When is woyzeck set




















One focuses on a monstrous, aristocratic predator who threatens to destroy a progressive bourgeois society; the other is a mentally ill proletarian who is beaten, betrayed, exploited and humiliated to breaking point. Nosferatu haunts, Woyzeck is haunted. And so on.

Yet this being Werner Herzog, such cut-and-dry dialectics are neither cut nor dry. Woyzeck stabbed Woost to death on the evening of 2 June He was immediately arrested and confessed to the crime. The report was written after five interviews with Woyzeck and delivered to the court on 16 September Based on this report Woyzeck was sentenced to execution by decapitation.

He interviewed Woyzeck five more times and delivered the new report on 28 February , which confirmed his earlier findings. Woyzeck was finally executed on 27 August Manuscript 1 is a folio set consisting of five booklets, which contain H1 and H2. Manuscript 2 is a single sheet of quarto paper containing H3 just two scenes. Manuscript 3 is six pages folded to make six quarto-sized booklets; this is H4. H1 is the first version and H4 is the last version.

H1 consists of 21 scenes. In it, the main characters are called Louis and Margreth. Scenes are set in the fairground. Scenes develop the theme of jealousy. Scenes depict the murder and its aftermath. H2 consists of 9 longer scenes. In H2 the characters of the Doctor and the Hauptmann Captain have been introduced. H2 ends with Louise praying alone; the murder is not depicted. The play comes to us a fragment without a real ending. There is something almost uncanny about the spell it casts over audiences.

Extraordinarily short, it vibrates with its compact intensity. A good performance need last no longer than forty minutes, although there are almost thirty scenes. The new dramatic structure, first attempted in Danton, is here brought to perfection. The division into acts disappears and so does character development. Plot is kept to a minimum. Just a series of stark pictures, brief confrontations between a humble man and the various people who populate his narrow world.

Even more shocking: kindly sympathy for a man who viciously murders a woman right on the stage! And it is not just any murderer, for Woyzeck is not the perverse invention of a writer, but an extraordinarily faithful portrait of one of the most publicized killers of the time. Woyzeck is one of the first plays in Europe about ordinary people. A lower-class character, formerly marginalized and ignored in previous plays, suitable not for a revealed subjective or moral life but for comic relief, takes center stage for the first time.

Woyzeck, however, does not just democratize drama by introducing a radically new dramatic subject. Concerned with the ways in which individuals are shaped by surroundings and social position, Woyzeck anticipates literary naturalism by almost a half-century. By its treatment of a notorious real-life murder case, Woyzeck is also one of the earliest examples of documentary theater and has been praised as the greatest social drama in German literature. Its open-ended, fragmented structure projecting internal, distorted states of mind anticipates expressionism, while its reduction of experience down to the incongruous and bizarre anticipates the theater of the absurd.

His father was a successful physician, an enthusiast of the French Revolution, and a fervent supporter of the social reforms instituted by Napoleon in Germany. He also collaborated in on the political pamphlet Der Hessische Landbote The Hessian Messenger that promulgated his view that social reform in Germany would only come through the revolutionary awakening of the disenfranchised, oppressed, and impoverished German peasantry aligned with enlightened industrialists, politicians, and intellectuals.

In Strasbourg he would complete a second play, the satirical comedy Leonce und Lena and the psychological novella Lenz. He also finished his research and dissertation on the nervous system of fish and received his doctorate from the University of Zurich, where he was offered a faculty position. Though in this picture, he also looks like a guard. With the way he stands and stares. This is a photograph that I took myself during a party where there was a gathering of military personnel.

I think their uniform is really awesome. Accessories Research Because Marie is in a poor family, she does not have money to pamper herself with all the nice jewelry. She only has the gold earrings that the Drum-Major has given her in the previous scene and a shard of broken mirror. I think they are too modern for my scene. These earrings show a very elegant and sophisticated look. From my research on colours, gold means a promise of better times.

I am not sure if that is suppose to foreshadow and help show the motive of the Drum Major or that gold was just valuable then. The Drum Major is the leader of the group. To go through parades, he must have his trusty brand mace with him to show his power. Through my image researches, I seem to have only found two types of maces.

The mace on the left looks much more suited to be the Drum Majors. Stage Research I have taken pictures of the stage in our auditorium so that I can use them as a reference as to how I am going to design the stage and where I would want the audience. Stage Design I have decided to use the proscenium arch stage because I want the audience to focus on the two characters on the stage. The stage will have a smaller thrust stage in the front where Marie and the Drum Major will stand most of the scene.

I will not put a lot of furniture on the set because the scene will focus on the atmosphere and to create atmosphere, I will use lighting and the voices of the actor and actress. On Google SketchUp, I have created a 3-dimensional model of what my stage would look like.

The only furniture I am using in this setting is a bed and the window. The reason I chose to place a window in the scene was because If someone looks through a window, there is a separation between the viewer and the outside world. The window has glass so the person is left as a spectator, not as someone who actually has any kind of involvement with the world.

This is similar to the poor Marie. She gets called a whore and she does not have money. However, she understands what they mean when they call her a whore but she still has the dignity to compare herself with any woman.

I placed a bed on the stage because by the end of the scene, the audience will now what will happen. Audience: Cast: The audience will mostly be placed in the center area because the actor and actress with nearly always stand in the center. Stage: Other Aspects Lighting: Since the scene would be small with not a lot of movement that covers the entire stage, I only want one spotlight in the middle of the scene where the characters will be in most of the time.

The light is tinted yellow to look like the room is illuminated by candle light. At the end of the scene. The characters will freeze and the spotlight turns red to show that these two are committing a sin with Marie cheating on Woyzeck. Design Concept The message I want the audience to try and interpret will not be as clear because I am more focused on how the actor and actress create mood and atmosphere by themselves.

A meaning or symbolism in the scene is the lighting. The end of the scene is show by a red spotlight shown on the pair to show that, what I think, is sin. Plus it is not the main focus of the scene. The main focus is the relationship between Marie and the Drum Major and how they act. The stage is small and the furniture would take up a huge amount of space, and so, I extended the stage with a mini thrust stage, so Marie and the Drum Major would be standing downstage center most of the time.

It would also be easier for the audience to see. The front row audience would get to sit around the curve of the stage, while the people in the back are put into the center to be able to see properly. The colours of the costume are according to the meanings I have researched. She has red lips to show that she is still a beautiful woman despite what Margaret says about her.

The brown on her dress shows her natural strength and that she is not a weak woman. He has bold colours like black to show authority and power, stability and strength.

Black also makes him look thinner. He has gold to show that he has gain medals of honor and he has pride. While the blue means that he is loyal. It does not necessarily mean the the Drum Major himself is loyal, but he should be in his position.



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