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Faith Smith
Creative Project – Theatre Appreciation
Image Rationale
1.
Jon Hamm’s dark,
scruffy, yet handsome
appearance matches
‘Peck’s’ war-torn
romantic spirit. Hamm’s
mix of ease and
aggression would suit the
scene between ‘Peck’ and
‘Li’l Bit’ when he teaches
her how to “drive like a
man.” The sort of man
who would plead for the
attention of his hesitant
romantic interest,
Hamm’s style and body
language read as entirely
able to play lovestruck
and encouraging. With a
smirk and dark charm,
Hamm embodies ‘Peck’s’
tendency toward
perverted romance and
ability to coerce an
impressionable girl with
his attractive
handsomeness.
2.
Rachel Bilson’s face
permits her to play both
the young and old
versions of ‘Li’l Bit.’ Her
darkness (hair and eyes)
matches that of Hamm
and would make for a
stunning stage pair that
differ greatly from the
lighter toned cast
majority; I intend for their
connection to be visually
obvious through color.
Bilson’s petite frame,
Student Name
large eyes, and thick licks
recall a sense of
immaturity and naivety
that would represent her
view of ‘Peck’ as a leader
figure during the
photography scene. The
roundness and softness of
her features would ideally
be attractive to the older,
more square ‘Peck.’ I also
feel that Bilson would be
able to express the
appropriate sort of anger
required during the dinner
scene in which she
berates her grandfather.
3.
Tyne Daly’s hearty,
south-raised appearance
would suit the
grandmother’s hesitance
to discuss sex with her
granddaughter. Daly
exudes a fear for the
repercussions of
controversial behavior
that would read well as a
contrast to Gwyneth
Paltrow’s openness.
4.
I genuinely enjoy the
contrast between the
blonde mother and
grandmother and the
brunette daughter.
Something about the
daughter’s darkness
speaks to secret keeping
and perversion. Gwenyth
Paltrow appears to be
sexually confident and
open and perfectly
represents the mother
figure that would joyfully
discuss sex with her
daughter. Her openness
would also be a
believable attribute to her
absence from the majority
of ‘Li’l Bit’s’ narrative.
5.
Jessica Chastain’s
‘redness’ expresses ‘Aunt
Mary’s’ anger at her
husband and her niece’s
affair. A somber sadness
fits well on her
traditionally beautiful
face. With the appearance
of a serious woman,
Chastain’s presence
would further illuminate
the Bilson’s youthfulness
and Hamm’s misfired
lust.
6.
Stan Lee appears to be a
crotchety senile man and
would splendidly recite
the grandfather’s crueltist
line: “How is
Shakespeare going to help
her lie on her back in the
dark?” His white hair
matches that of his ‘wife’
and the bald spot atop his
head signifies that
‘something’ is mentally
missing. I also feel that
Stan Lee has a Hugh
Hefner-vibe that would
satisfy the grandfather
role’s sexual
perverseness.
7.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s
non-descript, rat-like
appearance suits the
waiter role. His face and
eyes read as “money
hungry” and “compliant”,
two feature that are
especially necessary to
his enabling an under-
aged girl to get drunk for
her uncle’s pleasure in
exchange for a hefty tip.
8.
Anna Camp’s
nondescript, high school
mean-girl appearance
suits the play’s necessity
for a throwaway high
school girl to make ‘Li’l
Bit’ feel inferior about
her breasts during the
shower scene.
9.
This image represents the
vulnerability that should
be present during the
opening scene between
Hamm and Bilson in the
parked car. The spotlight
represents the pressure on
Bilson to please a
watchful Hamm. The
character’s curled
position represents the
sense of hesitance and
fear that should be
present in regard to the
female character during
this scene.
10.
The too-vivid colors and
pictorial offness of this
dinner scene capture the
insanity of the dinner
scene within the play. The
disbelieving expression
on the man in brown’s
face should be palpable in
Bilson’s character during
the staging of this scene.
The goal is to match the
sinisterness of this photo.
11.
A strong pedophilic sense
of control over ‘Li’l Bit’
should be present in the
photography scene. The
wrongness of the man’s
hand touching the child’s
thigh captures the
disturbingly sexual,
violatory nature of
‘Peck’s’ photoshoot.
12.
The restaurant scene
between Bilson and
Hamm should carry the
same sense of laughter
and lightness as this
photo. Bilson should
reach a state of absolute
comfort and bliss as the
alcohol loosens and
lessens her nerves.
13.
The mixed sense of
darkness and light/
negative and positive/
gratefulness and sadness
within this photo belongs
in the scene of ‘Li’l Bit’s’
recollection of ‘Peck’
after his death. While she
is grateful to have learned
from his example, she is
relieved to be free of his
pedophilic control over
her. In the same way that
this photo is neither
bright, nor dark, ‘Li’l Bit’
should feel neither fully
happy, nor fully sad to be
without ‘Peck.’
14.
The calm gold of this
photo and the bounty of
nature depict the freedom
and pleasure ‘Li’l Bit’
experiences during the
final moment of the play
when she describes her
driving procedurs and,
then, “floor[s] it.”
15.
The implication of carnal
knowledge in this
collection of apples
represents ‘Li’l Bit’s’
acquisition of carnal
knowledge from ‘Peck.’
Sliced open to expose its
secret contents, the
sensation of the apple
(and its implications)
should be detectable in
the private scenes
between Bilson and
Hamm. The apple is
symbolic for their
“student”-“teacher”
physical relationship.
This imagery is especially
useful in the construction
of the how to “drive like a
man” sequence.