Applying Conventions of Theatre Styles and Theatre Technologies
Theatre Style as a System of Conventions
A theatre style is a coherent system of conventions governing how a production creates meaning. Choosing a style commits you to a set of conventions about representation, character, audience positioning, and meaning construction.
Key Theatre Styles and Their Conventions
Naturalism
- Conventions: fourth wall, detailed realistic set, psychologically motivated characters, lifelike dialogue
- Effect: audience as invisible observer; emotional identification with characters
- Key practitioners: Stanislavski, Chekhov
Expressionism
- Conventions: distorted set and lighting, exaggerated movement and voice, externalisation of inner psychology
- Effect: audience enters the subjective world of the character
Epic Theatre (Brecht)
- Conventions: alienation/distancing effect, direct address, episodic structure, placards and projections, gestus
- Effect: audience maintains critical distance; theatre as argument
Absurdism
- Conventions: repetitive or circular structure, non-sequitur dialogue, existential inaction
- Effect: audience confronts meaninglessness; discomfort and dark humour coexist
- Key practitioners: Beckett, Ionesco
KEY TAKEAWAY: Many productions hybridise styles. What matters is that stylistic choices are coherent, justified, and consistently applied across all production roles.
Aligning Style Across Production Roles
| Style |
Acting |
Direction |
Design |
| Naturalism |
Internal, psychologically motivated |
Organic movement, spatial realism |
Detailed, period-accurate |
| Expressionism |
Heightened, externalised emotion |
Extreme physical states, distorted space |
Exaggerated shapes, stark lighting |
| Epic Theatre |
Showing the character, not becoming them |
Episodic rhythm, direct address |
Functional, unillusionistic; projections |
| Absurdism |
Deadpan, repetitive, trapped |
Circular or static staging |
Sparse, surreal, uncanny |
EXAM TIP: Name the specific style convention you are applying and explain why it serves the script’s intended meaning: “I chose the Brechtian convention of direct address to position the audience as conscious witnesses to the character’s injustice.”
Theatre Technologies
Lighting Technology
- Function: Focus attention, establish time/place, create atmosphere, signal psychological states
- Applications: A narrow spotlight in a monologue suggests vulnerability; cool blue wash communicates emotional distance
Sound Technology
- Function: Create environment, reinforce emotional register, signal time shifts
- Applications: Discordant underscoring creates unease; silence after a speech allows meaning to land
Projection/Video
- Function: Establish context, create visual metaphor, extend space
- Applications: Projecting archival images during a memory monologue connects personal and historical
COMMON MISTAKE: Treating technology as decorative rather than communicative. Every technology choice must be justified: “I use [technology] because it creates [effect] that communicates [meaning] to the audience.”