The Art of Clown Mondays & Thursdays 4:10pm - 5:35pm Lab: Thursdays 6pm-9pm (NOTE: Donna will not be present for lab. This is optional time set aside in Gates for you to practice your own stuff if you want to take advantage of that). Office Hours: By appointment Email: doblongata@coa.edu Phone: 845 594 8540 (Note: Email is by far the best way to reach me. Communicating by text makes me extremely grumpy, so text me at your peril .) Course description: The archetype of the clown exists in many cultural contexts throughout time - those individuals whose role it is to turn society on its head, poke fun at the powerful and make literal fun of our own flaws and vulnerabilities – society’s pressure-release valve. Contrary to common pop-culture depictions, clown is a form that requires tremendous vulnerability, self-knowledge and the ability to respond spontaneously in any performance context. The work in this class will ...
Read: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/17/arts/television/grief-stand-up-comedy.html?smid=url-share Listen (to any one episode): https://stand-up-and-clown.simplecast.com/ Write: 3 minutes of "material." Standup, silent, found text, whatever. Bring: A costume! Must cover your body enough that you could have nothing underneath it. Ideally, you have something on your head!!
Besides your 5 MINUTE PRESENTATION: Watch Plan B by Maria Bamford and Richard Pryor Live in Concert (1979). Both are on the hard drive in the library, but the Pryor one is also on Netflix if you have access to that. Like I said, there will be some stuff you find offensive in the Pryor piece, but you have to watch it. Also, reminder that the presentation must be between 4:40 and 5:00 (not including setup). No shorter, no longer. This is practice for fitting things into time constraints. If you need a powerpoint presentation but don't have a computer that connects to the HMDI, you can email it to me and I can open it on mine. See you then!
Comments
Post a Comment