Victorian Certificate of Education 2001 THEATRE STUDIES. Written examination. Wednesday 21 November 2001

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1 THEATRE STUDIES EXAM Victorian Certificate of Education 2001 THEATRE STUDIES Written examination Wednesday 21 November 2001 Reading time: 2.00 pm to 2.15 pm (15 minutes) Writing time: 2.15 pm to 3.45 pm (1 hour 30 minutes) QUESTION BOOK Structure of book Section Number of Number of questions Number of questions to be answered marks A 4 4 40 B 2 2 20 Total 60 Materials Question book of 5 pages. One or more script books. Lead and coloured pencils, water-based pens and markers, protractors, compass, set squares and aids for curve-sketching. Instructions Write your student number in the space provided on the front cover(s) of the script book(s). All written responses must be in English. At the end of the examination Place all other used script books inside the front cover of one of the used script books. You may keep this question book. VICTORIAN CURRICULUM AND ASSESSMENT AUTHORITY 2001

THEATRE STUDIES EXAM 2 SECTION A Answer all questions. Instructions for Section A Question 1 Study the illustration below and answer the following question. Due to copyright restriction, this material is not supplied. Discuss ways in which one area of stagecraft has been applied and/or could be applied on the stage in the illustration. You may draw illustrations to support your written answer. 9 marks Question 2 Collaboration between those working on areas of stagecraft contributes to a play production. Discuss ways in which you developed one area of stagecraft in the rehearsal(s) of a production in Unit 3 of Theatre Studies this year. In your discussion refer to the collaborative production processes your use of one area of stagecraft in the interpretation of a play(s) or excerpt(s) from play(s). 6 + 9 = 15 marks Question 3 The context of a play can include the play s structure, including plot and character. In the following dialogue, from the 1940s American play Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, Willy Loman, a travelling salesman, discusses his job with his employer, Howard Wagner. Read the following dialogue and answer both parts of the question that follows. SECTION A Question 3 continued

3 THEATRE STUDIES EXAM Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller HOWARD: What happened? What re you doing here? WILLY: Well HOWARD: You didn t crack up again, did you? WILLY: Oh, no. No HOWARD: Geez, you had me worried there for a minute. What s the trouble? WILLY: Well, tell you the truth, Howard. I ve come to the decision that I d rather not travel any more. HOWARD: Not travel! Well, what ll you do? WILLY: Remember, Christmas-time, when you had the party here? You said you d try to think of some spot for me here in town. HOWARD: With us? WILLY: Well, sure. HOWARD: Oh, yeah, yeah. I remember. Well, I couldn t think of anything for you, Willy. WILLY: I tell ya, Howard. The kids are all grown up, y know. I don t need much any more. If I could take home well, sixty-five dollars a week, I could swing it. HOWARD: Yeah, but Willy, see I WILLY: I tell ya why, Howard. Speaking frankly and between the two of us, y know I m just a little tired. HOWARD: Oh, I could understand that, Willy. But you re a road man, Willy, and we do a road business. We ve only got a half-dozen salesmen on the floor here. WILLY: God knows, Howard I never asked a favour of any man. But I was with the firm when your father used to carry you in here in his arms. HOWARD: I know that, Willy, but WILLY: Your father came to me the day you were born and asked me what I thought of the name Howard, may he rest in peace. HOWARD: I appreciate that, Willy, but there just is no spot here for you. If I had a spot I d slam you right in, but I just don t have a single solitary spot. [He looks for his lighter, WILLY has picked it up and gives it to him. Pause.] WILLY[with increasing anger]: Howard, all I need to set my table is fifty dollars a week. HOWARD: But where am I going to put you, kid? WILLY: Look, it isn t a question of whether I can sell merchandise, is it? HOWARD: No, but it s a business, kid, and everybody s gotta pull his own weight. WILLY[desperately]: Just let me tell you a story, Howard HOWARD: Cause you gotta admit, business is business. WILLY[angrily]: Business is definitely business, but just listen for a minute. You don t understand this. When I was a boy, eighteen, nineteen I was already on the road. And there was a question in my mind as to whether selling had a future for me. Because in those days I had a yearning to go to Alaska. See, there were three gold strikes in one month in Alaska, and I felt like going out. Just for the ride, you might say. HOWARD [barely interested]: Don t say. From: Arthur Miller Death of a Salesman, Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics, 1961, London, England, pp. 61 63 a. Identify two distinguishing characteristics of either Willy Loman or Howard Wagner from the dialogue above. b. Discuss how an actor might use each of these distinguishing characteristics to interpret the character of either Willy Loman or Howard Wagner. 4 + 4 = 8 marks SECTION A continued TURN OVER

THEATRE STUDIES EXAM 4 Question 4 Answer the question below with reference to the prescribed scene from one of the following plays on the Theatre Studies monologue list for Unit 4. Look at Everything Twice, for Me by Craig Sherborne Antigone by Jean Anouilh Dancing at Lughnasa by Brian Friel Pygmalion by Bernard Shaw Hamlet by William Shakespeare The Bacchae by Euripides Who s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? by Edward Albee Murder in the Cathedral by T S Eliot After Dinner by Andrew Bovell Mother Courage by Bertolt Brecht Discuss the performance style(s) and/or theatrical conventions applied in an interpretation of the prescribed scene in Unit 4. You may draw illustrations to support your written answer. 8 marks END OF SECTION A

5 THEATRE STUDIES EXAM SECTION B Instructions for Section B Answer all questions. Question 5 Answer the question below with reference to the performance of one of the following plays on the Theatre Studies play list for Unit 3. Miss Tanaka by John Romeril Salt by Peta Murray Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare The Tempest by William Shakespeare With reference to one of the plays above, discuss the relationship between the play in performance and the historical, political and/or social background of the play. 12 marks Question 6 Answer the question below with reference to one of the following plays on the Theatre Studies play list for Unit 4. The Seagull by Anton Chekhov Love Child by Joanna Murray-Smith Australian Marriage Act by Arena Theatre Company The Duchess of Malfi by John Webster, adapted by Kate Cherry Analyse how one actor in the production portrayed his/her character(s) on stage. In your response refer to any two of the following. actor audience relationship use of the acting space use of gesture Use specific examples from the performance in your response. If an actor played more than one character in the play, you may choose to describe one or more of his/her characters. 4 + 4 = 8 marks END OF QUESTION BOOK