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Cargando... Twenty 10-Minute Plays for Teens Volume I (Young Actors Series)por Kristen Dabrowski
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Perfect for high school students, these plays provide humor, drama, and a wide variety of characters and situations. These twenty original full-length plays can be performed in ten short minutes, with cast sizes ranging from three to eight actors. Included is a fascinating foreword by Earl D. Weaver, Assistant Professor of Theater, University of Central Florida. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)812.54Literature English (North America) American drama 20th CenturyClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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First, there's language. The book was published in 2004, so you wouldn't expect it be dated...but some of the expressions are more suited to a college student or older teen from the late eighties or early nineties. There's no current slang, but there are slang terms like boning...and I don't know when I last heard that outside of nineties music stations. And, while some of the language might be let slide in teenagers improvising scenes, or simply ignored by teachers, I can't imagine a high-school teacher giving out some of these skits that contain repeated uses of "bitch", "piss", and uncountable "that sucks". Oh, and then there are the derogatory remarks about things or people being "gay"--true, there's always the politically correct teen standing by to say "don't say that"...but it ends up being a repeated exchange that, if not offensive, is also unnecessary.
Then there's the entertainment value. Some of the dramatic scenes here have their moments, but just as many veer off course. And, those same dramatic scenes do short work of attempting to touch on such issues as child abuse, sexual abuse, rape, alcoholism, etc. In other words, the dramatic scenes veer into after-school special territory, but leave the scenes with no closure at all instead of wrapping them up either too neatly or too seriously. And, where the other scenes try to be funny or entertaining...they're just not, for adults or teens.
Unfortunately, still another problem is the simple practical use of the scenes. Most of the short plays (10 minutes or so long) have upwards of 7-8 actors/actresses involved, if not closer to 14-16. As a result, few characters have more than a few lines; the author seems to specialize in mini-crowd scenes of idle teenage dialogue. True, it's all believable, but how useful is it as a short play?
The book may have some uses. Because the characters are nearly all bare-bones, there might be some use in having students flesh out the characters and add depth to the characters or scenes on their own. Likewise, some of these short plays would work well enough as practice piece--they're nothing you'd want to have students put real work into performing (because, for the most part, they're just not entertaining to warrant the effort), but they do give opportunity for building an ensemble and/or memorizing lines and working at stage business in class. Again, I don't know that most of them are appropriate, but some are and could come in handy for in-class work and exercising, perhaps.
Simply, this isn't a collection that I'd find real use in recommending. Unless you're looking for simple short plays that can be performed by larger groups of older teenagers, you won't have much use for this. In the end, I'm afraid this book just doesn't have much material to offer to anyone--teens will find it condescending and/or boring, and any instructor who hands it to teens is likely to get some calls from parents. ( )