DRAMATIC ARTS
GRADE 12
NSC PAST PAPERS AND MEMOS
FEBRUARY/MARCH 2017
INSTRUCTIONS AND INFORMATION
SECTION A: 20th CENTURY THEATRE MOVEMENTS
This section is COMPULSORY.
QUESTION 1
Study SOURCE A below and answer the question that follows.
SOURCE A
Select ONE of the quotes in SOURCE A above, which best represents the characteristics of the 20th Century Theatre Movement you have studied:
Discuss, in an essay, how the quotation you have selected shows how the relevant 20th Century Theatre Movement revolutionised (changed) theatre performance at that time, in terms of staging techniques, devices and conventions.
Indicate the title of the play text you have studied at the top of your essay.
TOTAL SECTION A: 30
SECTION B: SOUTH AFRICAN THEATRE: 1960–1994
Answer only ONE question in this section.
QUESTION 2: WOZA ALBERT! BY PERCY MTWA, MBONGENI NGEMA AND BARNEY SIMON
Study SOURCE B below and answer the questions that follow.
SOURCE B
WOZA ALBERT! – A REVIEW BY SARAH ROBERTSON Excellent set, excellent lighting, excellent costuming and props – with clever use of all these, Woza Albert! stays true to Grotowski's Poor Theatre and pays tribute to South Africa's Protest Theatre which emerged in South Africa during the late 1970s and 1980s. It's astute anti-apartheid satire at its best. |
2.1 Explain the 'clever use' (line 1) of the props. Refer to ONE example in the play text. (2)
2.2 Describe the lighting and costumes that might be used in a production of Woza Albert! in order to stay 'true to Grotowski's Poor Theatre' (line 2). (4)
2.3 What will be the benefits of staging a production of Woza Albert! in a Poor Theatre style? (4)
2.4 Explain how Woza Albert! uses 'anti-apartheid satire' (line 4) to communicate serious apartheid issues. Give TWO examples of the techniques used. (4)
2.5 Describe how the actors, Zondi and Nzimade, might be able to 'recreate all of South Africa' (line 5) through the following:
2.6 Analyse the effect of using comic techniques ('howls with laughter') (line 7) in a play with serious themes. (4)
2.7 How did the Protest Theatre of the 1970s and 1980s, in your opinion, influence the socio-political transformation of South Africa? (6)
2.8 Discuss whether or not the themes in Woza Albert! reflect the same issues faced by our society today. Refer to lines 9–20 and the play text as a whole when you construct your answer. (10)
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QUESTION 3: SOPHIATOWN BY THE JUNCTION AVENUE THEATRE COMPANY
Study SOURCE C below and answer the questions that follow.
SOURCE C
SOPHIATOWN – A REVIEW BY LUVUYO KAKAZA Purkey's Sophiatown was conceived in a rehearsal room of the Junction Avenue Theatre Company and was the result of a joint effort of a group of multiracial, militant theatre practitioners. |
3.1 Name the theatrical term for a 'joint effort of a group' (line 2) to create a play. (1)
3.2 Describe the community of Sophiatown, the place, in the 1950s. (4)
3.3 Suggest why Sophiatown, the play, could be classified as a township musical. (3)
3.4 Analyse how TWO of the characters in the play text reflect a 'melting pot of cultural differences' (lines 9–10). (6)
3.5 Explain how the actor playing the role of the 'barely articulate' (line 14) Charlie, could make his vocal and physical performance memorable. (4)
3.6 Discuss the aspects of Sophiatown that might 'educate and entertain' (line 16). Refer to examples from the play text to support your answer. (3 x 2) (6)
3.7 Do you agree with the statement that the plot of Sophiatown would make a 'great storyline for a film' (line 19)? Motivate your answer. (6)
3.8 Respond to the relevance of Purkey's statement in lines 20–22, by discussing the themes and the play text as a whole. (10)
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QUESTION 4: SIENER IN DIE SUBURBS BY PG DU PLESSIS
Study SOURCE D below and answer the questions that follow.
SOURCE D
SIENER IN DIE SUBURBS – AN INTERVIEW WITH THE DIRECTOR, HEINRICH REISENHOFER, BY STEPHANIE NIEUWOUDT 'When I read this script for the first time, I knew I wanted to work with it. I believe that this is advantageous. I am setting it in the Cape Flats which gives it a different flavour.' |
4.1 'I (the director) am setting it (Siener in die Suburbs) in the Cape Flats which gives it a different flavour.' (Line 2)
4.1.1 Identify the original setting of the play. (1)
4.1.2 Explain, with references to the play text, what the director's comment suggests about the relevance of the play. (3)
4.1.3 Motivate your own choice of setting and set for a production of Siener in die Suburbs. (6)
4.2 Explain the importance of the role of 'supporting characters' (line 12) like Albertus and Fé to advance the plot of the play. (4)
4.3 The director mentions that his favourite character, Giel, 'is extremely well written. He seems like a small fry, but actually he carries the whole play'. (Lines 13–14)
4.3.1 Analyse the reasons why the director might feel that Giel 'actually … carries the whole play' (line 14). Refer to the play text to support your answer. (6)
4.3.2 Advise the director on the costume which might be suitable for the character of Giel. (4)
4.3.3 Create an actor's guide to assist potential actors to prepare for an audition for the role of Giel. (An actor's guide is a set of acting methods or techniques.) (6)
4.4 Discuss how Siener in die Suburbs 'sums up the essence of the working class communities' (line 16). Refer to the play text as a whole in your answer. (10)
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TOTAL SECTION B: 40
SECTION C: SOUTH AFRICAN THEATRE: POST-1994 – CONTEMPORARY
Answer only ONE question in this section.
QUESTION 5: NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH BY JOHN KANI
Study SOURCE F below and answer the questions that follow.
SOURCE F
NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH – A REVIEW BY MARTIN BUZACOTT OF THE AUSTRALIAN Imagine your perfect play – the one that made you laugh, cry and think deeply about an issue of great importance. |
5.1 Identify ONE 'issue of great importance' (line 2) in Nothing But The Truth which could make you 'laugh', 'cry' or 'think deeply'. (2)
5.2 Explain why your choice in QUESTION 5.1 is an 'issue of great importance' (line 2) in the play text. (2)
5.3 Discuss whether or not anyone 'living comfortably in middle Australia could truly understand' this play. (Lines 3–4) (4)
5.4 Suggest how an actor playing Sipho might create a performance that portrays 'a personal dignity as well as a sense of moral authority' (lines 5–6). Refer to vocal and physical characterisation. (6)
5.5 As the character Themba, write a diary entry in which you express the political and personal reasons why you 'fled into exile, never to return' (line 7). (4)
5.6 Discuss why the arrival of Mandisa might cause 'complex feelings of love, loss, envy, outrage and pain' (lines 10–11). Refer to examples from the play text. (6)
5.7 Describe THREE responsibilities and duties that Janice Honeyman might have as the director of Nothing But The Truth. (6)
5.8 Evaluate whether or not Nothing But the Truth could be described as 'one of the most spellbinding and moving works of theatre you are likely to witness' (lines 19–20). Refer to the review and your knowledge of the themes of the play text as a whole to support your answer. (10)
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QUESTION 6: GROUNDSWELL BY IAN BRUCE
Study SOURCE G below and answer the questions that follow.
SOURCE G
GROUNDSWELL – A REVIEW BY JIM HERBERT Envy, vengeance, redemption – those elements condense like a noxious (poisonous) fog in Groundswell, the compact, provocative (thought-provoking) thriller. |
6.1 Give ONE reason for the playwright's choice of title for the play. (2)
6.2 Identify the setting of the play. (2)
6.3 Explain, using a character analysis, how the three characters are 'trapped by the past and their inability to see a way through to some resolution' (lines 6–7). (6)
6.4 Analyse ONE dramatic moment when 'the complex friction among this trio' (line 9) leads to confrontation. (4)
6.5 Describe an 'arena-style' (line 10) theatre space. (2)
6.6 Evaluate the director's choice of staging this play on an arena type stage. State the theatrical effectiveness of this choice in terms of the following:
6.7 Suggest how the actor playing Johan might choose to express 'the pain behind the fury' (line 12) in his physical and vocal performance. (4)
6.8 Assess the value of tweeting this review to attract an audience. (4)
6.9 Discuss how Ian Bruce uses symbols to create a 'provocative (thought provoking) thriller' (lines 2–3) on stage. Refer to the review and the play text as a whole. (10)
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QUESTION 7: MISSING BY REZA DE WET
Study SOURCE H below and answer the questions that follow.
SOURCE H
MISSING – A REVIEW BY BEVERLEY BROMMERT Director: Mdu Kweyama Surreal drama marries off-beat humour in Reza de Wet's Missing … about the serial abduction of young girls when the circus comes to town … |
7.1 Determine if the reviewer, Beverley Brommert, is in favour of the production or not? Motivate your answer. (3)
7.2 Explain 'the mysterious opening of a trapdoor in the roof' (lines 4–5). (3)
7.3 Suggest why the reviewer describes the family's circumstances as 'bizarre (strange)' (line 6). (4)
7.4 Explain the irony in Gertie's 'visit to a house she perceives as a safe haven' (lines 9–10). (2)
7.5 According to the reviewer, '(e)nigmas (Mysteries) and tensions abound' (line 11) in the play.
7.5.1 Identify TWO moments of dramatic tension in the play. (2)
7.5.2 Describe how a director might use technical aspects of production to emphasise the dramatic moments of tension identified in QUESTION 7.5.1. (6)
7.6 Do you agree with the reviewer's suggestion that the circus could be labelled 'a character in its own right' (line 13). Motivate your answer. (4)
7.7 Describe THREE skills an actress playing Gertie would require to 'steal(s) the show' (line 14). (6)
7.8 Identify the symbols used in Missing and discuss how Reza de Wet creates a 'ghoulish (dark) quality' (line 21) in the play. Refer to the review and the play text as a whole. (10)
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TOTAL SECTION C: 40
SECTION D: THE HISTORY OF THEATRE, PRACTICAL CONCEPTS, CONTENT AND SKILLS
This section is COMPULSORY.
QUESTION 8
Study SOURCE I below and answer the questions that follow.
SOURCE I
Use the images below as a stimulus for your answers.
Case Study |
8.1 Define the following terms:
8.1.1 Community theatre (2)
8.1.2 Theatre for Conservation/Environmental Theatre (2)
8.2 State TWO requirements to start a community theatre company. (2)
8.3 Describe a possible storyline for a play on water conservation. (4)
8.4 Give your play a title. (1)
8.5 Choose ONE of the two images in SOURCE I that you may use as a poster to advertise your play. Motivate why you choose this image. (3)
8.6 Assess the value of this kind of production for Lerato's community. (3)
8.7 Reflect on the life lessons that you could learn from Lerato's example. (3)
8.8 You decided to apply the characteristics of a theatre movement you have studied in Dramatic Arts to the staging of your production.
8.8.1 Identify ONE theatre movement you could apply to the staging of your production. (2)
8.8.2 Describe TWO characteristics of the theatre movement you identified in QUESTION 8.8.1. (6)
8.8.3 Discuss how you would creatively apply the characteristics of the movement identified in QUESTION 8.8.1 to your production. Use the skills you learnt in Dramatic Arts. You may refer to the following:
TOTAL SECTION D: 40
GRAND TOTAL: 150