Writing 45-Minute One-Act Plays, Skits, Monologues, & Animation Scripts for Drama Workshops
Author | : Anne Hart |
Publisher | : iUniverse |
Total Pages | : 298 |
Release | : 2005-03 |
ISBN-10 | : 9780595345977 |
ISBN-13 | : 0595345972 |
Rating | : 4/5 (972 Downloads) |
Download or read book Writing 45-Minute One-Act Plays, Skits, Monologues, & Animation Scripts for Drama Workshops written by Anne Hart and published by iUniverse. This book was released on 2005-03 with total page 298 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Here's a guide book on how to write 45-minute one-act plays, skits, and monologues for all ages. Step-by-step strategies and sample play, monologue, and animation script offer easy-to-understand solutions for drama workshop leaders, high-school and university drama directors, teachers, students, parents, coaches, playwrights, scriptwriters, novelists, storytellers, camp counselors, actors, lifelong learning instructors, biographers, facilitators, personal historians, and senior center activity directors. Guide young people in an intergenerational experience of interviewing and writing skits, plays, and monologues based on the significant events and experiences from lives of people. Learn to write skits, plays and monologues based on historical events and personalities. What you'll get out of this book and the exercises of writing one-act plays for teenage actors and audiences of all-ages audience, are improved skills in adapting all types of social issues, current events, or life experience to 45-minute one-act plays, skits, or monologues for teenage or older adult drama workshops. How do you write plays and skits from life stories, current events, social issues, or history? Are you looking for the appropriate 45-minute, one-act play for high-school students or other teenagers, for community center drama workshops, or even for home school projects or for events and celebrations? Are you seeking one-act plays for older adults drama workshops? Use personal or biographical experiences as examples when you write your skit or play. If you want a really original play, write, revise, and adapt your own plays, skits, and monologues. Here's how to do it.