Saturday, 28 November 2015

Political Protest

   
In this day and age we have many social and political issues and just as many different ways of enforcing and challenging them. What is a protest if not a necessity to have your voice heard created by the severity of a social or political situation. Protest is marches, boycotts, illegal action, strikes riots and speeches but it can also be art. It can be a straight forward argument presented in theatrical way. The effect of that is the ability to bring an audience on something that seems to be an escape but is really Encapsulating the chaos and damage of political actions into art. It can be even more effective than a "real" protest. Something that has a completely different and appealing platform of provoking change. Takckling social issues and raising awareness over them in a narrative art form. I belive that every piece of good art is if not central to, influenced by a political angle or social issue. Perhaps because the best art comes out of pain and oppression. We, as a group and as individuals thought about the issues in the world that we feel strongly about. There were hot topics like the flaws of capitalism, the refugee crisis, discrimination, human trafficking, unequal healthcare and education etc...
As children of free speech and a powerful tool like Brechtian Theatre we are presented with countless possibilities to protest. The list of facts to challenge are also endless. Political theatre is a reflection of society and can be made into a very clear challenge towards a certain aspect of it. A Brechtian style is what would take a reflective piece of theatre and make it not only hold up a mirror to society but a hammer with which to shape it. Political theatre is Political Theatre, is Theatre that moves away from your normal story telling. I believe that Political Theatre is there to spark others, and their ideas. It should leave the audience leaving motivated, but they should be questioning themselves and the society they live in.
It addresses several issues, not just politics and the Government. We live in a society where Homophobia, Discrimination and Prejudice are common occurrences. Through Theatre, we can confront those issues and make the audience think about it. We can also confront the Government, and the current affairs we see on the news everyday.
 It gives us a chance as Actors, Directors and even Writers to talk about the issues we face everyday, and not be stopped for it. 

our PROTEST

Our protest was based on human value and idealism in the materialistic world of possibly privatised healthcare and money orientated adoption agencies. We tried to commit to being salespeople of a nicely packaged brand at a sample baby stall to question just how real the caricature we painted had the potential to become. We had our own brand catalogue and were pricing babies based on their ethnicity and gender.We put the most price on a male Aryan baby to challenge idealism and presented our capitalist company with variations of an ironic motto and logo, deciding on Stork and Co. "child trafficking the right way". We wanted to give the logo a warm family feel to make our point about the "human" yet inhumane companies who brainwash us daily. 
I initially pictured bugs bunny's hand grabbing a bitten carrot. The masked hand would suggest a dark manipulated side to the multi-millionaire kid's cartoon character's arm enjoying a healthy snack. And the bitten vegetable gave us the idea to write "get the app" below our logo. Finally we decided to go with a simple blue stork as a fantastical romanticized version of the truth behind these tedious adoptions.
Our roles in the protest were to be the over-friendly robotic people the Stall itself and take orders, answer questions, explain the company and ADVERTISE!  We were smiling up to our ears with banners posters and conversational proposals, really calm and friendly to contradict the callous reality of what we were actually doing. 
Before the protest we researched this topic finding out how much adoption really costs and we were shocked to find prices of $36000, most of it going for profit and advertising. We were looking at a reality in which adoption agencies become as commercialized as the food industry. We’d all walked past a “Hello fresh” type food delivery company stall and tried to incorporate some of their selling techniques to make our point on media manipulation. Our other political motive was to challenge the price of humans with disabilities or poor backgrounds. In our Baby Spring Catalog We had offers like free delivery coupons and three to five working days per child, as well as a romanticized version of the truth in our logo.
As a criticism of the success level of our protest I’d say there were a few things I’d do differently. First of all there were two other groups in a space near us and it seemed like our protest clashed a bit but we were still successful in bringing people over and getting desired reactions out of them. Lots of them questioned our pricing of the babies which was what we wanted but not as many noticed the point we were trying to make with the commercialization of our company. I feel like we could have gone even further with Stork and Co. and made an even bigger Brechtian style commercial of a protest. It was more like a naturalistic improvisation and was a bit far-fetched for all the people to fully understand. We all agreed on the potential for protest to be a theatrical product because all good theatre is political and a way to make a change in society is not only to threaten and demand for it.  















Tuesday, 17 November 2015

Brecht

Epic Theatre techniques in political theatre:

Brecht was a German playwright, practitioner/director and poet who made great advancements in the world of theatrical production and dramaturgy in the early 20th century.
Epic theatre is a theatrical movement, popularized in the early 20th century. It came about as a reaction to realism, which was the accepted style of most artists at the time. Brecht and a few of his contemporaries found realism to be overplayed and did not promote individual criticism. Brecht founded a style that would counteract this in the form of epic theatre.
We are going to use Brechian techniques in creating political theatre. In this day and age most theatre is political and all good theatre has an uncensored political message. Brecht wanted not only to challenge his audience but create this political message in a very clear cut way. He looked at what theatre should be.


He saw it as weapon and a strong platform for both social and political change.
His epic theatre has a didactic style for the audience to think about and be challenged by. The Marxist notions are constant in his plays and anti-capitalist/bourgeois messages flow from is ideology. His technique is to brake the fourth wall in order to make clear political statements. He often disregarded naturalism in his epic theatre because he was constantly reminding the audience that they are watching a play rather than being immersed in the story. He wanted his audience to be thinking about the message after the performance is over. For this he decided to produce expressionist works of art that had power and meaning and move on from the naturalist style of theatre.

The V-effect 

Verfremdungseffekt, or the V-effect is used to describe the technique actors employ for creating a character in Brecht's Epic theatre. The gist of it is that theatrical illusion must be partial so that theatre is used used not as a mirror to reflect reality but a hammer with which to shape it. The technique lies in alienating the audience to make them look at theatre in a critical perspective rather than an emotional one which may arise from being drawn into a naturalistic performance. This is a way of distancing the audience from the emotional and letting them question and judge the message. He uses tools such a braking the fourth wall and placards to constantly remind the audience they're watching a play with a political message. This lets an audience experience an alien sense that distances them from the story and just lets them get the effect of the message. It's a similar sense to that of a child seeing their teacher being prosecuted and seeing them for the first time in a context being affiliated with crime or realising their mother is also a married woman seeing her as a wife for the first time. 
Brecht’s notion with epic theatre was that the spectators should see a particular scene or circumstances from more than one viewpoint and form their own judgements about what was going on. The audience will not get so drawn in that they forget they are watching a dramatic production once they experience the V-effect with all it's techniques. Another technique to make political messages clear is Brecht's Slap and Tickle. The use of dark humour goes a step further with teasing the audience and making them laugh at something serious and then "slapping them in the face" with the hard hitting reality of the message making them realise just what it was they were laughing at. 
Other techniques involve song, gestus, nonatualistic voice and movement, breaking the fourth wall, playing multiple roles, using placards etc.. 

“Epic Theatre turns the spectator into an observer, but arouses his capacity for action, forces him to take decisions...the spectator stands outside, studies.”

DRAMATIC THEATRE                                            EPIC THEATRE 
Plot                                              
Narrative 
Implicates the spectator in a stage situation  
Turns the spectator into an observer but 
Wears down 
Arouses his capacity for action 
Provides him with sensations 
Forces him to take decisions 
Experience 
Picture of the world 
The spectator is involved in something 
He is made to face something 
Suggestion 
Argument  
Instinctive feelings are preserved 
Brought to the point of recognition 
The spectator is in the thick of it, shares the experience 
The spectator stands outside, studies 
The human being is taken for granted 
The human being is the object of inquiry 
He is unalterable 
He is alterable and able to alter 
Eyes on the finish 
Eyes on the course 
One scene makes another 
Each scene for itself 
Linear development 
In curves 
Evolutionary determinism 
Jumps 
Man as a fixed point 
Man as a process 
Thought determines being 
Social being determines thought  
Feeling 
Reason 

Developing Brecht’s techniques

One of the key tools is communication, especially in political theatre. 
This is why we overdramatize to make a point and communicating clearly to the audience can be hard sometimes in naturalism. Naturally people are one animal but pretend to be another. 
You can only truly play a character if you know exactly what they are inside and out. But in epic theatre all of the cards are on the table; more specifically all of the placards. 
Brecht focuses much more on the political motive than on mystifying the characters for interesting naturalistic stories. 
The exercises we did to develop our ability to create political theatre helped me get my head around all this. The first exercise we did was with playing cards. We were given two sets of info; our status level in terms of cards (if you’re a King of hearts you’re much higher than someone who’s 2 of spades etc…) and a placard. 
We had to first walk around then socialize with the playing card in mind and then greet another citizen we didn’t know the identity of whist holding placards to the audience. This created irony and revealed much more than a simple gest of interaction. 
It gave the audience an opinion. We had placards like “Foolish heroic fireman” and “poor orphan” meant to challenge and reveal to the audience.
We did an exercise with nursery rhymes, using them as an example of a story used in political theatre to get across the message. The mission was to communicate it to our partners whilst they tried to do the same along with everyone else in the room which made the initial task quite difficult at first. Then we realized that rather than vague natural movements we needed to OVERdramatise and use gestus in our telling of the nursery rhyme
. As our actions grew bigger it made the communication much clearer. The use of gestus is very important in epic theatre because it means increasing the actions and adding an emotional intention to them. Like a group of soldiers marching would be a gesture but if you add a bunch of dead ones on the stage for them to march over then we have a clear message and context of the gest that for example the soldiers are being controlled by politicians as robots and the insensitivity for human life combined with brainwashing is what caused this war.
Overall we established that epic theatre is of reason and non-engagement of emotion and is quite different to dramatic theatre which is designed to entertain. Epic theatre doesn’t want you to just be entertained and escape but to go away thinking about the message and the reason. Brecht believed that true change would come about if the audience had their brain stimulated from theatre and could leave inspired by argument and by reason to cause a change in society. Dramatic theatre relies on your soul being affected when you connect to characters not just engage your thinking process for you to change the world.