I was playing Little Red Riding Hood but an evil version. In the original version she is an innocent little girl that gets killed by a wolf on the way to her grandmother's house. I twisted the story by making her on the way to kill her grandmother and if she is successful at that she will want to try to kill the wolf too. Before I started to write the speech, I actually decided to come up with a story line for the characters, what the characters would be like, why little red riding hood would want to kill them and what would happen if she did and if she didn't. After I came up with the story, I decided where I would put the speech in. I put the speech in the middle of the story as if I was on the way to kill grandmother, that way I could talk about and explain my plans and why I was doing the things I wanted to do.
I have learned that to come up a successful story you need to think of a 'background story', like what happened before/after and what could have happened. When you have that and you are writing the actual story, it becomes easy to think of what the character would say, how they would say it and why they do the things they do. By having a 'background story' it also makes it easier to play the character because (like I said) you know exactly why they are doing the things they do.
I think this will help me in the future if I am writing a story or some sort of script. It will also help me when I have to present in front of people. I know that I need to make eye contact with the audience and make sure I speak clearly and loudly.
Thank you for your reflection, Lena. You've included both what you've learned about content and about speaking and presentation skills. Choosing Red Riding Hood was an inspired idea and you certainly planned it out very carefully for optimum success.
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