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Encyclopedia > Role (performing arts)

The term role in the performing arts is usually taken to mean an actor's interpretation of a fictional character written in a script that culminates in a unique performance of that character. So, for example, Shakespeare's character of King Lear remains timeless and unchanging as words on a page, but each new actor coming to the character creates a new role, a new expression of the possibilities in that character. Each actor brings his or her own sensibilities, physicality, emotional history and personality to a character to create a unique role. Consequently, no two roles can ever be the same. This is one of the features of performance that makes it compelling and 'alive'. Actors in period costume sharing a joke whilst waiting between takes during location filming. ... Interpretation, or interpreting, is an activity that consists of establishing, either simultaneously or consecutively, oral or gestural communications between two or more speakers who are not speaking (or signing) the same language. ... A fictional character is any person who appears in a work of fiction. ... Script may mean: A writing system A manuscript, scroll A draft for a book The dialog and instructions for a play, film (see screenplay), or comic book or strip; or, without dialog, the instructions for a dance routine (such as for a musical, or the ballet) A kind of computer... King Lear and the Fool in the Storm by William Dyce (1806-1864) King Lear is generally regarded as one of William Shakespeares greatest tragedies. ...


The term role is usually used of the dramatic arts but roles may be acted, sung or danced. Singing is the act of producing musical sounds with the voice. ... A contemporary dancer rehearsing in a dance studio Dance generally refers to human movement either used as a form of expression or presented in a social, spiritual or performance setting. ...


Not to be confused with the term Role-play which is the experimentation of character, and/or situations. See more at role. A function is part of an answer to a question about why some object or process occurred in a system that evolved or was designed with some goal. ...


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
role: Definition, Synonyms and Much More from Answers.com (1496 words)
Role, which is first recorded in English in 1606, came to us from French already having the sense “a part one has to play.” The word rôle in its earlier history (Old French rolle) had meant “a roll, as of parchment,” particularly with reference to a manuscript roll.
A role (sometimes spelled rôle) or a social role is a set of connected behaviours, rights and obligations as conceptualised by actors in a social situation.
Role conflict is a special form of social conflict that takes place when one is forced to take on two different and incompatible roles at the same time.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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