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Drama Workshops

 

Description: Drama is an important and enjoyable means of expressing yourself, working with others and thinking imaginatively.

Newest Review: ... should flow naturally and you are likely to not only give an excellent performance but nerves will melt away almost ... more

 ... instantly. At the end of a LAMDA piece, it is important to hold the picture. Holding the pose at the end for about 3 seconds adds dramatic effect. It allows the audience to recognise that the piece has finished and really cements the whole dramatic atmosphere and finishes it off appropriately. When you perform a LAMDA piece dramatically, you earn your pauses. Pauses are to let a previous dramatic outburst sink in. If you arrange pauses badly, the piece will sound disorientated and lost. When you perform it, earned paus...more

Books Price Comparison

Explosive Drama: For Workshops and Performance by Jonathan Ullmer
Pages: 44, Paperback, Moorley's Print & Publishing - Books/Subjec ...
£ 4,74 Postage & Packaging: £ 2.75
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Dramatic Events: How to Run a Workshop for Theater, Education or
Pages: 192, Paperback, Palgrave MacMillan - Books/Subjects/Music, ...
£ 7,70 Postage & Packaging: refer to shop website
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Gendu
Premium Review Drama Workshops: Dramatising a LAMDA Piece... (2913 words)
by Gendu - written on 05.02.04 (Very useful, 262 readings)
Rating:

IMPORTANT: This review is NOT about drama workshops as such. It is about LAMDA which is a recognised qualification of acting exams. I could not find a category purely dedicated to the topic so I have posted it here as the nearest category I could find. I hope that you will find it useful. INTRODUCTION LAMDA stands for The London academy of Music and Dramatic Art. I discovered LAMDA when I attended a theatre college. In the LAMDA exams I took, it was for drama. This review is all about the drama side of LAMDA, about how the whole system works and how to dramatise a LAMDA piece. Thsi review does not deal with the music side of things. Partly because I ...

kittykat18
Premium Review "I Want to be a Treee!" (1771 words)
by kittykat18 - written on 16.12.01 (Very useful, 395 readings)
Rating:

This category could have been created for me. From the age of 14 I was involved in the youth theatre and I was in several productions. I went on to do GCSE Drama and Theatre Studies A Level. In my year out I joined a theatre company called RAGE and starred in a production of Shakers by John Godber (an excellent play!) As part of all this Thespian stuff I did, there were many workshops put on. At the youth theatre, which was held at the Crescent Theatre in Birmingham, we had workshops occasionally, put on by visiting companies. When we were putting on "The Pirates of Penzance" we had a voice workshop. Now the principal actors all had to sing ...

Wiseguy
Premium Review Drama Workshops: DRAMA THERAPY OR MESSING AROUND?!?! (1078 words)
by Wiseguy - written on 15.12.01 (Very useful, 1018 readings)
Rating:

Drama classes are too often dismissed as messing around. I took G.C.S.E drama and it was full of people who simply wanted an easy way out. The benefits of Drama workshops are, however, enormous. I am of the opinion that particpating in such workshops can be invaluable in terms of personal development and social integration and should not be dissmissed as simply 'messing about'. Firstly, let me give you a little background about my experiences of directing drama workshops and using drama as a means of facilitationg pesonal development. Initially I assisted in teaching workshops at a small drama school. This experience led to my studying dama at ...

 
 
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Drama Workshops