The Costumer's Manifesto is written by Tara Maginnis, and proudly hosted by William Baker.

THE MANIFESTO IS MUTATING!  IT IS TURNING INTO A WIKI THAT CAN BECOME THE HIVE MIND OF ALL COSTUMERS, FINALLY LIVING UP TO IT'S SLOGAN: "COSTUMERS OF THE WORLD, UNITE!" YOU CAN HELP IN THIS PROCESS BY MOVING PAGES TO THE NEW SITE AT THECOSTUMERSMANIFESTO.COM, HELPING TO EDIT THE PAGES THAT ARE THERE ALREADY, AND ADDING YOUR OWN ORIGINAL INPUT.

 

READING THE PLAY 

Questions you should ask yourself after reading the play:

What is this play about in literal terms?

What is this play about in general or metaphorical terms (CONCEPT)?

What is the style of the play?
Realism? Expressionism? Romanticism

What is the location of the play?
Country/Continent? City/Country? Indoors/Outdoors?
Specific Space?

What is the time of the play?
Year/Time/Period? Season/Weather? Time of Day/Occasion?

What does the action of the play call for?

Are there any references to clothing in the text?

Where (to who) does focus need to be pulled to and when?

What is a play concept? "A light-heated romp in the woods"
"A Mel Brooks Vaudeville routine? -- "A violent page ripped out of the
newspaper" -- "A giant Polish joke" -- "An art deco jukebox"

Also ask about each individual character:
What is the character's Age?
Social class?
Financial position?
Social Attitude?
Marital Status?
Health?
Moral Attitude?
Job?
Mental State?
Education?
Country of origin?
Present home?

Dramatic Metaphor:
My love is like a red red rose vs. My love is a red red rose
examples:
The tailor is a prancing pincushion
Kate is too hot to handle
Hortensio is a horny toad
Bianca is good enough to eat if you don't mind sugar poisoning

What does the action require the character to do?

Are there any textual references that mention a character is dressed certain way?

What was the character planning/thinking when he/she put on his/her clothes?

What kind of body does the character have?

How does he/she walk? Sit? Gesture? Stand?

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The Costumer's Manifesto is proudly hosted by William Baker.

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This Page is part of The Costumer's Manifesto by Tara Maginnis, Ph.D.  Copyright 1996-2010.   You may print out any of these pages for non-profit educational use such as school papers, teacher handouts, or wall displays.  You may link to any page in my site.