|
Post by oxfordsimon on Aug 24, 2017 13:20:27 GMT
My O level plays were The Crucible and either Shrew or Merchant. I did before A levels but can't remember which was third year and which was O level.
A level texts were Dr Faustus, Measure for Measure and Murder in the Cathedral.
Thankfully I enjoyed them all then and still enjoy them now.
I can't say the same for the 19th century novels. Hardy and Gaskell can fit in the library shelves for all I care.
In terms of poetry, I did WW1 poetry for five years straight. Lucky me.
My upper school only did two plays during my five years there. Our Town and Waiting for Godot. The first was a sensible choice for a large mixed school. The second really wasn't. I had roles in both and would return to them as a director now. Sadly my idea for an accent neutral Our Town has already happened and it would now seem like copying. I used the same technique on The Laramie Project and it worked really well.
|
|
950 posts
|
Post by vdcni on Aug 24, 2017 14:07:51 GMT
Oh I also did 'Our Country's Good' for English A Level (I think) My English A Level was a particular kind of torture for it's dreaded 'Poetry Anthology' around 50 pages of poems to be analysed....I have a talent for English but that talent does not extend to poetry. I managed to dodge poetry for A-Level somehow. I think we did Making History as a second play instead of any poetry.
|
|
341 posts
|
Post by adrianics on Aug 24, 2017 14:19:47 GMT
I got in a huge argument with my AS Level English Literature tutor over my interpretation of Death of a Salesman. The details escape me now but she kept saying "that's not what Miller was going for" and I'd say "sorry, were you a friend of his?"
I still subscribe to the Death of the Author approach to this day.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 24, 2017 14:33:35 GMT
In the words of that great philosopher, Celine Dion, it's all coming back to me now. I do recall starring as Tony in 'West Side Story'. Yes, I know right? Jerome Robbins clearly knew nothing about it because I don't recall being put through my paces with his choreography. Or maybe I just couldn't be faffed and thought I knew better. It's possible.
I also recall having to write an original play set around the Bristol Riots. My group and I chose to present it as a news report which kept getting interrupted by an old episode of 'Dallas'. Mainly because we weren't interested in the Bristol Riots but did want to swan around with Texas accents pretending to be Sue Ellen Ewing.
We also presented 'The Importance of Being Earnest' and studied a bit of Oscar Wilde. Yours truly was Algernon natch. A role I believe I've carried on through most of my adult life as it happens.
Ah memories. Let's just say that when the time came to have a conversation with my parents, they were already a couple of steps ahead of me.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 24, 2017 14:54:24 GMT
I can't remember everything we studied but I know that Romeo and Juliet was one. I was lucky in that I had an English teacher who brought what was often thought of as dry and dusty literature to life. We also had the benefit of the school being in an old country house and the courtyard and portico made excellent settings for plays like The Merchant of Venice and Julius Caesar, so we had a couple of productions of that nature every year.
I never took part in them. Acting is something that holds absolutely zero interest for me. I did have a ten-second non-speaking part in a house play once, and that was entirely enough acting for a lifetime as far as I am concerned.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 24, 2017 14:55:55 GMT
I got in a huge argument with my AS Level English Literature tutor over my interpretation of Death of a Salesman. The details escape me now but she kept saying "that's not what Miller was going for" and I'd say "sorry, were you a friend of his?" I still subscribe to the Death of the Author approach to this day. Oh while we're talking arguing with tutors, my favourite to this day is with my PhD supervisor who when reading some analysis of the 'Man in the Park' scene in Angels (for the uninitiated it involves gentlemen cruising The Ramble in Central Park) And I commented on the 'humour' in the scene, and of the particular exchange 'Relax...' 'Not a chance'
Turns out supervisor was a bit 'unfamiliar' with the um...mechanics of the situation....I declined to explain it in detail.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 24, 2017 15:10:31 GMT
HEY! Jonah Man Jazz was AWESOME!
|
|
|
Post by oxfordsimon on Aug 24, 2017 15:57:23 GMT
we did the Daniel Jazz inmusic. Reminds me of that limp "Jonah Man Jazz" that some of the, well, less intellectually gifted kids thought was better than "Joseph." Saps. Nineveh city was a city of sin The jazzing and the jiving made a terrible din Beat groups playing rock and roll And the Lord he said 'Bless My Soul' Such great lyrics. We also did 'Rooster Rag' which was based on the Nun Priest's Tale
|
|
19,787 posts
|
Post by BurlyBeaR on Aug 24, 2017 16:18:08 GMT
I dint go too skool
|
|
2,302 posts
|
Post by Tibidabo on Aug 24, 2017 17:10:06 GMT
Well you obviously learnt the bear necessities elsewhere....
|
|
3,578 posts
|
Post by showgirl on Aug 24, 2017 18:09:44 GMT
For O Level we did Macbeth, The Pardoner's Tale and, I think, The Crucible. The teacher wasn't that good so A Level, taught by the head of department, was much better. We did Hamlet, some ghastly Yeats (but the other A Level class had texts I thought were worse), Sons & Lovers and The Shoemakers' Holiday, which last was great fun to read aloud but seems unknown now.
|
|
4,029 posts
|
Post by Dawnstar on Aug 24, 2017 19:35:51 GMT
I can't remember everything we studied You're lucky. I can remember all the books & plays I studied in English & I wish I could forget some of them! Plays: Year 7 A Midsummer's Night's Dream, Year 8 The Tempest, Year 9 The Merchant of Venice & Romeo and Juliet, GCSE Macbeth & An Inspector Calls. I detested the last two. I've always preferred comedies. Our school drama competition mercifully got cancelled during my time there but not before I'd lurked in the background as a schoolgirl in scenes from A Little Princess & got out of being in scenes from Pygmalion by organising the costumes. The aforesaid drama competition was also the location of my first ever mid-show walk out. Well, not exactly mid show, I lasted probably under 2 minutes of scenes from Sweeney Todd before walking out. I was lucky with my GCSE 19th century novel option with Sense and Sensibility as I like Austen. Some groups had to do Dickens (who I'm so-so on) or Hardy (who I dislike). I hated the 20th century novel, Of Mice and Men. In previous years we'd already done The Great Gatsby & To Kill a Mockingbird. Collectively they engendered in me a lifelong detestation of novels dealing with the destruction of the American Dream & I don't think I've read a single American novel since finishing GCSE English.
|
|
3,578 posts
|
Post by showgirl on Aug 25, 2017 3:37:43 GMT
It's terrible - and ironic - that studying Eng Lit at school can put you off it - or parts of it - for life. I thank school for my enduring love of theatre as despite some diabolical trips to dire and boring plays, I loved reading plays aloud in class (most didn't and all the boys were dreadful - reluctant and unable even to read confidently, let alone with expression); loved participating in the annual house drama comp and chose and directed the winning entry in my final year. Then it was university to study languages and very amateur play-reviewing for the student mag.
|
|
409 posts
|
Post by maggiem on Aug 25, 2017 11:31:41 GMT
Primary School, late sixties/early seventies had us troop into the hall to listen to 'the school radio', usually a programme called 'music and movement' where you pretended to be trees and stuff whilst trying to retain at least some semblance of four year old dignity.* As Tvcream explain "Arcane Swiss sociology exported as near-naked prancing on splintering wooden floors. For decades after World War Two primary school kids had their cognitive skills ostensibly honed by the aural equivalent of cod liver oil: a frosty-voiced BBC matron encouraging them to act out an activity in time with a piece of music picked out in lacklustre fashion on a battered piano. Quick, get into a space, it's time to do ‘our wide dance’." www.tvcream.co.uk/bric-a-brac/a-m-bric-a-brac/m-is-for-bric-a-brac/music-and-movement/* For music it was 'Singing Together', with such glories as 'Michael Finnegan'. Now this is my era too. Country dancing (Virginia Reel , anyone?), classical record playing as we came in for assembly (Mozart French Horn Rondo), and Singing Together (Lillibulero... "there was an old woman who lived in a basket, seventeen times as high as the moon...") Great memories. Back on topic ... O level - "Henry V" (I've loved "upon the king" before Agincourt ever since "And what art thou, thou idol ceremony?") A Level - "Coriolanus" (not everybody's choice, I think, but I'm still in 2 minds all these years later as to how noble/ignorant he is. Take your pick). Also "Miller's "A view from the Bridge" (a wonderful modern day Greek tragedy) Degree level- "Measure for Measure", and Ibsen's "Hedda Gabler" (problems, problems).
|
|
4,029 posts
|
Post by Dawnstar on Aug 25, 2017 11:56:58 GMT
"When a Knight Played For Spurs," "Lay down my flannel and soap, down by the bath side" - would both get you chucked out. Were they deliberate changes then rather than mondegreens?
|
|
5,159 posts
|
Post by TallPaul on Aug 25, 2017 12:25:22 GMT
Growing up in the Socialist Republic of South Yorkshire in the 1980s, the classics were considered to be far too bourgeois to be either taught, or visited on school trips. We didn't even have to study English Literature if we didn't want to, so I didn't. As for a school uniform, forget it.
We did have a drama department, if it can be called that, housed in a Potakabin in the car park, led by the rather eccentric Mr Firth, who drove an orange kit car, obvs. If we performed anything, it would have been agitprop.
|
|
53 posts
|
Post by harrie on Aug 25, 2017 20:24:12 GMT
For GCSE we did The Merchant of Venice and An Inspector Calls, enjoyed both. For A Level we did Richard III (enjoyed but it did put me off reading anything that shows you a family tree at the beginning for a while), Doctor Faustus (teacher wasn't very good so never felt I understood/knew what was going on) and Othello, which I loved. As for school shows it was the usual, Annie, Oliver and so on.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 25, 2017 21:39:46 GMT
At college i played the Bridegroom in Lorca's Blood Wedding. I was the campest groom you could meet. Its a thankless role.
We also did The Duchess of Malfi and i was thhe Cardinal.
Serious drama's weren't my thing. At all.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 25, 2017 21:44:49 GMT
Reminds me of that limp "Jonah Man Jazz" that some of the, well, less intellectually gifted kids thought was better than "Joseph." Saps. Nineveh city was a city of sin The jazzing and the jiving made a terrible din Beat groups playing rock and roll And the Lord he said 'Bless My Soul' Such great lyrics. We also did 'Rooster Rag' which was based on the Nun Priest's Tale OMG. Those are the only lyrics i still remember from Jonah Man Jazz!
|
|
|
Post by oxfordsimon on Aug 25, 2017 23:00:58 GMT
I have the score to it somewhere.
And Captain Noah and His Amazing Floating Zoo
|
|
3,040 posts
|
Post by crowblack on Aug 26, 2017 9:27:27 GMT
Captain Noah and His Amazing Floating Zoo I'd completely forgotten about that. Captain Noah and his genocidal deity- what a bloody weird thing to make children celebrate in song. They censored 'Joseph' a bit (no Potiphar's wife, just a random jailing) but still had to explain the word 'fratricide' to us, in primary school.
|
|
|
Post by oxfordsimon on Aug 26, 2017 10:28:07 GMT
There is a Naxos recording of Jonah, Rooster and others by Michael Hurd under the title of Pop Cantatas.
It might just have slipped into my Amazon basket...
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 26, 2017 10:43:28 GMT
Honourable mention here to RADA tutors for putting me off Hamlet for nearly a decade (Hiddles want to have a word?) and to The Wooster Group for having the honour of the first play I fell asleep in (also Hamlet) which I feel was a cardinal theatrical sin, but it was hella hot in there, and we'd got the 6am Eurostar and their version is about 45 minutes longer than the average Hamlet....zzzzz
|
|
2,302 posts
|
Post by Tibidabo on Aug 26, 2017 12:06:26 GMT
Did someone mention Hiddles Hamlet? 🎉🔛🔜✌️
|
|
5,159 posts
|
Post by TallPaul on Aug 26, 2017 12:08:28 GMT
I've heard 'it' called some things in my time, but never that, even on Naked Attraction!!
|
|