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THEATRE TOPICS
ARTSLYNX
DEPARTMENTS
THEATRE
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Theatre Design
Portfolio presentations. Some Thoughts... C.
2000 R. Finkelstein
RULES OF THE ROAD .
. .
Here's the bad news....work that might
earn you an "A" in school, may not even earn you a passing
grade as you move beyond the cocoon we call "school". The
pressure for high standards is squarely on YOUR shoulders. No one can
force you to do good work. No one is responsible for your work but
YOU! "Getting by", just doesn't cut it anymore. Everything
you do must be done with an eye to the future. Every step you take
should be geared towards preparing you for the next step. Although the
temptation will be strong to go for the quick result, the most visible
results, keep in mind that the "quick fix" may not give you
a strong enough foundation to enable you to progress to a higher level
of work. The first step for an actor on the road to success is NOT the
finding of an agent. A much stronger approach for the budding actor
might be to develop their art to a point where the agent would find
them! This is important. Ultimately, your work speaks for you.....not
the other way around!
- Only present work that represents
you at your best. Anything else will obviously dilute the impact
of your presentation. Edit, edit edit!!!!!
- Work MUST be presented in a
quality manner. Perception of quality can only be degraded if the
mechanics of presentation are not up to or even beyond the level
of quality of the work being presented.
- Sloppiness and other clues to a
careless attitude or one where the details get slighted can
sabotage your presentation from the start.
- KNOW YOUR AUDIENCE!
Work that might impress one niche in the industry might be treated
with scorn in other quarters! Some types of portfolio are
obviously "academic" in nature. This might be great if
you are being interviewed for a graduate school program, but could
be deadly for those looking for professional work. It is even
possible to have a portfolio that is "too good" in this
topsy turvy world of ours. To be best prepared, you must be as
thoroughly familiar with your audience as possible!
The concerns
- What type of theatre environment are
you interviewing for? Professional, Academic, Broadway.....?
- What POSITION are you interviewing
for? The work you select should be geared toward this specific
goal. Unfortunately, some viewers are impressed by further
flexibility in your work, while others become paranoid if they
suspect you are "dabbling" in too many areas. Watch out
for being labeled a "frustrated" anything! Presenting
too many renderings at an interview for a TD post might signal
your audience that you are just "a frustrated designer".
On the other hand, the theatre you interview at might be quite
resource poor and might be genuinely impressed with your multiple
abilities!
- What type of spaces do the people
you are interviewing with operate in? Try to find out in advance
so that you can include work in your portfolio that will
demonstrate to them a facility with the specific styles of design
that will be required of you. If your portfolio, for instance,
only includes work from large proscenium stages, you might not be
seriously considered by folks interviewing for a designer to work
in a small black-box environment!
- What is the Scope of the
organization you are interviewing at? Try to see photos of their
work so that you can tailor your portfolio to the type of work
they might expect from you while striving to demonstrate how you
can improve on the traditions they have already established.
How to tip the odds / researching your
audience!
Use every resource possible to learn
about your potential future home as well as learning about those folks
who may be interviewing you IN ADVANCE of your serious portfolio
presentation. Possible sources of info can include.....
- College Catalogs on the Internet
- TCG Indexes like Theatre
Profiles
- Personal visits
- Checking with folks you know.
- "Networking" as widely as
possible. Use the principles so neatly illuminated in the play Six
Degrees of Separation.
- Newspaper reviews and other
publications
- Programs
- Conventions, Journals, etc.
- Keep notes and files on your
"targets".
- Try to learn about "the
competition".
- Who else was included in the search?
- Try to talk to folks who have
interviewed with the same folks previous to you.
- Try to discover the qualities that
impressed the group in the past.
Since it is usually impossible to do
those things listed above....at the minimum you should be well versed in
the standards of your profession. You should be quite familiar with the
work of recognized leaders in the field, and you should be an active
theatre and museum goer. At the minimum your life and behavior should
demonstrate a long term commitment to the community we call theatre.
Work should be presented in a manner that
takes the viewer's needs into consideration. Slides for instance, can be
difficult for most people to view, especially when time is limited. Easy
access to your work is the rule! Try for a Modular approach to
your portfolio so that large pieces could be left behind while you go
for lunch, for instance. At lunch you might be joined by other
evaluators that have not seen your work. How nice it would be if you had
available a "pocket portfolio" that you could then whip out
impressing everyone!
Go for clarity of intent. Each piece in
your portfolio should be carefully chosen so as to illuminate an aspect
of your work.
Work should be documented so as to
provide the viewer with appropriate context in evaluating your work.
Variety can be important, both in content
as well as in form. You may not have "guessed" fully the needs
of the person who is viewing your work. Different evaluators are
energized by pushing their own unique buttons. Variety in the work you
choose to present will enhance the chances that your work will
"touch" a wider variety of people. Similarly showing work from
a variety of stages in the design process can be quite helpful as well.
Consider including a "case
study" approach, showing a project as it progresses from initial
considerations to final realization. This approach has an added benefit
in its ability to demonstrate your working methods as well as your
analytical approach to your work.
Similarly, try to include examples that
show both the design as well as the realized work in production. Be sure
that the two match, however. If the quality of the final realization
does not match that of the rendering or model, your work may come under
closer scrutiny!
Try to have something you could leave
behind for the folks to remember you by! My last major job came from a
previous interview that did not net a job. An evaluator from the first
job search moved on to another location and remembered my presentation
at is former venue, and so it goes!
Be aware of two factors that will be
important but are also usually mutually exclusive. On the one hand your
portfolio should demonstrate an understanding of the standards that are
commonly applied to work included in portfolios. Still, you need to
demonstrate qualities that make your work unique. To be hired, your work
will need to stand apart from the "masses". Balance between
expressing conformity and the maverick spirit is always a risky, but
necessary need.
When going a long distance to your
presentation, strongly consider separating your portfolio into different
locations. If, for instance, you travel by air, make sure that you keep
a portion of your portfolio with your carry on baggage. Checked bags Do
get lost.........frequently!
Avoid dogma! Your audience might have
very different ideas on theory, politics, methodology, and the like. You
are not here to "preach".
Frequently, especially in academic
situations, your evaluators will be looking for POTENTIAL for further
training. The actual product may be less important than your
organizational skills, work methods, philosophies, personalities, and
understanding of the function of your work within your art. Flexibility
in approach is an added plus in these instances.
FINALLY....
Always be aware of the importance of
thorough, careful, and high quality documentation of your work. Reviews,
testimonials, production photos, programs, etc. should be collected,
prepared, and filed on a continual basis. Theatre is fleeting and must
be documented properly as it
happens!
A Technical Theatre Portfolio
Checklist
Checklist of Quality for your portfolio
- There is a logical order to the work
presented
- All work is presented in a way that
is neat and well crafted
- There is a clear title page
- Your full contact information is
included
- All work is fully labeled and
annotated
- All plates are titled
- Shows and producing
organizations are identified
- Your exact role in the
production is identified
- All lettering is typed or crafted
with care
- There are no spelling or grammatical
mistakes
- You have included a table of
contents
- Photographs when included are of
high quality.
- While it is wonderful to be able to
demonstrate some mastery of computer technology, this must NOT be
at the expense of quality of design work.
Checklist
of Possible Portfolio Items:
General:
- Title Page
- Table of Contents
- Resume
- Letters of Reference
- Statement of Educational and Work
Philosophy
For Scenery:
- Perspective Renderings
- Photos of Models
- Storyboards
- Planning sketches
- Research Materials
- Drafting samples (a complete set of
show drafting would be useful. Reduce to fit into the portfolio).
Consider both hand drafting examples and CAD examples.
- Painters Elevations
- Production Photos
- Photos of work in process
- Statement of Conceptualization (This
should be included with each show example)
- Organizational Materials
For Costumes:
- Swatched Costume Renderings
- Sketches and Studies
- Production Photos
- Photos of work in process
- Research Materials and listings.
- Statement of Conceptualization (for
ea. show)
- Organizational Materials. Lists,
charts, etc.
- Examples of pattern drafting.
- Discussion of process.
For Lighting:
- Storyboards and lighting studies
- Visual Research
- Statement of concept (for each
production example)
- Light Plot - Examples of hand and
CAD work
- Full set of paperwork - All
schedules
- Magic Sheet & Color Key
- Production Photos
For Technical Direction:
- Production Photos and copy of
designer’s sketch or rendering.
- Drafting samples, especially of
working drawings.
- Examples showing challenges and how
you have solved them.
- Examples showing your organizational
skills such as crew schedules, building schedules, etc.
- Budget documentation and reports.
- Other documentation of your work.
Crew Heads and Members:
- Production photos with your
contributions clearly noted.
- Photos showing your projects both
complete and in process.
- Any sketches and drafting to show
the scope of one or more project.
- Examples of research.
- Statement of goals and work
methodology
Stage Management:
- Fully realized prompt script with
introductory commentary of challenges that were met. The prompt
script should neatly include: all blocking, rehearsal reports,
performance reports, contact sheet, rehearsal schedules, policies,
etc.
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