Léa has been doing drama for a few years and it has become one of her highlights in the week. Last month it was her birthday, and going from a superhero party (don’t ask me where it came from) to a hamper party (which excited her – and me – as much as going to the dentist) to no party at all, I finally had a lightbulb moment and thought of a drama party! It turned out to be the easiest party to organise and probably the one that she enjoyed the most.
The idea with our drama party was to put into practice everybody’s acting skills. Most children are drama queens anyway, so it was a matter of putting structure around these theatrical little people.
We started with a few rounds of charade to get warmed up.
Stella acting ‘going to bed’,
Léa acting ‘catching a big fish’,
Rachel acting ‘a hook’,
and Kiera wondering how to act something that seemed to scare her 🙂
Our second short game challenged them to line up first according to height, then in alphabetical order of their first name. All that without being allowed to speak! They struggled a bit with all the ‘Ks’: Killian, Kaira, Kiera, Katie!!
They clearly needed some fresh air by then. We went outside where they had to act according to how they feel about words I told them.
Here they are expressing their feelings about ‘bananas’: one happy chap, others…not so much,
their feelings about monsters (not sure about Léa here),
and their feelings about birthdays.
We then moved on to acting different emotions. Rachel and Kaira being sad,
Kiera, Dayna and Léa being tired,
Killian and Matt being angry (my boys are familiar with this feeling as you can see by their great acting face),
Cass and Kaira being bored (to death for Kaira it seems),
and Katie showing surprise.
After some well-deserved refreshments, the part that Léa had been looking forward to for weeks and weeks was a showcase of a short scene. She wrote a script of an argument scene between four people (a convenient writing assignment for school taken care of). The kids were then split into 2 teams and each team had to prepare and perform their scene in a different style.
Here they are preparing their lines (so professional).
Team 1 was given the style Downton Abbey – british and aristocratic (Yes, Léa might have watched an episode or two…).
Team 2 was given hip-hop style – the yoyo-dude and what’s up-sister style. They definitely looked the part!
They really had a lot of fun all together, a real creative and teamwork outlet for a 10 year-old birthday party.
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