Dramatic is something that is stirring, affecting or moving.
Dramatic Entrance is something that
catches and holds attention, and has emotional impacts.
Dramatized Experiences can range from:
- Formal
Plays
- Pageants
- Tableau
- Pantomime
- Puppets
- Role-playing
Plays depict life,
character, culture, or a combination of the three. They offer excellent
opportunities to portray vividly important ideas about life. Teaching with
dramatized Experiences
Pageants are usually community
dramas that are based on local history. An example is a historical pageant that
traces the growth of a school.
Pantomime is an “art of
conveying a story through bodily movements.” The effects of pantomime to the
audience depends on the movements of the actors.
Tableau is a picture-like
scene composed of people against a background.
Role-Playing is
an unrehearsed, unprepared and spontaneous dramatization of a situation where
assigned participants are absorbed by their own roles.
Puppets - A puppet is an
inanimate object or representational figure animated or manipulated by an
entertainer, who is called a puppeteer. Puppets can present ideas with extreme
simplicity.
Types of Puppets
Shadow puppets –
flat, black silhouette made from lightweight cardboard shown behind a screen.
Rod puppets –
flat, cut-out figures tacked to a stick with one or more movable parts, and are
operated below the stage through wires or rods.
Glove-and-finger puppets –
make use of gloves which small costumed figures are attached.
Marionettes –
flexible, jointed puppets operated by strings or wires attached to a cross bar
and maneuvered from directly above the stage.
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