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POST-SHOW ACTIVITIES


HOW DO ACTORS USE IMPROVISATION TO PROCESS DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES ON THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION?


(Common Core Code: CCLS SL11-12.1b) DISCUSS


PREPARE


Reflect on how the 2000 presidential election provides a background for If I Forget and how the action occurs both before and after the election. Next, lead students through this improvisation process in order to explore different perspectives of the 2016 election.


Brainstorm the major personalities and issues of the 2016 presidential election. Then, divide students into groups of 3 or 4. Assign them in-role as family members that represent 3 generations (grandparent, parent(s), teen child). Each family member should have a different position on the election: who they are supporting and one issue they care about. (You may want to assign these positions.)


IMPROVISE


Have all groups improvise 2 scenes, simultaneously, in different areas of the room. (They can be sitting in groups around desks). BEFORE: July 2016 at a July fourth picnic. What does each character want? Who are they supporting and why? (Allow 3-5 minutes for this, then call time before moving to #2.) AFTER: December 2016 at a holiday dinner. How do these same characters feel about the results of the election? Who is getting what they want, and who is not? How does this impact their dinner?


SHARE REFLECT


Allow one or two groups to re-improvise their BEFORE and AFTER scenes for the class.


What are some different perspectives they discussed today? What is interesting about seeing scenes of a family, both before and after an election? Why do they think Steven Levenson set his play during a past election (2000)?


HOW DO PLAYWRIGHTS WRITE DIALOGUE FOR CHARACTERS WHO ARE IMPACTED BY SOCIETAL ISSUES AND HISTORICAL EVENTS?


(Common Core Code: CCLS W11-12.3b) REFLECT


Reflect on the historical events that are discussed in the background of the family drama in If I Forget. (The 2000 election, Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the Holocaust, the post-MLK assassination riots). How do these events provide background for the family conflicts? How is information revealed through dialogue? You may use the PDF HERE as an example of dialogue in the play.


PREPARE


Have students brainstorm a list of contemporary issues that they care about. (Examples: race issues, LGBTQ rights, college expense, prejudice against Muslims in U.S., guns, etc.) Assign groups into pairs and have them select an issue and identify a specific current event it relates to. (Or choose an issue/ event for the class and provide an overview on the topic.) Ask them to create two characters who are family members with different perspectives on the same issue.


WRITE


Lead students through a silent dialogue writing exercise. • One student writes a statement for one of the characters. S/he passes the paper to the other student, who reads this statement.


• Then on the same page, s/he writes a response to this statement from the other character, then passes it back.


• The dialogue is written through this silent passing back-and-forth, allowing each character to have at least 5 passes. (Ten lines)


SHARE REFLECT


Invite a few teams to read their dialogue aloud for the class. Why do you think many great plays look at larger social issues through the perspective of families? IF I FORGET UPSTAGE GUIDE 21


FOR EDUCATORS


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