PLAY GUIDE. Why Mosquitoes Buzz By Jeremy Kisling. Adapted from the folktale. Presented on the LCT Main Stage: April 26 th - May 2 nd

Similar documents
PLAY GUIDE. The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane. 418 W. Short Street Lexington, KY

PLAY GUIDE. Alice in Wonderland. Presented on the LCT Main Stage: Dec , 2016 On tour: Aug. 29, Jan. 27, 2017

Anansi Tries to Steal All the Wisdom in the World

Why Mosquitoes Buzz In People's Ears Download Free (EPUB, PDF)

Emotional Intelligence

Lazy Anansi By Ghanian Folktale

Mentor Text. A Trickster Tale

Turtle, Frog, and Rat A Vietnamese Folktale

Writing Model. Report. Talk About It. The topic sentence tells what the report is about. Detail sentences tell facts about the topic.

Objective of This Book

Reading Skills Practice Test 11

ATOMIC ENERGY CENTRAL SCHOOL No.4, RAWATBHATA WORKSHEET FOR ANNUAL EXAM Name: CLASS : III / Sec. SUB : English

Infographic: Would You Want a Robot for a Friend? p. 2. Nonfiction: The Snake That s Eating Florida, p. 4

PRODUCTION GUIDEBOOK. A production of L'Illusion, Théâtre de marionnettes

LARGE GROUP. Treasure Hunt! Lesson 3 June 24/25 1

Elk Grove Unified School District Visual and Performing Arts Resources Theatre

JESUS HEALS THE PARALYTIC DAY 2 PRESCHOOL BIBLE LESSON

STAND BACK, SAID THE ELEPHANT, I M GOING TO SNEEZE! By Patricia Thomas

Begin this lesson by reading this Folktale to the class.

Writing. the. the. through. slithers. snake. grass. Wild about

Anansi and the Talking Watermelon

Play script Checklist Features of a play script

Name. The Story of Sid

Name of Material: Pre- K Riddles

Table of Contents. alphabet review: letter order, letter recognition, letter sounds... page 16, 22

Anansi and the Talking Watermelon

Absurdities REM 201C A TEACHING RESOURCE FROM... C RITICAL THINKING SKILLS

ATOMIC ENERGY EDUCATION SOCIETY TERM I EXAMINATION ( ) Date of Exam - 18 Sept SUBJECT ENGLISH Marks 80

Before reading. King of the pumpkins. Preparation task. Stories King of the pumpkins

Lesson Objectives. Core Content Objectives. Language Arts Objectives

chicken house and laid some big fat farts right next to it. I is really not liking chickens. They is evil. I is sure if you was to meet them you

JONAH AND BIGFISH. By Richard T. Young

STUDY GUIDE.

Telling Tales Robin Walker

The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck By Beatrix Potter

Apes. Quiz Questions. Some apes live in groups. Some apes live with one mate. Some apes live alone. Apes take good care of their babies.

Sweet Potato Pie and Such

Tales of Beatrix Potter

Detective Figurative Language Activity Cards

Room 6 First Grade Homework due on Tuesday, November 3rd

The Spider Monkey and the Marmoset

Unit 12 Superstitions

Anatomy of a Fairy Tale Class Discussion Guide

1-1 I Like Stars. A. It is in a room. A. It is looking at the stars through the window. A. They are a rabbit, a frog, a bird, and a mouse.

P3 Hold On Tight. Do you want to have some fun? Dah dah dah dah Do you want to have some fun? Then come along with me.

not to be republished NCERT Why? Alice in Wonderland UNIT-4

The Gecko. Tips for Telling

Description. Direct Instruction. Teacher Tips. Preparation/Materials. GRADE 4 Comprehension Compare/Contrast Stories (Supplemental)

Sideways Stories From Wayside School Download Free (EPUB, PDF)

RSS - 1 FLUENCY ACTIVITIES

Punctuation practice: Glossary

The Jungle Book Kids - SCRIPT SONG: Jungle Prologue

TEST NAME: ELA 11/18 TEST ID: GRADE:05 - Fifth Grade SUBJECT:English Language and Literature TEST CATEGORY: School Assessment

REVISION PAPER for FINAL TERM EXAM GRADE 5 ENGLISH LANGUAGE. Section A. Rikki-tikki from The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling (Excerpt)

NATIONAL SPORT SCHOOL

Grade 2 - English Ongoing Assessment T-2( ) Lesson 4 Diary of a Spider. Vocabulary

An Idiom a Day Will Help Keep the Boredom In Schooling Away #1. What are idioms?

Reading Strategies Level D

KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN MINISTRY OF EDUCATION ALFLAH PRIVATE SCHOOLS RFFA BOYS BRANCH. June English Exam. DURATION: 40 minutes

Forgetting the Words By W.M. Akers

Lesson plan-the Giving Tree

MANY MOONS CFE 3268V

Hansel and Gretel. A One Act Play for Children. Lyrics by Malcolm brown Script and score by David Barrett. Copyright Plays and Songs Dot Com 2005

Pinocchio Visual Story

High Frequency Word Sheets Words 1-10 Words Words Words Words 41-50

THE IRON MAN VISUAL STORY

& Digital HD February 11

September Book Project

The Poetry of Phrases Foundation Lesson

Learning more about English

Atomic Energy Central School-4, Rawatbhata. Primary Section ( ) Name Roll No Sec Sign. A LITTLE TURTLE. head tail

CHILDREN S ESL CURRICULUM: LEARNING ENGLISH WITH LAUGHTER

Anansi The Spider By Gerald Mcdermott

We will explain how illustrations contribute to a story.

What we do. Preparing for our visit

Lesson 2: Metaphors DIRECT TEACHING THINK CHECK GUIDED PRACTICE INDEPENDENT PRACTICE. Build Student Vocabulary charge

AprilisNationalPoetryMonth

Section I. Quotations

Tuesday, February 7th, 2017 at 10:00 AM. table of contents

Teachers Notes. Silly Squid! Poems about the Sea. Written by Janeen Brian Illustrated by Cheryll Johns. Contents OMNIBUS BOOKS

Punctuation practice: Conversations 1

Test Booklet. Subject: LA, Grade: th Grade Reading. Student name:

Brilliant Activities for Reading Non-fiction

VISUAL STORY FOR OUR PRODUCTION OF

Write three learning objectives

2018 English Entrance Exam for Returnees

cinderella lecture demonstration A TEACHER'S GUIDE WITH STUDENT ACTIVITIES

Teo the Hare. Teo the Hare. A Story for Mathew from his Grampa and Grandmas. April John Bonthron for Matthew, Easter 2014 Page 1

Stone. Face 2 Face. in the CREATION. Teacher s Pack

PROFESORES ASOCIADOS EGRESADOS DEL INSTITUTO SUPERIOR DEL PROFESORADO EN LENGUAS VIVAS "Juan Ramón Fernández"

Lesson 15 - My Five Senses

KidSeries Season EDUCATOR STUDY GUIDE. Thumbelina (Fall 2016) Fable-ous! (Winter 2017) Giggle, Giggle, Quack (Spring 2017)

The Goat Who Hated Easter by Mary Engquist

Grade Grade K indb 1 12/9/10 10:36 AM

ANIMALS LESSON PLAN Advance Lesson Two - Day Lessons

BOOK REPORT ENGLISH DEPARTMENT R. LACOUMENTAS

Prince Charmin (Prodigal Son) (Forgiveness) (God s Love)

The mission of Richmond Ballet is to awaken and uplift the human spirit, both for audiences and artists.

ACTIVITIES TO IMPROVE LANGUAGE

AFRICAN MUSIC AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

Transcription:

PLAY GUIDE Why Mosquitoes Buzz By Jeremy Kisling. Adapted from the folktale. Presented on the LCT Main Stage: April 26 th - May 2 nd 418 W. Short Street Lexington, KY 40507 859.254.4546 www.lctonstage.org Major Contributors:

Dear Educator - Lexington Children s Theatre is proud to be producing our 79 th season of plays for young people and their families. As an organization that values the arts and education, we have created this Play Guide for teachers to utilize in conjunction with seeing a play at LCT. Our Play Guides are designed to be a valuable tool in two ways: helping you prepare your students for the enriching performance given by LCT s performers, as well as serving as an educational tool for extending the production experience back into your classroom. We designed each activity to assist in achieving the Kentucky Academic Standards (KAS), including the National Core Arts Standards for Theatre. Teachers have important voices at LCT, and we rely heavily on your input. If you have comments or suggestions about our Play Guides, show selections, or any of our programming, your thoughts are greatly appreciated. Please email Jeremy Kisling, our Associate Artistic Director in Charge of Education, at jkisling@lctonstage.org. Please use the Teacher Response form following a performance. We are thrilled that you rely on LCT to provide your students a quality theatrical experience, and we hope this resource helps you in your classroom. LCT s Education Department The mission of our education programming The mission of Lexington Children s Theatre s Education Department is to provide students of all ages with the means to actively explore the beauty, diversity, complexity, and challenges of the world around them through the dramatic process. We strive for young people to develop their own creative voice, their imagination, and their understanding of drama and its role in society. Your role in the play You may wish to have a discussion with your class about your upcoming LCT experience and their role as audience members. Remind your students that theatre can only exist with an audience. Your students energy and response directly affects the actors onstage. The quality of the performance depends as much on the audience as it does on each of the theatre professionals behind the scenes and on stage. Young audiences should know that watching live theatre is not like watching more familiar forms of entertainment; they cannot pause or rewind us like a DVD, there are no commercials for bathroom breaks, nor can they turn up the volume to hear us if someone else is talking. Your students are encouraged to listen and watch the play intently, so that they may laugh and cheer for their favorite characters when it is appropriate. At the end of the play, applause is an opportunity for your students to thank the actors, while the actors are thanking you for the role you played as an audience.

What to know - before the show! Play Synopsis Agbara, the great god of all, calls a group of young humans together to tell the story of a creature: Mosquito. It all started late one day... Nwanko and his wife are out gathering palm nuts to use for their evening meal. The nuts they find are high in a tree, and Nwanko must climb the tree to try and reach the nuts. Along comes Mosquito, who asks the man what he is doing. When he shoos Mosquito away, the palm nuts fall, causing Nwanko s machete to fall toward his wife, Aja, who must jump to safety. Aja lands on Python s tail, startling him, so he runs to hide in the Rabbit s hole. These events set off a chain reaction of panic in the forest that ends when Monkey shatters Hen s eggs. Hen and Rooster are so sad that Rooster forgets to wake the sun. After several days of darkness, the animals get anxious and call upon their King, the Lion, to solve the sun s disappearance. The animals blame one another for the darkness until Python reveals the humans involvement. Some of the animals are scared of humans, and Lion calls Agbara to assist in their discovery of the truth. Mosquito retreats to hide in a nearby tree. When it is determined he is to blame, he cannot speak for fear of Agbara. Agbara strips Mosquito of his voice until he receives forgiveness from all living creatures. Since you refuse to speak, you will only be able to buzz. I may reconsider reinstating your voice, but only after you ve gained the forgiveness of all earthly creatures. Satisfied, Rooster lifts his head and calls the sun. To this day, Mosquito approaches the creatures of the earth asking if Agbara has forgiven him, but almost all earthly creatures find his buzzing annoying and try to eradicate the pesky mosquito.

What to know - before the show! Becoming An Animal Read Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People s Ears: A West African Tale by Verna Aardema to your class. Talk about the animals in the book. Which animals are found in the United States as well as in Africa? Try reading the book to your class while they play the different animals using their bodies and voices. Remember: actors are humans. We don t walk on four legs or move like animals. So we have to find ways to suggest that we are a specific creature. How would you move if you were pretending to be a mosquito or a monkey? What would a lion or a python sound like? KAS: AH-E-3.1.41, 3.1.42, 3.1.33, 3.1.35 RD-E-1.0.9 Make a Sock Puppet! 1. Put the sock on your hand so that your fingers and thumb are in the toe and the back of your wrist is in the heel. 2. Push in on the sock toe between finger and thumb to create a mouth. 3. Cut two ovals three inches across and five inches long. Cut a piece of poster board or cardboard (this will be used to create the hard mouth surface), and the other fabric is the inside of mouth. 4. Glue the fabric oval to the poster board (rigid) oval with white glue. After the glue is dry, fold the oval in half the short way. 5. Put your sock back on your hand. Tuck the mouth oval into the sock and glue or sew in place. KAS: VA:Cr2.3.2, VA:Cr2.1.3, TH :Cr3.1.3b, TH :Pr4.1.4b Now the fun begins! What your puppet becomes depends on you. Think eyes, ears, noses, fur, feathers, beaks, or whiskers. Now that you have a puppet, here are some guidelines to help you bring your puppet to life. Work in front of a mirror with your puppet. This will allow you to see what the audience sees. Create a specific character for your puppet. Define their likes and dislikes. Try and make your puppet express specific feelings. Make each movement mean something specific. Always remember if you are talking, so should your puppet! The puppeteer should always be looking where the puppet is this helps the audience know where to focus.

What to know - before the show! African Proverbs Africa is rich with folk tales and proverbs. In the evening, people would gather around a fire and call upon each other to tell stories. It is through this oral tradition that African people learn and maintain their culture and respect the cultures of others. Below are some African and American proverbs that share a similar lesson. We included a few examples and left a few for you to discuss with your students. After you have discussed proverbs, have your students bring in some of their family sayings and write your own. AFRICAN AND AMERICAN PROVERBS KAS: SS-E-2.1.1, 2.1.2 WR-E-1.3 African: If you play with a cat, you must not mind her scratch. You have to take the bad with the good. African: Evil knows where evil sleeps. It takes one to know one. African: All sunshine makes desert. African: Time destroys all things. African: He who hunts two rats catches none. African: If you are hiding, don t light a fire. African: When one is at sea, he doesn t quarrel with the boatman.

How to grow - after the show! Mistrust What s your tale of mistrust? All the confusion in Why Mosquitoes Buzz could have been avoided if only the animals stopped and talked to each other about what was happening. Instead they let their fear and mistrust get in the way. Can you think of a situation when anger or frustration could have been avoided if only people stopped and talk about the problem instead of blaming someone else? Tell or write a story about someone who is too stubborn, scared, or vain to listen to someone who is trying to help them. KAS: TH:Cr2.1.4a, TH:Pr6.1.4, WR:3.3.a, WR:4.3.d

How to grow - after the show! Responsibility In Why Mosquitoes Buzz, Rooster is responsible for waking the sun each day and Monkey is given the job of being the forest watchman. Do you have special jobs, chores, or duties to perform at your house? What happens if you do not do your job? Talk about responsibility and what it means. Make a list of all the different things you are responsible for each day. Write a short story and draw a picture of what might happen if you did not take care of your responsibility. There may be people counting on you to do a job. If you don t, what might happen? KAS: WR:3.3.a, WR:4.3.d, VA:Cr1.2.2

How to grow - after the show! What to Read Next The Village of Round and Square Houses by Ann Grifalconi In the village of Tos in Central Africa, we discover the story of why women live in round thatchroofed huts while men live in square shaped houses designated in the aftermath of a volcano releasing its full fury upon the village. The Talking Eggs: A folktale from the American South by Robert San Souci Down in Louisiana, sisters Rose and Blanche are very different: Blanche s sweet nature pays off when she helps an old woman with magical powers. Anansi does the Impossible by Verna Aardema Anansi A small spider sets out to reclaim all the stories of the world from the Sky God, armed only with his wits. The Elephant s Child by Rudyard Kipling A long time ago, when elephants still sported short noses, curiosity drives a child elephant to ask the crocodile what he eats for dinner. A tug-of-war results in the elephant s new and improved elongated trunk. How Snake Got His Hiss by Marguerite Davel This fanciful book tells of how snake gets his shape and sound through run-ins with other species. It ends with an altercation with an elephant that results in his current shape. Zzzng! Zzzng! Zzzng!: A Yoruba Tale by Phillis Gershator As all things on earth are finding mates, Mosquito is told over again that she is too small and weak to marry, but she gets revenge on those who refuse her. She even continues to bite and buzz after she finds a mosquito mate! The Day Ocean Came to Visit by Diane Wollestein Long ago, when Sun and Moon still lived on earth, they invited their new friend Ocean to visit their home. They discover when she comes that they are ill prepared for her visit. Misoso: Once Upon a Time from Africa retold by Verna Aardema Twelve African tales speak of justice and revenge, greed and generosity, sly trickery, and off-the-wall silliness with humor and flair. LCT teaches in YOUR school! Would you like to see some of these play guide activities modeled in your classroom? Book a workshop for your class with one of LCT s teaching artists! In our pre-show workshops, our teaching artists will engage students in acting skills and themes from the play through drama activities. In our post-show workshops, students will extend their play-going experience by strengthening their personal connection to the play and deepening their understanding of the themes and characters. Call us at 859-254-4546 x226 to book a pre or post-show workshop for your class! To learn more about Lexington Children s Theatre and our programming for your school visit: www.lctonstage.org/for-educators/in-school-experiences/