Dramatic Interpretation

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Dramatic Interpretation (often shortened to "Dramatic Interp," "Drama" or just "DI") is an event in National Speech and Debate Association (and NSDA-related) high school forensics competitions. In the National Christian Forensics and Communications Association and the National Catholic Forensic League, the event is combined with Humorous Interpretation to create the Dramatic Performance event. It consists of a piece from any published work, edited to fit within a 10-minute span with a 30-second grace period (it does not have a minimum and cannot be above 10:30).[1]

In a typical round of DI, five to seven performers will each perform a "cutting" (excerpt) from a readily available, published (copyrighted or non-copyrighted) play, novel, or short story. As the name suggests, the cuttings are invariably from non-comedic (e.g., dramatic) works. Some performers select monologues, others may adopt the roles of many different characters, changing their tone, manner, and the position of their body to indicate a change in character.

After all of the competitors have performed, the judge (or judges) in the round will rank them from best to worst, and assign each of them a score. Contestants who score well will "break" out of preliminary rounds and continue to advance through octo/quarter/semi/final rounds if they continue to score well.

NSDA Nationals

Salt Lake City, Utah in 2016. National Champions are awarded a scholarship of US$1,000.[2] To receive the title a competitor must have the lowest cumulative score throughout the duration of the tournament. The Dramatic Interpretation competitor to receive the lowest cumulative score in the final round is awarded the BAMA Bowl and a US$500 scholarship.[3] The National Speech and Debate Association (NSDA) National Tournament is the largest academic competition in the world.[4][5][6]

Recent National Champions

Year Competitor Academic Institution
2021 Giana Martinez L C Anderson HS, Texas
2020 Semaj Lee Apple Valley HS, Minnesota
2019 Jacob Foster Comeaux HS, Louisiana
2018 Kimberly Lee Summit HS, New Jersey
2017 Chase Garrett Southside HS, South Carolina
2016 Izabella Czejdo McDowell HS, Pennsylvania
2015 Daniel Williams Holy Cross School, Louisiana
2014 Abigail Onwunali Hastings HS, Texas
2013 Anthony Nadeau Royal Palm Beach HS, Florida
2012 Deshawn Weston Grand Prairie HS, Texas
2011 Jamaque Newberry Nova HS, Florida
2010 Michael Carone Monsignor Farrell HS, New York

Rules

Dramatic Interpretation falls under the jurisdiction of events under the category defined as “Interpretation” by the National Speech and Debate Association (NSDA). These events are Humorous Interpretation, Duo Interpretation, and Program Oral Interpretation. Events that do not fall under the jurisdiction of the following rules include, but are not limited to Poetry, Prose, and Storytelling. The National Speech and Debate Associations rules are organized into categories of length, material, material availability, performance, re-use, and website approval submission process.[7]

Length

The set time limit is ten minutes with a thirty-second period in which a student may go overtime with no penalty, colloquially referred to as a 'grace period.'According to National Speech and Debate Association rules, a student who exceeds the ten minute and thirty-second time limit cannot be awarded the rank of 1st in the round. There is no minimum time limit.[8]

Material and material availability

A student may choose from a single work of literature to perform. Acceptable forms of literature include:[9]

  • Novels
  • Plays
  • Anthologies
    where only one piece of literature is performed
  • Poetry
  • Song lyrics

Performance

In Dramatic Interpretation, Duo Interpretation, and Humorous Interpretation performers are not permitted to use any type of "physical objects or costuming."[10] In addition, students may not:

Re-use

Students may not perform the same work of literature at any National Speech and Debate Association tournament if they have already done so in a separate contestant year.

Website approval submission process

All piece selection is subject to online year-round review.

College Dramatic Interpretation

In college, DI cuttings must be from a play. Novels and short stories are used in prose.[11] College competitors in the event are discouraged from singing and are allowed to select exclusively from published plays. Creating a Dramatic Interpretation from multiple plays is allowed if the aggregate product is of one cohesive theme.[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ High School Unified Manual: Chapter, Rules, and Tournament Operations. 2017 ed. Vol. 1.0. National Speech and Debate Association, 2017. PDF. Updated February 2017
  2. ^ "Nationals History".
  3. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-03-12. Retrieved 2017-03-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ "Blue Valley West hosts world's largest academic competition". 17 June 2014.
  5. ^ "National Speech & Debate Association's National Championships (Largest academic competition in the world)". Archived from the original on 2017-03-12. Retrieved 2017-03-10.
  6. ^ "Kansas City hosts largest academic competition in the world - Story". Archived from the original on 2017-03-12. Retrieved 2017-03-10.
  7. ^ High School Unified Manual: Chapter, Rules, and Tournament Operations. 2017 ed. Vol. 1.0. National Speech and Debate Association, 2017. PDF. Updated February 2017
  8. ^ High School Unified Manual: Chapter, Rules, and Tournament Operations. 2017 ed. Vol. 1.0. National Speech and Debate Association, 2017. PDF. Updated February 2017 pg 43-44.
  9. ^ High School Unified Manual: Chapter, Rules, and Tournament Operations. 2017 ed. Vol. 1.0. National Speech and Debate Association, 2017. PDF. Updated February 2017 pg 43-44.
  10. ^ High School Unified Manual: Chapter, Rules, and Tournament Operations. 2017 ed. Vol. 1.0. National Speech and Debate Association, 2017. PDF. Updated February 2017 pg 45.
  11. ^ "Drama Interpretation" (PDF). Blinn Colledge-Bryan writing center. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
  12. ^ https://gustavus.edu/forensics/events/di.php[dead link]

External links