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Topic: Research paper on melodrama( Topic Closed) | |
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the41player
Walk-On Joined: 12/05/07 Location: Israel Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
Topic: Research paper on melodrama Posted: 12/05/07 at 7:10am |
hey, i need help... I am writing a paper about directing melodrama and i need information! things that are special to melodrama and books and stuff, so i was wondering if anyone can help me. thanks.
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vickifrank
Celebrity Joined: 9/21/07 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 332 |
Posted: 12/05/07 at 2:57pm |
I'd start with the site: http://novaonline.nvcc.edu/eli/spd130et/melodrama.htm
Melodramas were important to the 19th century in a similar fashion that 'B grade' movies were important to the mid 20th century and sitcoms & soap operas to the late 20th century. They provided cheap and easy and reliable if not super high quality entertainment to the masses. They also provided the characteristic acting of silent films--where a piano player provided music to the emotions of the exaggerated actors on film. How else could a 'silent' film convey a rich emotional vocabulary?
Some interesting results from melodramas include traveling shows, and eventually a booking system for stars. And (see the site cited above for an explanation) the growth of NYC and Broadway as a national center for theater. It also was a style of acting that grew an entirely different style of acting--"method acting" is likely a revolt against a melodrama style.
Melodrama actually means "drama put to music" (or similar) because in these shows music was used to enhance the emotions. Eventually the type of show melodrama was born as an artform and grew to mean any show that had exaggerated characters, exaggerated acting and any of a set to typical themes and plots usually with high moral overtones.
Some unique features include 1.) how many acts (3-5 but mostly 3-4). 2.) the role of music to emote. 3.) use to actors and theaters to the growth of the rep system of shows, leading to traveling visiting 'stars' and the star system.
We've come a long way, baby--nevertheless, you can see echos of Melodrama in soaps, cartoons (especially Japanese), videogames (again Japanese), and in a raft of shows like Grease and High School Musical that seem more like spoofs.
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bbpchick
Star Joined: 7/17/07 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 86 |
Posted: 12/20/07 at 12:02am |
Vicki gave some really good info. I would also read some melodramas as well. I would also get the book Between the Hisses from Pioneer Drama. It gives a good history of Melodrama, as well as classic poses, music to use and a description of olios. I would also read some melodrama scripts. 1800's melodrama were serious plays and you can see that in such scripts as "The Drunkard". Modern melodrama is a bit more light hearted and scripts written by Tim Kelly are good ones to read. One thing about meldorama to remember is that good and evil are very black and white. Good always wins through virtue and evil is always punnished. There is also always a villain, a hero and a heroine. There is almost always theme music and the audinece participates by Booing the villain, Cheering the Hero, and Awwwing for the heroine. Modern melodrama is very stylized. While it is over the top and exaggerated, the actors MUST play their parts straight other wise it isn't going to fly. I hope this helps. If you need anything else let me know. |
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