The island Flashcards

1
Q

Fugard’s methods in the township plays

A
  • not pure realism
  • dramatic economy (minimal use of everything)
  • retains unity of time, place and action
  • actor-centred approach
  • set elements and props are used powerfully
  • Epic theatre techniques
  • character addresses audience
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2
Q

Style

A
  • workshopping
  • realism
  • protest
  • epic
  • poor
  • personal story
  • not overtly politcal (far too subtle)
  • human statement (shows experience)
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3
Q

Fugard and Grotowski’s poor theatre

A
  • admired the space and silence in his work
  • Fugard was working on ‘pure theatre experience’
  • actor and stage, actor on stage
  • space filled with meaning and words and sounds
  • his words being the silence itself
  • tried to simplify his work
  • 2/3 characters and space and time are restricted
  • no elaborate set, limited costume, shorter plays
  • actor/spectator relationship being unique and special
  • ‘Holy actor’ (unique truth, allowed to live on stage)
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4
Q

Poor theatre and the island

A
  • sparseness (prison life)
  • any venue and space
  • actor is the heart and soul
  • costumes were everyday, nothing special, no entertainment
  • costumes gave no identity and individuality, other than the actors individuality
  • simple multi-purpose props
  • simple stark white light, no emotion, indicate time and place change
  • simple staging
  • very physicalised, vocalised, very in control, mime, physical discipline
  • voice made music and sound effects
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5
Q

Fugard and Brecht’s Epic Theatre

A
  • distance and alienate the audience
  • artificially created
  • engage critical faculties, to learn
  • narration
  • interspersed songs
  • actors go by their names (representing both themselves and the greater oppressed)
  • play within a play (distances further)
  • end, winston addresses as himself
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6
Q

Fugard and existentialism

A
  • Camus and Beckett
  • lucid consciousness (expressed properly than avoiding)
  • Robben Island as a fight for consciousness
  • mime, to triumph of physical exhaustion
  • Courageous pessimism ( to show courage at how futile life really is)
  • Few characters
  • spare set
  • terms of existence
  • casual explanations, existence is inexplicable and irremediable (impossible to cure)
  • problem of identity, man’s metaphysical anguish
  • human condition
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7
Q

Protest Theatre

A
  • tackled previously taboo ideas
  • voice to the voiceless
  • international awareness
  • plays organised assaults on legal statutes
  • Immorality Act, Group areas act, pass system, bantu education act
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8
Q

Island as example of protest theatre

A
  • protests the system of Apartheid, justice system and south african pass laws
  • protests the conspiracy of silence
  • political because they represent political acts
  • words can make a difference
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9
Q

Hodoshe

A
  • sadistic warder
  • carrion fly which eats rotten flesh
  • actual name of a warden
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10
Q

Comedic elements

A
  • classical double act
  • John comic, Winston as straight
  • before bed, entertainment
  • humour is never far from the surface
  • costume of antigone is comedic
  • shift from comedic to serious at the end
  • Hodoshe will not be given contentment
  • man’s dignity transcends clothes and appearances
  • laugh at themselves (laugh keeps one away from the brink of insanity)
  • piss in his pants, serious yet humorous
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11
Q

Staging

A
  • actor-centred
  • stage-set
  • few props
  • costumes (play within a play)
  • lighting effect (time, place, mood)
  • sound effects (siren, whistles, grunts, buzzing flies)
  • very performer demanding play
  • energetic, physical, vocalised
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12
Q

Parallels between the island and antigone

A
  • transgression by state law
  • fundamental humanism
  • oppression versus power
  • unwarranted and disproportionate sentences
  • antigone is an image of rebellion to unjust laws (articulates the suffering)
  • inhumane, immoral, arbitrary
  • unrepentant
  • relation in politics
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13
Q

Idea of survival

A
  • entertainment (keep each other’s spirits up by different forms of entertainment)
  • brotherhood and caring (support each other and look after each other - tending of wounds)
  • resistance (determined their spirit and vitality will not be diminished)
  • obedience (obey ruled and do their work)
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14
Q

Intention of the island as an instrument of education

A
  • didactic
  • educated people about the Apartheid laws
  • challenges society through reality
  • forces confrontation of terrible occurrences
  • entertaining and enlightening
  • slice of township life
  • tragic and comedic
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15
Q

Universality / locality of the island

A
  • local to South Africa
  • powerful and moving
  • excellent by international standards
  • dozen of other countries
  • unjust imprisonment for beliefs
  • racism, man’s inhumanity to man
  • God’s laws vs. Man’s laws
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16
Q

performance

A
  • physical
  • vocal
  • emotional
  • mental
17
Q

Themes

A
  • lack of synergy between justice and the law (conflict between laws and laws of humanity)
  • brotherhood saves humankind from isolation (care for each other, strong bond, gives meaning to them surviving)
  • human dignity in the face of oppression (degradation and dehumanisation, no sense of identity and individuality)
18
Q

Character centred vs. Actor centred

A
  • text accurate
  • character’s persona portrayed
  • actor blends into character
    vs.
  • actors’s life is portrayed
  • physicality
  • voice
  • emotions
  • character blends into actor
19
Q

scene 1

A
  • digging on beach
  • chased by hodoshe
  • urinate on one another to clean wounds
  • play games for bed
  • mug becomes phone
  • excited mood becomes somber and dark
20
Q

scene 2

A
  • john convincing winston to play antigone
  • “take you antigone and shove it up your arse”
  • john is take off stage by hodoshe
  • john ecstatic to be released
  • reminisce on trip to robben island
  • john wondering if family heard the news
21
Q

scene 3

A
  • john count down days
  • winston watches, but can only count 1
  • isolation realisation for winston
  • futility (passbook burning)
  • comes to term with fate
22
Q

scene 4

A
  • performance takes place
  • cell into stage
  • speech of empowerment
  • two men come together shackled and repeat three legged run
  • siren