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Script and improvisationUsing themes from the play

Spontaneous and rehearsed improvisation can be used to generate new content. Exploring themes in a play and experimenting with styles and status are useful when creating new scripts and characters.

Part of DramaScripts as a stimulus

Using themes from the play

Look at this extract from the play:

An Inspector Calls
by J B Priestley

Birling

They suddenly decided to ask for more money. They were averaging about twenty-two and six, which was neither more or less than is paid generally in our industry. They wanted the rates raised so that they could average about twenty-five shillings a week. I refused, of course.

The themes in the above extract are obviously money, greed and inequality. You could create the following improvisations around these themes:

  • characters talking together about the poor rates they鈥檙e paid and deciding to act
  • a scene with a worker and Mr Birling showing the argument from both sides
  • a modern-day scene exploring the issue of fair pay

Improvisational methods to use in rehearsal

Even if you鈥檙e using a script, improvisation can be a wonderful way of discovering things about it you had not realised before. It鈥檚 also a superb way of freeing up actors or breathing new life into a scene that has become stale. Try these exercises:

Taking characters out of context

What happens if you pick up the characters and put them in a different place or time? Improvise in a strange setting like a spaceship or a submarine! Look at Explorative strategies to find out more.

Using verse

Try to improvise while speaking in a rhythm or using rhyme. This can be helped by actors throwing a ball from one to another to change the pace. You might use rhyming couplets or lines that rhyme with each other. This forces the actor to think in a different way and use words that they might not usually consider.