1 / 21

Freshman A

Freshman A . Delivery: OI. Warm Up: Tongue Twisters. Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers. A peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked. If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers, Where's the peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked? Got that? All together now.

fonda
Download Presentation

Freshman A

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Freshman A Delivery: OI

  2. Warm Up: Tongue Twisters • Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.A peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked.If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers,Where's the peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked? • Got that? All together now. • What makes tongue twisters so dang hard but so much fun?

  3. Making the script • Teaser (start the scene, grab attention) • Introduction – give background information of the scene, include author and title, introduce scene (WRITE THIS YOURSELF!) • Cut to the appropriate length (3-4 mins.) • Make your outline look like a script! • Bold headings (teaser, introduction, body) • Create/ Lable characters (highlight names, focal points, stance, voice, facial expressions, etc.)

  4. Delivery • You will be graded on the following: • Volume • Rate (pacing) • Focal Points • Gestures • Posture • Facial Expressions • Emphasis • Character Development

  5. Volume: Tips • Find a balance between TOO LOUD and too soft • Project your voice • Have vocal variety! • Loud and fast • Loud and slow • Soft and fast • Soft and slow • What does your volume say about your character? If they talk Loud and Fast you might think they are confident.

  6. Volume: Practice • Loud: Miss Martin is the best English teacher ever! • Soft: North is way better than South! • Project a whisper: Hey, what did you decide to do for your Oral Interp.? • Even though you are whispering you still need the audience to hear you!

  7. Rate (pace): Tips • Pacing – the rate of speech used to move through the content • Fast enough to keep the audience’s interest • Slow enough to help the audience understand the content • Don’t fill the silence with non-words (umm, aaa, like) • Pause for effect • Fine line between not waiting at all – and waiting too long!

  8. Pacing: Practice • Mark up your paper! • Slashes at pauses to breath • Double slash at pause for effect Example: “I trade my sweat for strength. /I trade doubt for belief. / I trade cheer // for nothing.” / Today, / I brought my poms and bows to share with you all my history in becoming a cheerleader and how much dedication and determination it takes me to perform my heart out. --L.B.

  9. Focal Points: Tips • Pick logical locations (character is short, pick something at their eye level) • Look at the exact same place every time! • Make it obvious • Look in different directions • Stare, hard. Don’t break your focus. • Even though you are staring at a wall you can react to the other characters!

  10. Focal Points: Practice • Pick 3 places as focal points in the classroom • I will count out 1, 2, or 3 and you must look at the focal point!

  11. Gestures: Tips • Gestures -- the use of your hands and arms to illustrate your words. • The gestures must be meaningful • Match your gestures to your words! The audience usually believes most what they see! Create habits! Playing with a ring, tucking their hair behind their ear, licking their lips, etc.

  12. Gestures: Practice • What gesture might you use in order to communicate the following? • “This needs to happen right now!” • “I don’t care. It wasn’t my fault.” • “…and BAM, it hit the floor!” • “Please you have to believe me.” • “Come with us. Please. Pretty please!” • “How do I look?”

  13. Posture: Tips • Every character should have a different stance or posture • The only time you should stand “like you” is during the introduction • Be creative! • Watch people! • What does your character “lead” with? Their chin, their hips, their chest? How would they walk? Are they pidgin toed, do they bounce when they walk, etc?

  14. Posture: Practice • Create a stance or posture for the following character types: • Innocent little kid, age 6, wanting ice cream • Grouchy old man who always yells at kids to get off his lawn • High school girl who is “too cool” • Jock boy • Jock boy trying to be cool/tough • Jock boy who was trying to be cool/tough but go turned down by the girl he just asked out

  15. Facial Expressions: Tips • Different facial for each character • Make sure the expression matches! • React to the other characters • Use a mirror or video tape yourself • Try out different things!

  16. Facial Expressions: Practice • Warm up your face by trying to get your face as small/big as possible! • You just ate a lemon • You walk into a surprise party for your birthday • You just got a full ride to the college of your dreams • Stink eye / dirty look • You have a question, but you are afraid to ask it • Your parents are embarrassing you in front of your friends • You walk into a crowded room and you scan the room until you friend your friends

  17. Emphasis: Tips • Plan your stress • Add stress by talking slower, louder, or enunciating • Stress the important part of the sentence • If you repeat something (“I wont go. I wont.”) Make sure you vary the way it is said.

  18. Emphasis: Practice • How does the stress change the meaning of this sentence: • “Her name is Sally and she’s my friend” • “Her name is Sally and she’s my friend” • “Her name is Sally and she’s my friend” • “Her name is Sally and she’s my friend” • “Her name is Sally and she’s my friend” • “Her name is Sally and she’s my friend”

  19. Character Development/Voices: Tips • Each character must have a different voice • Make sure the voice is fitting for the character AND the tone of the scene! • Use your entire vocal range (low voice – falsetto)

  20. Character Development/Voice: Practice • Old Man Voice (“Kids these days.”) • British Accent (“Time for a spot of tea?”) • Geek/Nerd/Brain (“Actually the answer is 7.”) • Southern (“Ya’ll just need to settle down.”

  21. PUT IT ALL TOGETHER NOW! • “I won? Are you sure I won?” – disbelief • “I want you to have it. Every time you see it, think of me” – sincerity • “Please, please believe me” – begging • “That’s stupid. No one thinks that’s cool” – degrading • “Don’t follow me. I want to be left alone” – pleading • “I have a totally brilliant idea” – excitement

More Related