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Drama Studio
Sandy Faison, Coordinator
SandyFaison@schools.nyc.gov
The Drama Studio is a professional training program that provides students with the skills and techniques necessary to pursue a career in acting. This training prepares students to enter directly into professional careers in stage, film, and television or into Theater, Speech and Communications Departments of colleges, universities and conservatories. The focus is on preparation through courses in Theater History and Criticism, Acting: Voice and Diction: Physical Techniques; and Dance: Ballet, Jazz, Tap, and Theater Dance. Guest artists have included: Al Pacino, Adrien Brody, Adrian Grenier, Alec Baldwin, Edie Falco and Alan Cumming.
Sample Drama Sequencing
| Grade 9 |
| Term 1 |
Term 2 |
| Acting 1 |
Acting 2 |
| Theater Dance 1 |
Theater Dance 2 |
Theater History 1 |
Theater History 2 |
Voice and Diction 1 |
Voice and Diction 2 |
| Grade 10 |
| Acting 3 |
Acting 4 |
| Theater Dance 3 |
Theater Dance 4 |
Physical Theater
Improvisation 1 |
Physical Theater
Improvisation 2 |
| Dramatic Lit. 1 |
Dramatic Lit. 2 |
| Voice and Diction 3 |
Voice and Diction 4 |
| Physical Technique |
Vocal Production |
| Grade 11 |
| Acting 5 |
Acting 6 |
| Audition Technique 1 |
Audition Technique 2 |
| Theater Dance 5 |
Theater Dance 6 |
| Musical Theater 1 |
Musical Theater 2 |
Vocal Text |
Vocal Text |
| Voice and Diction 5 |
Voice and Diction 6 |
| Grade 12 |
| Acting 7 |
Acting 8 |
| Career Management 1 |
Career Management 2 |
| Theater Dance 7 |
Theater Dance 8 |
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Play and Film |
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Voice and Diction 7 |
Core Curricular Areas
Acting - Acting is the core element of the curriculum and all Acting Studio classes develop students’ understanding of Stanislavski-based technique. Students must complete and pass the full-year course of Acting in order to be promoted to the next year’s level.
Physical Techniques and Dance - Physical Techniques and Dance presents a series of exercises adapted from various styles of dance and theater movement that are natural to all body types and designed to facilitate the execution of specific actions that require increased range of motion, considerable strength and moderate coordination.
Theater Studies - Theater Studies, which includes Theater History, allows for the study of principles of theater, theatrical discipline, styles, types, theory, play analysis, and theater history.
Voice and Diction -Voice and Diction training gives the actor an instrument capable of producing and projecting sound in a healthy manner, as well as articulating clearly in performance.
Course Offerings for 2010-11
All of the following courses are required and sequential. Active and consistent participation in class-work is essential for the completion of each course. Most courses require performance projects as well as written research/analytical assignments or projects.
Note: After-school rehearsals are required for all performance classes.
Grade 9
Acting 1 and 2 -Students explore and develop their instruments. They learn basic acting technique, beginning with work on self.
Dance 1 and 2 - Introduces a basic vocabulary of movement in conjunction with definite rhythmical patterns to expose students to a practical method used in obtaining a knowledge of dance. The first year establishes a foundation for a basic technique in contemporary dance and tap dance.
Physical Theater Improvisation 1 and 2 - Stimulates and develops imagination, spontaneity, creative risk-taking, responsiveness, and ensemble skills through individual as well as group theater and problem-solving improvisation exercises.
Theater History 1 and 2-The course begins with an overview of theater for actors. Students become acquainted with the workings of professional theater, terminology, and the history of the development of acting principles. Coursework continues with an overview of theater history that connects purpose, physical design, acting style, and plays performed throughout the ages.
Voice and Diction 1 and 2 -The focus is on freeing the natural voice, increasing resonance, articulation of consonants and blends, proper placement and breathing, ear training, support and projection in voice production. Students are introduced to phonetics and the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) as a tool.
Grade 10
Acting 3 and 4 -Students continue to explore and develop their acting technique.
Dance 3 and 4 -Furthers students’ experience of dance through the implementation of modern jazz and the soft-shoe style of tap dance. Students present dance combinations and routines that make them aware of their own performance in relation to that of the rest of the group. Freedom to express various emotions while relying on technique and the music to permit proper execution is encouraged.
Physical Theater Improvisation 3 and 4-The class develops technique and physical freedom through exploration of skills in hand-to-hand stage combat, self-defense, mime, juggling, acrobatics, and relaxation exercises.
Play and Film Study 1 and 2 - The class teaches the actor an approach to analyze scripts for playing characters focusing on plays from the 19th to 21st Centuries.
Voice and Diction 3 and 4 -The classes build upon the skills learned in Freshman Year while students create an Individualized Speech and Voice Plan (ISVP) focusing on their own unique challenges and goals. Students are introduced to recording techniques, to IPA transcription and to Eastern Standard Speech (to expand their character options in addition to working on clarity of speech when approaching their own regionalisms).
Grade 11
Acting 5 and 6 -The Junior Acting class introduces the concept of extension of self; students must go outside of self for the source of creating character. Students work on character sketches far from self in scenes from modern theater, children’s theater, classical theater, absurdist theater, and farce.
Audition Technique 1 and 2 -This course introduces the student to audition preparation and the audition process for theater, film, and television. Students prepare portfolios of classical and contemporary texts.
Dance 5 and 6 -This course aligns with the studio work on classical and stylized works. Students continue the techniques learned in the prior years and apply them to further work in ballet and other stylized dance.
Musical Theater 1 and 2 - Musical Theater introduces the student to the study of song interpretation for the stage. Primarily an acting class to further the development of far from self, the class guides student in preparing short musical theater scenes for singer and non-singer.
Physical Theater Improvisation 5 and 6 -The class further develops technique and physical freedom through exploration of skills in stage combat involving weaponry, acrobatics, kabuki, Elizabethan, and other stylized forms.
Voice and Diction 5 and 6 -This course introduces dialects and accents and the use of IPA in rehearsal. The Junior Vocal Text class introduces techniques for vocal text interpretation of verse and more advanced elevated and heightened language.
Grade 12
Acting 7 and 8 -The Senior Acting course is the production year where the student actors apply their three years of acquired skills and techniques in working on scripted material with a director for invited audiences and public performances. Students learn ensemble acting and how to maintain a “life” on stage when they do not have lines. Projects include large group scenes (four or more on stage at a time), a fully mounted/professionally designed production of the Spring Drama Festival, a Showcase presented to invited casting directors and agents, and a Senior Project of the student’s choosing including playwriting, directing and filmmaking.
Audition Technique 3 and 4 -This course continues to explore the audition process with particular attention paid to college auditions, film and television auditions, and preparation for a culminating industry showcase for agents and managers.
Career Management 1 and 2 -Equips actors with skills and knowledge as to how to be working actors. Students are introduced to various job opportunities in theater, film, and media where they can apply the skills and techniques they have learned in our program. Students acquire practical professional information about unions, agents, resumes, pictures, interviews, and their options after graduation. Students meet visiting working professionals from theater, film, television, and radio who speak about their fields and answer students’ questions.
Dance 7 and 8 -This course concentrates on techniques that will help portray expressive movements that exhibit a performer with versatility and style. Students learn approaches to interpretation and identification with certain musical qualities. Focus is on Theater Dance as a means of gaining experience with floor, spatial, and rhythmical patterns as well as design, character, and showmanship.
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