with further details is included with the video.)
Frankenstein
(Globalstage) (1997)
Pinocchio
(Globalstage) (1998)
Cyrano
(Globalstage) (1998)
The
Island of Dr. Moreau (Globalstage) (1999)
Master
Poets Collection, The: William Shakespeare - A Poet For All Time (1997)
VIDEO
Understanding
Shakespeare: Macbeth (1993) also
When Cirque du Soleil first ventured beyond Canada's
borders, its powerful, singularly ambitious "reinvention of the circus"
seemed quixotic. Inspired by European precedents, this was a big top downsized
to a more intimate, single ring, as the French-Canadian troupe jettisoned
animals, banished the usual fright-wigged clowns in favor of funny folks
versed in (gulp) pantomime, and focused on acrobats, contortionists, and
illusionists. Conventional wisdom would have held that such esoterica was
doomed, but anyone lucky enough to catch that initial Cirque production
(or, for that matter, any of its subsequent offerings) knows just how wrong
conventional wisdom can be.
Quidam
(1999)
Cirque
Du Soleil - Alegria (1998) DVD






Saltimbanco
(1995)
Nouvelle
Experience (1995)
We
Reinvent the Circus (1992)
Ocirque
Du Soleil at the Bellagio
by Veronique Vial (Photographer)
by Veronique Vial
(Photographer)