‘Fly In Fly Out’ is autobiographical by Australian playwright Robert Kronk. The performance is set in a small Queensland mining town where Jenny is about to graduate grade 10. Her struggle to balance her school work, her part times jobs (Chicken fry Shop and Hairdressers), her relentless younger sister, her relationships and also trying to keep up with everyone's expectations of her. The intended dramatic meaning of this play is to show what it is like to be a fly in fly out the community through teenagers eyes this is shown by realism: costumes, dialog and the elements of drama that include focus, timing, space, and language.
The dramatic meaning of ‘Fly In Fly Out’ is to inform the audience about the realism throughout the performance.Realism is shown by the costumes and the way that charters talk and interact with each other. In the play she changes the way she interacts with people from is at home to when she is working..She also changers her clothing when she is at home she wears casual clothes to when she is at work wearing her uniform Another example is in the scene when Jenny is working at the Chicken Fry shop as the new kid walks the way she is standing and looking has changes. When she changes the way she interacts with other people and the way she dresses, is often how other teenaged girls would act in those situations in a fly in fly out community.
The overall dramatic meaning of this play has been successfully shown by the elements of drama. The
A short play is usually filled with a theatrical energy of diverse anthologies. The time allotted may be only ten or fifteen minutes, so it must be able to capture and engage the audience with some dramatic tension, exciting action, or witty humor. Just as in a short story, a great deal of the explanation and background is left for the reader or viewer to discover on their own. Because all the details are not explicitly stated, each viewer interprets the action in their own way and each experience is unique from someone else viewing the same play. Conflict is the main aspect that drives any work of literature, and plays usually consist of some form of conflict. In “Playwriting 101:
Throughout the play there are many themes leading up to and causing the chief event.
Our theatre practitioners have come up with various ways of putting together a play. Traditionally, a play has to hold certain aspects and plot to be complete and considered a play. According to Freytag (2014), a drama is divided into five parts, namely: Exposition, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action and Denouement. The play Everyman incorporates such qualities. Everyman is medieval play probably written in the 15th century, and its original writer remains anonymous. It is a morality play that consists of allegory characters that symbolize certain concepts of life.
In the 3rd century B.C. a philosopher Aristotle formed what he called the “Six Elements of Drama,” which are thought/theme/ideas, action/plot, characters, language, music, and spectacle. Little did he know that two millennia later, we would use these guidelines in order to evaluate or develop an exquisite play. Twelve Angry Jurors followed these guidelines to pull in their audience and cause them to be attached to characters or intrigued by the plot in such a way only a play of high excellence could. This play was performed in Merrol Hyde Magnet School. Twelve Angry Jurors demonstrates the excellence in the thought/theme/ideas, action/plot, characters, language, music, spectacle also known as the “Six Elements of Drama”
The message and theme of the play positions the audience to feel sympathy and sadness.
Fly has two wings, four legs, two hundred one eyes, red eyes, and is also annoying. The antagonist of the story.
The film The Fly is about a scientist that makes an experiment that goes terribly wrong. The scientist was working on a transporting device. So, he tries transporting objects like plates and newspaper then, he transports living things like a cat and guinea pig. Trouble occurs because he tests it out on himself and it goes terribly wrong, he went into the device with a fly and mixed their atoms making his head and left arm of a fly. In the end, Helen his wife is ordered to kill him because the fly was messing with his mind.
* The play’s text relies on a major dramatic question that overarches the story and strings the dramatic tension and resolution together through the work as well as a goal for the protagonist, which acts alongside the MDQ to push the plot forward, and towards the goal of resolution.
What is important about the play is that it is a theatrical representation of a historical moment
Before I saw the play, I was very sceptical about the drama as I had expected it to be predictably monotonous as I could not interpret how the production could make a live performance to be perceived as an alluring thriller. I had not assumed that
In the story “The Fly”, the boss of a company is experiencing an episode of sorrow. His son, who was supposed to take over his business, passed away in World War I. ‘The boss’ (Mr Woodward) finds a fly in his office and later displays his emotions through the fly by letting it suffer in an ink pot. ‘The boss’ uses the fly as a metaphor to express his anger. The fly is one of a million flies. Just like his son, who was one in a million soldiers, killed during the war.
part of the play, not in the plot but in the way the play has been
Drama has been used as a source of entertainment and enlightenment for hundreds of years and is often considered an art form. Just as with many other types of literature, drama relies on several separate components all working together to tell a story. These components serve to draw an audience in, create a believable situation, and illicit a particular response. The play “A Doll’s House” by Henrik Ibsen provides an excellent example for analysis, with each component strongly supported.
In Katherine Mansfield’s, “The Fly,” an older gentleman referred to as “the boss” struggles with a fight, however it was a fight with his own thoughts and despair. Although The Boss is able to forget in the end, who is to say that this has not happened before, or will not happen again. The sadness he feels for his son will always be there, but he just cannot bring it to the surface. Although the fly drowns as if to symbolize his despair, his need to cope is gone. The boss as depicted by Katherine Mansfield in “The Fly” seems to be in adequate physical health, but is fighting his own depression that he thinks he should be feeling for his son, yet the fly provides a distraction that he needed to move on.
To understand Dramatic Structure. “The scaffolding on which playwright plots a tale to frame or shape the action” Mira Fellner, THINK theatre (Boston: Pearson, 2013), 51. While reading a play, knowledge is applied in a critical perspective. Our mind tries to classify it in a coherent form into one of the types of dramatic structures that have been studied by us. It should be possible now to differentiate a climactic structure from a serial, episodic or circular one. Our goal is to clarify the ideas presented in a play. For this, it is imperative to acknowledge that each play has its own structure.