When you attend a production from the prescribed VCE Theatre Studies Playlist, you are analysing how a creative team has interpreted a script — what choices they made, why those choices communicate particular meanings, and how effectively those choices serve the playwright’s intentions.
Understanding interpretation means reading the production as a set of deliberate decisions: nothing you see on stage is accidental. Every choice by every production role is an interpretive act.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Interpretation is not what “just happened” in the production — it is the sum of thousands of specific, deliberate decisions by actors, director, and designers, all working toward a unified (or, sometimes, incoherent) interpretive vision.
The actor interprets the script through:
In your analysis, ask: what interpretation of the character do the actor’s choices communicate? Is this interpretation consistent with the script’s intentions?
The director’s interpretation is expressed through:
Each design area makes interpretive choices:
In your analysis, you should assess:
- Whether the interpretive choices across all roles are coherent — pointing in the same direction
- Whether the interpretation serves the script’s intended meanings or departs from them (and whether that departure is justified)
- Whether the interpretation communicates effectively to the audience
EXAM TIP: Structure your analytical writing around specific, observed examples. “The director’s interpretation of the central power struggle was communicated through consistent use of levels — the antagonist was always positioned at a higher level than the protagonist throughout the first act, reinforcing the structural inequality of the relationship.”
COMMON MISTAKE: Describing the production’s plot rather than analysing its interpretation. “The actor played a character who was angry” is description. “The actor communicated the character’s anger through a low, controlled vocal register and minimal movement, suggesting the anger was suppressed and therefore more dangerous than if it had been expressed overtly” is analysis.
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA assesses your ability to analyse and evaluate the interpretation of a script in performance. Use the language of interpretation deliberately — ask not just what happened but how and why, and evaluate whether the choices were effective.