Rachel here...
Courage cast, you should have gotten an email about this as well. See me if not.
Three examples of clown characters from another d&pdc project to give you the general idea of what this could look like in the end. (top to bottom: Catherine Tripp, Hannah J Crowell, Wyckham Avery)
Ideal due date is April 1, unless you are meeting with Ivania beforehand.
Here are the directions.....
Character Portrait Collage
Project: Using collage, create a portrait that visually represents your character.
Ask: What do I like to do? What is it that makes me a unique individual? What
are my core values and goals? What do I care deeply about? How have people,
experiences, and places shaped me? What symbols best represent my true self? How do images, color, texture, scale, and composition answer these questions? Avoid using words/text.
Materials: The format is 2-dimensional but you may use any material that will help to create the visual representation of your character i.e. magazine images, prints, photographs, newspaper, fabric, scrapbook paper, paint, markers, glitter, yarn, and stickers. Glue or tape the finished collage to a board, anything from a cereal box to a cardboard box, for presentation.
Presentations: You will first share your collage with the costume designer and director ... but eventually everyone will present to the Courage team. Please prepare a few thoughts about what you discovered about your character in the process of creating your portrait and how your portrait represents your character physically and emotionally.
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Inspired by Foer
Rachel here...
Almost done reading Jonathan Safran Foer's newest book Eating Animals, which I digress for a moment to personally, fully endorse. And not just b/c of my slight obsession/fascination with his work... or b/c it has helped with the positive renewal and reinforcement of my vegetarianism (which I had been wrestling with over the past year or so. yes, the secret is out for those near/dear). The book is a non-fiction poetical philosophical global and personal journey in 267 pages (hardcover). Well-crafted. Beautiful. Crushing. Empowering. Read it.
Anyhow...
Foer quotes B. R. Myers' review of Michael Pollan's The Omnivore's Dilemma (also a great read)... which is in reference to the way society is praises bringing factory farming into the public view but doesn't fully condemn the horrific practices we perpetuate:
The technique goes like this: One debates the other side in a rational manner until pushed in a corner. Then one simply drops the argument and slips away, pretending one has not fallen short of reason but instead transcended it. The irreconcilability of one's belief with reason is then held up as a great mystery, the humble readiness to live with which puts one above lesser minds and their cheap certainties
(quote extracted from Eating Animals; link to review theatlantic.com/doc/200709/omnivore; admitting now that I have not read the review in its entirety)
I wonder how often Courage does this or a version of this? How do the other characters in the show? How do we - in relation to many MANY ethical/moral "life choices"?
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