Every production of a script makes choices about theatre style — the aesthetic language and set of conventions through which the story is told. Analysing theatre style means being able to:
- Identify the stylistic conventions embedded in the written script
- Identify the stylistic approach taken in the production you attended
- Evaluate how successfully the production’s style served the script’s intended meaning
KEY TAKEAWAY: Style in the written script reflects the playwright’s theatrical context and intentions. Style in the production reflects the director and creative team’s interpretive choices. These may align closely or diverge significantly — and both outcomes can be effective.
When analysing the style used in the production you attended:
Look for evidence of style in:
- Design choices — realistic vs. abstract set; period vs. contemporary costume
- Acting approach — psychologically realistic vs. heightened or stylised
- Staging conventions — fourth wall integrity vs. direct address; linear vs. episodic
- Use of technology — naturalistic vs. symbolic; integrated vs. visible
Consider:
- Is the style consistent across all production elements, or does it vary?
- Does the chosen style serve the script’s intended meaning?
- Has the production applied the style’s conventions fully, partially, or selectively?
- Has it combined multiple styles? Is this combination purposeful?
A particularly rich analytical opportunity arises when the production’s style diverges from that implied by the written script:
| Relationship | Description | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Faithful | Production honours the script’s stylistic conventions | Clarity; serves playwright’s intent |
| Amplified | Production intensifies the script’s stylistic tendencies | Heightened impact; clarified intent |
| Subverted | Production applies a contrasting style | Creates irony; re-examines meaning |
| Hybrid | Production blends multiple styles | Complexity; potentially alienating or enriching |
EXAM TIP: When writing about style in the production, name the style, provide evidence of its application in specific production choices, and evaluate its effectiveness: “The production applied Epic Theatre conventions through the use of projected scene titles and actors stepping out of scenes to address the audience directly. These techniques were effective in creating the critical distance appropriate to the script’s satirical intent.”
REMEMBER: Style is not decoration — it is the fundamental language a production speaks. Understanding style is understanding how a production tells its story.