Theatre Studies

Unit 1: History of theatre styles and conventions pre-1945

This unit focuses on the application of acting, direction and design in relation to theatre styles and their conventions pre-1945. Students work in production roles with scripts from specific periods.They study innovations in theatre production through the styles they explore and apply this knowledge to their interpretations of works. Students begin to develop skills of performance analysis and apply these to the analysis of a play in performance.

 

On completion of this Unit, students should be able to:

  • Apply production roles (actor, director, designer) to scripts.
  • Apply elements of theatre composition to realise theatrical possibilities within a script.
  • Apply safe, ethical, inclusive and sustainable (where possible, environmentally sustainable) working practices in theatre production.
  • Interpret scripts.
  • Apply theatre terminology.

Unit 2: Contemporary theatre styles and movements

This unit focuses on the application of acting, direction and design in relation to contemporary theatre practice from 1945 to the present day. Students work in production roles to interpret scripts. They study developments and innovations in theatre and apply this knowledge to their own work.

 

On completion of this unit students should be able to:

  • Develop interpretations of scripts from contemporary theatre styles or a movement from 1945 to the present day.
  • Work collaboratively to develop an interpretation.
  • Document ideas that have contributed to the planning and development of the interpretation.
  • Apply safe, ethical, inclusive and sustainable (where possible, environmentally sustainable) working practices in theatre.
  • Analyse and evaluate a theatre production.
  • Analyse ways in which acting, direction and design are used to interpret the selected theatre styles evident in a production.

Unit 3: Producing theatre

This unit focuses on an interpretation of a playscript through the four designated stages of production: planning, production development, production season, and production evaluation. Students also attend a performance selected from the prescribed Theatre Studies Unit 3 Playlist published annually in the VCAA Bulletin, and analyse and evaluate the interpretation of the playscript in the performance.

 

On completion of this unit the student should be able to:

  • Apply production roles to interpret a playscript for performance to an audience and demonstrate understanding of the stages of the production process.
  • Apply dramaturgical processes, theatre technologies, elements of theatre composition across the production process to achieve production aims. 
  • Document, analyse and evaluate ongoing contributions towards the realisation of production.
  • Apply safe, ethical, inclusive and sustainable (where possible, environmentally sustainable) work practices.
  • Identify and describe ways in which work in production roles could be used to interpret scripts
  • Apply relevant theatre terminology in writing and in discussion
  • Analyse and evaluate ways in which written scripts were interpreted in a performance of a production to an audience 

Unit 4: Presenting an interpretation

In this unit students study a scene and associated monologue from the Theatre Studies Performance Examination. They develop an interpretation of the scene and then interpret the monologue from the scene. To realise their interpretation, students work in production roles as an actor and director, or as a designer.

 

On completion of this unit the student should be able to:

  • Conduct dramaturgy and apply dramaturgy. 
  • Describe and demonstrate theatrical possibilities and possible interpretations of a monologue and its prescribed scene.
  • Outline safe, ethical, inclusive and sustainable (where possible, environmentally sustainable) working practices associated with theatre production that will be applied to realise the interpretation.
  • Apply relevant theatre terminology, especially pertaining to the two chosen production roles.
  • Analyse and evaluate the acting, directorial and design decisions in a production.