Acting in Musical Theatre
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Acting in Musical Theatre

A Comprehensive Course

Joe Deer, Rocco Dal Vera

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eBook - ePub

Acting in Musical Theatre

A Comprehensive Course

Joe Deer, Rocco Dal Vera

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Acting in Musical Theatre remains the only complete course in approaching a role in a musical. It covers fundamental skills for novice actors, practical insights for professionals, and even tips to help veteran musical performers refine their craft. Educators will find the clear structure ideal for use with multiple courses and programs.

Updates in this expanded and revised third edition include:



  • A comprehensive revision of the book's companion website into a fully online "Resource Guide" that includes abundant teaching materials and syllabi for a range of short- and long-form courses, PowerPoint slide decks and printable handouts for every chapter.


  • Updated examples, illustrations, and exercises from more recent musical styles and productions such as Hamilton, Waitress, and Dear Evan Hansen.


  • Revision of rehearsal and performance guidelines to help students and teachers at all levels thrive.


  • Updated and expanded reading/listening/viewing lists for specific-subject areas, to guide readers through their own studies and enhance the classroom experience.


  • New notes in the "The Profession" chapters to reflect the latest trends in casting, self-promotion, and audition practice.

Acting in Musical Theatre 's chapters divide into easy-to-reference units, each containing group and solo exercises, making it the definitive textbook for students and practitioners alike.

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Información

Editorial
Routledge
Año
2021
ISBN
9781000290455

SECTION II

Score and libretto analysis and structure

CHAPTER 4

Musical analysis – listening for clues
4.1 Introduction
4.1.1 Learn to listen
4.1.2 The music never lies
4.2 Kinds of musical information
4.2.1 Composer’s markings
4.2.2 Emotional qualities
4.2.3 Melodic shape
4.2.4 Tempo quality and changes
4.2.5 Rhythmic quality
4.2.6 Musical key
4.2.7 Modulations
4.2.8 Tension and release
4.2.9 Musical accents
4.2.10 Musical dynamics
4.2.11 Musical idiom
4.2.12 Musical character quality
4.2.13 The relationship between melody and accompaniment
4.2.14 The relationship between dialogue and underscoring
4.3 Architecture of the traditional theatre song
4.3.1 Introduction or “intro”
4.3.2 Verse
4.3.3 Chorus or refrain
4.3.4 Playoff or ride-out
4.4 A closer look at the chorus
4.5 Contemporary variations
4.6 The musical “voice” of a song and of a character
4.6.1 Musical voice reveals character function
4.6.2 Musical style reveals character status
4.6.3 Voice type can reveal a character’s nature
4.7 A final thought on musical analysis
Image
Figure 4
Jessie Mueller as Carole King, Anika Larsen as Cynthia Weil, Jake Epstein as Gerry Goffin, and Jarod Spector as Barry Mann in Beautiful: The Carole King Musical. Photo © Joan Marcus
The best musical actors have a full and considered grasp of their texts, and have made strong, appropriate, and exciting choices based on that analysis. The three chapters that follow will give you a methodology for exploring the music, lyrics and script, and ways to apply them to a role.
The key element that distinguishes musicals from other theatrical forms is the song, where we experience the emotional high points in the characters’ lives. In the wide range of styles from Verdi’s Aida to Elton John’s, what makes each event a musical theatre piece is the presence of songs as an integral part of the theatrical text.

Unit 4.1 Introduction

Perhaps the only factor that unifies all types of song in musicals is that each is a heightened expression of a character’s experience – a slice of life we go through via the combination of sung words and music. Unlike popular music we listen to on the radio or online, songs in musicals depend on the story and characters that surround them for specific meaning. Songs in the theatre are written with the knowledge that an audience member will hear those songs in the context the authors intended and with all the necessary background information in place.
As we listen to the music a character sings with and speaks over, we’re given a lot of information about that character, her mood, and the emotional changes she goes through. Even though it is not the linguistic information you find in the libretto and lyrics, it is still specific to the character and provides you with character building information. It is this musical information we’ll be exploring next.
After you work your way through this chapter you should be able to:
  • Listen to a score from an actor’s perspective.
  • Employ a step-by-step way of finding and using acting clues in the score.
  • Show the relationship between the character’s journey and the architecture of the traditional theatre song.
  • Use your understanding of musical clues to express the character’s function, status, and essential nature.

Unit 4.1.1 Learn to listen

Most of us listen to music uncritically. It affects us below our awareness. Take a look at film scores to understand how this works. So, we need to develop the skills to consciously notice and use musical information the audience will take in unconsciously. You don’t need to be a musicologist or even be able to read music to find this information. Probably the most valuable skill you’ll need to acquire for the musical analysis of your songs is an ability to listen to different aspects of the music and to identify how they express the emotional experience of your character over the course of a song.

Unit 4.1.2 The music never lies

Let’s start with a basic premise that the accompaniment and underscoring for a song or musical scene are always telling the truth about a character’s feelings. This is an important assumption because in the verbal text of a scene, speech, or song your character may lie about how she feels, or she may hide the true extent of her feelings to the people with whom she’s talking or even to herself. This is not unusual in drama. In non-musical theatre we often have to guess at the true emotional content of a scene or look for indirect signals to it. This allows for a great deal of flexibility in interpretation. But in the musical theatre we have the added textual layer of music to tell us what is going on under the surface of the scene. Subtext is often explicitly delivered through music. The audience can have the simultaneous experience of the characters saying or singing one thing while the music tells us something else. The music can also agree with what the characters are saying and support it with new, different, or varied information. Even when the words are repeated exactly, the music can amplify, diminish, or change their emotional impact and meaning. This chapter will outline some of the many ways music can illuminate a character’s experience.

Unit 4.2 Kinds of musical information

Image
As we begin to hunt for character information in the score we’ll see it’s made up of the following layers:
  • Melody: The tune. More formally, it is the arrangement of pitches in musical time, upon which the lyrics are sung.
  • Accompaniment: What the piano or orchestra plays while you sing the melody.
  • Underscoring: Music that has been composed or arranged to be played during the dialogue portions of a musical scene.
Because music is in many ways another language, a specialized vocabulary has evolved over many centuries to refer to its various components. The following are a few central terms that will help you discu...

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