Christmas Play Analysis

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Season’s Greetings
Sunday afternoon, a cloudy day. Right after lunch, I was heading West to see the play. I was excited already to start with the Christmas spirit, even though, Thanksgiving still far. I got to the theatre, on the second floor. I bought my ticket on this little window at the end of the hallway. As I entered the theater I could hear the Christmas songs and notice the big Christmas tree in the middle of the stage. The type of stage is proscenium with an extended apron; its structure was very different. The audience seats are arranged in an arch, the entrance was made from the back of the theater and the stage was below the audience. This theater, even though small, it accommodated everybody well, giving everybody a very good …show more content…

The director focused on the relationships within the family and the issues they were all going through. Before the play started, she came upstage and said “This is a very warming Christmas play, made with love. I hope everybody enjoys it.”, her statement got me ready to feel more empathy towards the family and understand better their conflicts. The genre was said in her words and played until the end, she intentionally made of it a Domestic Comedy. The structure can be interpreted as climatic and episodic; there were nine actors in stage (episodic); if you focus on Belinda and Clive’s first encounter as the first glimpse of the problem (episodic, because the plot begins early in the story), but if you see it as Howard’s comment about guns (climatic, because it begins late in the story); it covers a short space of time (climatic); it occurs in Belinda and Neville’s house (climatic, restricted locale). So, in my opinion, it has a climatic format. Season’s tells the story of a family that get together every year for Christmas, and just like any other family has a lot of disagreements. Its protagonist, Belinda, who is married to Neville, and sees in Clive an adventure, which she seems not to have had any excitement for a while; the antagonist, Clive, a writer who is brought to this house by a friend, or more than a friend, Rachel, which is Belinda’s sister; this character was done with characteristics of stock character, he is known as a “clever writer”. The language used was an everyday language, vernacular, which brings more realism to the play, and facilitates the audience

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