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fairy tales

Fairy Tale Lessons for Drama Class

May 27, 2019 By dhcbaldwin 9 Comments

Fairy Tale Lessons for Drama Class

Fairy Tale Lessons for Drama Class

About fifteen years ago, I taught at Smithton Middle School in Columbia, Missouri.  I thought I’d probably end up teaching in high school, instead I taught in a middle school–a large one at that! It was a great experience.

Fairy Tale Lessons for Drama Class

Every five and a half weeks, seventy-five sixth graders would roll into my class eager (or maybe not) to learn about drama. (If you are doing the math, that’s around 400 students each year!)

I taught them about the components of theatre–storytelling, tableau, movement, chanting, costumes, masks, improvisation, sets, sound effects, etc.

While doing so, many classes focused on fairy tales.

Why fairy tales?

Everyone knows at least one fairy tale–usually they know Cinderella, Red Riding Hood, Snow White, etc.

When you teach the same concept over and over it gets stale.  This is very hard on a creative person like me and over time I was becoming bored.

I HATE to be bored.

So, I got to thinking…………

Hmmm.  What if I used one theme for the entire twenty-five day rotation? I wonder if the students (and I ) would appreciate it?

Aha.

Fairy Tale Lessons for Drama Class

 Fairy tales weren’t as popular fifteen years ago as they are now (thank you Disney.)  But boy, were the kids totally engaged.

Why should you take my word for it?

I did a little research to see what I could find about the reasons the study of fairy tales is useful with our students.

Wow!  There is a lot of information out there—-

Research on the Importance of Fairy Tales

According to the parentingpassageway.com, here are a few reasons:

“Children who are ready for fairy tales instinctively know that these stories are not literally true on the physical plane, but are true pictures of inner events and circumstances, of inner challenges and forces which must be faced and overcome. Thus, they sense that beauty and ugliness refer to inner qualities, not external appearance.” –In A Nutshell: Dialogues with Parents At Acorn Hill, Nancy Foster, page 47.

Vintage, Book Illustration, Literature, Shakespeare

 

“In regard to the issue of violence and evil, it is a reality that children, and all of us, do encounter challenges and bad or frightening experiences in life. The fairy tales, in which such experiences are redeemed in various ways according to the particular story, help to give children the trust that challenges can be overcome and that we are not powerless.” –In A Nutshell: Dialogues With Parents At Acorn Hill, Nancy Foster, page 48.

 

“That is the strength of fairy tales. They are filled with promise. The weak can be strong; evil can be turned to good; the ugly can become beautiful; Cinderella can become a princess, the frog a prince. Every human being can rise to his true stature. Even the smallest child can realize this and rejoice at future victories.” –An Overview of the Waldorf Kindergarten, page 54.

Fairy Tale Lessons for Drama Class

Sounds good, huh?

Fairy Tale Lessons for Drama Class

In my Teacherspayteachers store, I have several lessons and units which were tailor made for the middle school classroom,

however some upper elementary gifted/talented classes would appreciate it as well.

If you are wanting to study any part of theater with a twist using fairy tales, try this:

Fairy Tale Lessons for Drama Class

These drama lessons and units use fairy tales as the focus. In particular, students learn about set and costume design, tableau, stage properties AND participate in a class play, The Brave Little Tailor. Plus, they have the opportunity to be designers themselves. Cooperative learning, creative problem solving and developing individual creativity is stressed. Use the entire bundle and you have a month’s worth of learning!

Here’s what included:

Set Design Unit Product

This eight day unit on set design (with fairy tales as the focus) was created for upper elementary gifted and middle grade students through ninth grade. Students learn about the history of set design, famous set designers, develop a critical eye about what makes up an award winning set design, create a ground plan for a story of their choosing and draw a rendering. In addition, the students must work with ratios and measuring. The first two assignments are completed individually, but then the fun begins! The students are paired up to create a model working together towards the goal. There is even room for parents to celebrate the end of the unit with your students.

Included in the unit:

• An overview of the unit for the teacher
• Rationale for teaching set design
• History of set design
• Set designer’s responsibilities
• Teacher’s Script–what I say and how I say it!
• Warm up for day one
• Procedures for each day (8)
• Lecture notes including links
• Information about the message color conveys
• Ground plan example
• Rendering examples
• Stage curtain sheet for rendering
• Step by step directions for model building including photo examples
• Cheat sheet for various set pieces
• Assignment sheet for each step of the design process
• Exit slip prompts for 4 days
• Grade sheet EDITABLE
• Source Page

Now I have costume design lessons for grades 3 to 5 as well.  Check them out here:  Bundle Costume Design with Fairy Tale Characters Elementary Grades

And a spanking new Broadway musical unit for Peter Pan!

Set Design Templates Product

These templates are time savers for the busy teacher. They were created to answer the requests for additional templates to accompany my Set Design unit.

Note: These templates are sketched on l/2 grid paper. The student can use them as examples, but they will not be the correct measurements if they merely trace them.

There are eleven pieces:

  • door
  • window
  • fireplace mantel
  • desk
  • bed
  • bridge
  • throne
  • cemetery grave marker
  • tree
  • fence
  • shrub

Costume Design with Fairy Tales

Costume Design with Fairy Tale Characters

or find it at:  Costume Design with Fairy Tales (The Wheel Education Website)

This two-day lesson on costume design is focused on fairy tale characters and gives the students an opportunity to be costume designers. Suitable for students in grades 4 to 8, the product is broken in to two class periods, although it could be used for a one day exploration of the subject. This is a huge time saver for the busy teacher!

Students will learn about:

  • The History of Costume Design
  • The Rationale for Teaching Costume Design
  • Teacher’s Script–what I say and how I say it!
  • Costumes Notes for Students
  • Procedure
  • Materials List
  • Source & Video link list
  • A Warm-Up—engaging and creative
  • Fairy Tale Character list
  • Two Assignments–one creative and one written
  • Student Examples

Tableau

This one day lesson teaches the why, what and how of tableau. It is suitable or all ages, but most successful with elementary and middle school students.

The product contains:

  • Warm up Exercise
  • What is Tableau
  • Why Teach Tableau
  • Teacher’s Script
  • Procedure
  • Lesson
  • Extension Activities
  • Cool Down Exercise

Stage Properties

This one-day lesson about stage properties (with fairy tales as the focus) is suitable for upper elementary and middle school students. It is engaging, fun and unique. This isn’t just a worksheet–this is an ENTIRE lesson ready for you to copy and go!

Product includes:

  • Warm Up
  • Teacher’s Script–what I say and how I say it!
  • Stage properties categories and the reasons they are labeled as such
  • Short quiz
  • Quiz key
  • Movie title suggestions–cued up and hot linked to help you
  • Cooperative learning assignment

The Brave Little Tailor

This comical play (moderate or large cast depending on your needs) is suitable whether studying fantasy and fairy tales, the German culture or in a drama class. Students strengthen their reading (fluency), speaking (diction) and listening skills (restating) while learning to work cooperatively. The central themes include fate, ingenuity and cleverness. Based on the Grimm Brothers’ fairy tale by the same name, students will have an opportunity to:

learn about “the director’s concept” and help to create one

dramatize a fairy tale including a few puppets if you so choose

use unusual materials as stage properties

create comical characters

This product comes with:

  • a warm up focused on dialogue and the art of imitation
  • procedure or rehearsal schedule
  • teacher’s script–how I say it and what I say
  • information about the Grimms Brothers and the true history of the fairy tales
  • eleven page script complete with stage and blocking directions (to help you stage your performance)
  • tips and advice
  • discussion questions (post performance) with a quick art assignment
  • costume suggestions
  • original song, written especially for this play–plenty of fun for everyone!
  • sound bytes which can be used as accompaniment or for rehearsing the song
  • stage properties list–including how to create each prop
  • links to puppets, hat making
  • sources

If you are looking to save some money and get a BUNCH of set design lessons, check out this one:

Bundle:  Set Design Units (3 Weeks)

Time tested by veteran award winning drama teacher of 38 years. these are winners with students!

If you’d like to know about other Dramamommaspeaks products, check out these posts:

The Reasons to Teach Drama Class with Unique Lessons

Creative Dramatics Lesson Plans: Nine Reasons to Teach Radio Theater

Cirque Du Soleil Lesson Plans–a New Twist for Drama Classes

What are your favorite fairy tales?  For some reason I like The Red Shoes fairy tale and The Steadfast Tin Soldier the most. They are both very dramatic. That must be why. 😊

 

 

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Filed Under: arts education, creative dramatics, drama education, excellence in teaching, teaching strategies, The Wheel Education, theatre, youth theatre Tagged With: cinderella, costume design, creative dramatics, elementary drama, fairy tales, math integration, Peter Pan, red riding hood, set design

Here’s a Lesson You’d Never Expect: Costume Design

November 23, 2018 By dhcbaldwin 1 Comment

Here’s a Lesson You’d Neve Expect:  Costume Design

Image result for people in costumes in a play

It’s one of my favorite subjects in theater.  How can you beat it?

It’s fun, creative, allows for your imagination to flow freely and just plain fun.

Oh, did I say fun twice?

You know who else loves costume design?  Kids.

I think sometimes as drama teachers we think of costume design from the standpoint of a play or musical solely.

But there are so many other ways we use costumes.  Maybe like me, you haven’t thought of them either.

For instance:

  • Halloween costumes
  • Parade costumes
  • Ballet costumes
  • Super Hero
  • Circus Performers

and probably more I haven’t even thought of yet!

Image result for people in costumes in a play

Why Should I Teach Costume Design?

Here are some reasons for you:

  • Costumes are one of the most popular components of theatre.
  • An actor need not speak. A costume can share something about the character. The time period, tone of the production, personality or job of the character can all be conveyed through a costume.
  • Costume design involves multi -step procedures. The student learns to site specific examples while attending to the precise details of a description.
  • Students determine the meaning of symbols, key terms and phrases as they are used in a specific context relevant to grade appropriate texts and topics.

You may not know there are several important steps a costume designer must go through before the costume hits the stage.

1.) Analysis: The first step is an analysis of the script, musical composition, choreography, etc. Costume parameters for the show are established and a rough costume plot is created. A costume plot outlines which character is in which scene, when the actors change, and what costumes are mentioned in the script.

2.) Design Collaboration: This is a time when all of the designers meet with the director. There must be a clear understanding of where the show is headed. The designers get on the same page with the director in terms of themes for the show and what message they want the audience to get from the show.

3.) Costume Research: Now, the costume designer gathers research. Costume designers usually begin with world of the play research where they find research to establish the world where the play takes place. This helps the designers establish the rules of the world and then in turn understand the characters better. The designer will then go into broad research about each character to try to establish their personalities though their costume.

4.) Preliminary Sketching and Color Layout: Costume designers begin by creating preliminary sketches. beginning with very quick rough sketches the designer can get a basic idea for how the show will look put together and if the rules of the world are being maintained. The Costume designer will then go into more detailed sketches and will figure out the specific costumes and colors for the character. Sketches help see the show as a whole without them having to spend too much time on them.

5.) Final Sketches: Once the Costume Designer and the Director agree on the costumes and the ideas are fully flushed out, the designer will create final sketches. These are called renderings and are usually painted with watercolors or acrylic paints. These final sketches show what the designer wants the character to look like and the colors of the costume.

Image result for people in costumes in a play

Here’s a little history for you:

Costume design has a very long history. The ancient Greek playwright Aeschylus, who lived in the 5th century B.C., created specific costumes for actors to wear when performing his tragedies. In the Middle Ages & Renaissance, scenery and costumes became increasingly important elements of stage plays. Want a free costume design lesson? Click here.

They helped capture a mood, create an exciting colorful event, and entertained audiences. But there wasn’t one cohesive idea of what costume had to be. In Shakespeare’s time, people performed in contemporary dress. In his own company, Shakespeare’s performers provided their own costumes.

In the 16th century, some traveling theatrical troops performed a style of theater called commedia dell’arte. It had costumes that represented stock characters, such as the serving girl, the doctor, and the harlequin. Everyone in the audience understood what these characters stood for by looking at their costumes.

From the 1770s through the 1870s, a desire for greater accuracy in costume design began to take hold due to an increase in stage performances and traveling theatrical troupes, and because more people had become familiar with the costumes of cultures around the world.

Into the 19th century, costume design became an increasingly specialized art,           and two main ideas filtered into it. One was historical accuracy, or capturing the sense of a time period.

The other was concept-driven, in which costumes captured a vision that might not have connections to a known historical time and place. Think about movies and television today, and you can probably name several productions that fall into either category.

Did you know the use of metaphor through costume design is super cool?  I love this part! 

The Metaphor is used to assist the designer in developing a specific tone, mood, style, or feel for the play.

Metaphor is “A figure of speech in which a word … that ordinarily designates one thing is used to designate another, thus making an implicit comparison…“

For example: “All the world’s a stage,…” (William Shakespeare’s, As You Like It, Act II, scene 7). In less poetic terms — the world is a stage. (Note: A simile would add the word “like:” The world is like a stage.)

For example, after an analysis of Moliere’s The Giver, the designer may decide that Harpagon’s home, the primary set, is a gold coin. The metaphor — home is a gold coin — can suggest to the designer a color (gold), a shape (round), a texture (metallic)… How these elements are used depends on the designer’s creativity.

Think of the elements in Wizard of Oz—tornado, bicycle, ruby slippers, hour glass

How could you use these elements in the design of Dorothy’s house?

Here’s a Lesson You’d Never Expect

I have several costume design lessons you might be interested in.

Costume Design studies through:

Costume Design with Fairy Tales

Fairy Tale Characters

Costume Design with Super Heroes

Circus Performers

Super Heroes

Halloween Characters

Costume Design with Nutcracker Characters

 

Nutcracker Ballet Characters  

Here's a Lesson You'd Never Expect

Holiday Parade Characters

Costume Design with Newspaper

Each is a two day student-centered study of the history of costume design, including giving students an opportunity to create their own designs and much more.  If you are looking for a unit, this five day costume design unit works well with high school students.

Costume Design Unit for High School

 

I hope you’ll give them a look see.

I’d love to hear about your experiences with costumes.  I have a few crazy ones, like the time I decided to dress as a stalk of celery…..but I’ll keep that story for another time.

Contact me at dhcbaldwin@gmail.com or DeborahBaldwin.net

MTI Senior Musicals: A Baby Boomer's Dream Come True

 

 

 

 

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Filed Under: arts education, drama education, Education, youth theatre Tagged With: circus performers, costume design, elementary, fairy tales, Halloween costumes, high school, Middle school, Nutcracker Ballet, super heroes lesson plan

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