Mechanisms of co-presence in repetitive drama studio performances

Authors

  • Željka Flegar University of Osijek
  • Grozdana Lajić Horvat

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33178/18.2.6

Keywords:

Co-presence, Drama studio, Improvisational theatre, Process drama, Adaption

Abstract

When working with older children (ages 9-12) in a drama studio environment (extracurricular theatre and drama education with performative outcomes), keeping everyone present is both an exciting and challenging task. The process towards a performance can encompass several techniques and methods during the creative process, as well as on stage, in three core areas: 1. Impro and Process Drama; 2. Mentoring; 3. Language and Literature. Presence and co-presence occur as a result of focus, accepting, and building which are characteristic of improvisational theatre and process drama techniques that are used to keep students engaged and on task. Students address issues from an autobiographical and collaborative perspective, allowing them to play a part through improvised personal responses. The mentoring is present both outside and inside the play as mentors guide their students, assume some of the roles, and provide a meaningful framework and direction of the play. Fairy tales and well-known literary texts can be used as starting points; they are adapted and transformed on the spot. This results in a creative, spontaneous, and natural use of language that keeps the players present and alert throughout. This paper presents the examples from the Zagreb Youth Theatre (ZKM) Drama Studio's final production "A Bunch of Forest Fairies" (June 2023) which contains elements of Impro, process drama (uncharacteristically performed on stage), inside and outside mentoring (super mentoring), and fairy tale elements that are transformed in a new socio-cultural context. Such an approach enables the players to perform the same play repetitively with the same intensity and presence as the first time, allowing them to re-explore relationships, expressions, and texts in a new and meaningful way.

Author Biographies

  • Željka Flegar, University of Osijek

    Željka Flegar is an Associate Professor at the Academy of Arts and Culture, University of Osijek (Croatia), where she teaches and does research in English language, literature, media, and drama. She is the author of the first book on improvisational theatre in Croatia, Theatrical Improvisation, Language, and Communication (2016), and co-editor of Children and Languages Today: First and Second Language Literacy Development (with Ivana Moritz; Vernon Press, 2019) and Children's Literature in Place: Surveying the Landscapes of Children's Culture (with Jennifer M. Miskec; Routledge, 2024).

  • Grozdana Lajić Horvat

    GROZDANA LAJIC HORVAT graduated at the University of Zagreb with
    a degree in French language and literature, Information sciences and
    Theatre studies. Since 2005 she has been permanently employed at the
    Zagreb Youth Theatre (ZKM) as a Theater pedagogue and Head of
    Drama studio department, where she authored and staged numerous
    plays with children and youth. In 2015 she attended a Summer institute
    program "Activating learning through the arts" at the University of Texas,
    Austin, USA. She co-authored the book An Entirely Different Language
    with plays and strategies for learning Croatian as a foreign language.
    She conducts workshops for teachers at schools, clubs, and
    associations. In 2022 she was awarded for her achievements by the
    Croatian Drama in Education Association (HCDO).

References

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Published

2024-12-31

Issue

Section

Special Issue Window of Creative and Reflective Practice

How to Cite

Mechanisms of co-presence in repetitive drama studio performances. (2024). Scenario: A Journal of Performative Teaching, Learning, Research, 18(2), 89-103. https://doi.org/10.33178/18.2.6