Category Archives: Conversation

Let’s Talk About… Acting

Let’s Talk About… Acting

Work with a partner or small group and practice your speaking and listening skills by talking about… acting.

New Vocabulary   Mark the stressed vowel sound in each word or phrase:

  1. actor
  2. actress
  3. amateur dramatics
  4. audience
  5. audition
  6. award
  7. drama school
  8. extra
  9. improvisation
  10. leading lady / man
  11. lines
  12. method acting
  13. part
  14. performance
  15. rehearsal
  16. supporting role
  17. typecasting
  18. understudy
  19. unemployment
  20. voiceover

Discussion Questions   Ask and answer them with a partner or small group:

  1. Do you use the gender-specific words ‘actor’ (male) and ‘actress’ (female) to describe people who act, or the word ‘actor’ for everybody? Why? In these questions we use ‘actor’ to mean both actor and actress.
  2. Are you a thespian? Do you act? What about amateur dramatics – creating community theatre in your free time? If not, would you like to? What do you think would be the challenges and rewards?
  3. Who is your favourite actor? Why? What have you seen them in? If you could spend the day with them, what would you do? Why are some actors famous and others never make it big?
  4. Do you know any actors in real life? What kind of people are they? Describe a typical actor’s lifestyle.
  5. Are actors pretentious? What kind of character is required to be a really great actor? Could you do it? What kind of actor would you like to be? Would you prefer to be a leading lady / man, or play a supporting role?
  6. Is the ability to act a useful skill in everyday life? Is acting really just lying? Are you a good liar?
  7. How many different kinds of acting can you think of? What is method acting? Is acting a dangerous job?
  8. How difficult is it to learn lines when preparing for a part? What about if you have a leading role in a Shakespearean tragedy? How do actors learn all those lines? What techniques would you use?
  9. Are you good at improvisation? When in life do we need to be able to improvise?
  10. What are the differences between acting on stage, acting in films, and acting on the radio?
  11. Is unemployment a problem for actors? Why? What kind of jobs do actors do when they are ‘resting’? If the majority of actors don’t become rich and famous, why don’t they just ‘pack it in’ and get a ‘proper job’?
  12. What would it be like to be an understudy – only playing the part if the main actor is unavailable?
  13. What skills do people learn at drama school? Is it easier than other forms of higher education?
  14. How long do actors need to spend in rehearsal for a theatre or film role? What happens during rehearsals?
  15. What is the relationship between the actor onstage and the audience at a theatre? What makes for an effective performance? Is it more rewarding to watch actors at the theatre, at the cinema, or on TV? Why?
  16. Have you ever thought about being an extra in a film or TV production? Why are extras required?
  17. Is typecasting a hazard for certain actors? Why do some actors get typecast?

English Idioms about Acting   Say a new sentence with each idiom:

  1. be a hard act to follow
  2. act your age
  3. an actor’s life for me
  4. be caught in the act
  5. be in the limelight
  6. break a leg!
  7. get your act together
  8. it’s curtains for you
  9. let’s get this show on the road
  10. life is not a rehearsal
  11. live up to the hype
  12. make a song and dance about something
  13. perform a disappearing act
  14. read somebody the riot act
  15. run the show
  16. something is waiting in the wings
  17. the show must go on
  18. upstage somebody

Discussion Situations about Acting   What would you do if…?

  1. You filmed your part as a zany robot for a blockbuster movie. It was great, but you were cut from the final edit.
  2. You are waiting for a car to take you to the Oscars, but it doesn’t show up and you can’t collect your award.
  3. You volunteer to act in an amateur dramatics production, but your fellow actors are really bad.
  4. You desperately want to go to drama school, but you can’t scrape together enough money for the fees.
  5. Your teacher at drama school believes you lack talent.
  6. You are cast in a dog food commercial – playing a poodle.
  7. You have an audition for a pirate film, but you lied on your resume about being able to sword-fight.
  8. You’ve been ‘resting’ for a while, and have no money left.
  9. On the morning of a lucrative voiceover gig, you wake up to find you have laryngitis.
  10. Due to a trilogy of hit movies, you’re typecast as a villain.
  11. The audience thinks your understudy is better than you.
  12. You forget your lines during a big moment on stage.

Talking about Pictures

  1. Describe the pictures below.
  2. Discuss them.
  3. Compare them.
  4. Create a quiz about them using different question types: comprehension, wh-, yes/no, true/false/unknown, etc.
  5. Improvise a dialogue or story.

Picture A:

Let’s Talk About… Acting - Picture A

Let’s Talk About… Acting – Picture A

Picture B:

Let’s Talk About… Acting - Picture B

Let’s Talk About… Acting – Picture B

Answers:

Let’s Talk About… Acting - Answers

Let’s Talk About… Acting – Answers

Note: vowel sounds are indicated with Clear Alphabet. For more about Clear Alphabet, please click here.

 Images: Pexels; Ionas Nicolae and Petra Hegenbart from Pixabay


This material is completely free to use, so please feel free to share it widely!

If you have any feedback about these free resources, we’d love to hear from you! Please leave a comment or review below or on Facebook or Twitter.

Let’s Talk About… Fashion

Let’s Talk About… Fashion

Work with a partner or small group and practice your speaking and listening skills by talking about… fashion.

New Vocabulary   Mark the stressed vowel sound in each word or phrase:

  1. accessories
  2. autumn collection
  3. designer
  4. fashion house
  5. fashion show
  6. fashion victim
  7. fashionable
  8. fashionista
  9. haute couture
  10. influence
  11. look (n.)
  12. outfit
  13. overpriced
  14. racket
  15. runway
  16. shoot
  17. style icon
  18. trend
  19. vacuous
  20. wardrobe

Discussion Questions   Ask and answer them with a partner or small group:

  1. What is fashion? Is fashion generally a good or bad thing? Why? Why do we need it? Did we have fashion in the past? What would the world be like if nobody dressed fashionably?
  2. Do you follow fashion? How? How often do you buy new clothes? How much money do you spend on clothes, shoes, and accessories in a normal month? Where do you like to buy clothes?
  3. Do people think you are fashionable, or do they call the fashion police when you walk into the room? Do you consider yourself… a) a trendsetter, b) a fashionista, c) a style icon, d) a fashion victim? Why? / Why not? What kind of fashion do you dislike? Are women more interested in fashion than men? Why?
  4. What was the last trendy outfit you bought? How much did it cost? Why did you buy it?
  5. How do you find out about the latest trends? Do you read magazines about clothes or take advice from vloggers on YouTube channels? Have you ever been to a fashion show? Describe it. How did you feel?
  6. Who are the most fashionable people… a) that you know, b) in your country, c) in the world, d) in history? Which nation is the most fashionable / unfashionable? Why?
  7. Have you ever considered working in fashion? What jobs are there? Which would you like to do? Why?
  8. Are people who follow fashion vacuous? What’s wrong with wearing the same trousers for twenty years?
  9. Is it important to you to always have the right look? Do you like to be in fashion or make your own style? Would you like to be a model, marching down the runway? What do you think they do in a typical day?
  10. Who is your favourite designer? Why? Have you got any / many of their designs? Compare two or more of your favourite designers. Why is haute couture [high fashion] so expensive? Is it value for money?
  11. Have you ever designed / made your own clothing? If no, would you like to? If you could create and sell your own design to a major fashion house for their spring or autumn collection, what would it look like?
  12. Have you ever travelled to the four fashion capitals – New York, London, Paris, or Milan – to buy clothes?
  13. Is the fashion business a racket used to sell overpriced rubbish to gullible people? Why? / Why not?
  14. Is the fashion industry a good influence on girls? Why? Why not? What do fashion shows and photo shoots teach us about our bodies? Should fashion be banned? Do models represent real women? If no, why not?
  15. Parents – do you make sure that your children are fashionably-dressed at all times? Why? / Why not?

English Idioms about Fashion   Say a new sentence with each idiom:

  1. a must-have item
  2. I wouldn’t be seen / caught dead in that!
  3. retail therapy
  4. the emperor’s new clothes
  5. to be dressed to kill / dressed to the nines
  6. to be in vogue
  7. to come (back) into / go out of fashion
  8. to dress for the occasion
  9. to fit like a glove
  10. to rip somebody off / to get ripped off / a rip-off
  11. to have an eye for fashion
  12. to have money to burn
  13. to have more money than sense
  14. to keep up with the latest trends
  15. to make a fashion statement
  16. to pay just for the name
  17. to spend a fortune
  18. to strike a pose

Discussion Situations about Fashion   What would you do if…?

  1. You find out that your partner spent £1,000 on a jacket.
  2. You fall asleep during a fashion show – just when the most celebrated designer is getting a standing ovation.
  3. You can’t decide how many more handbags to buy.
  4. You want to become a model, but your parents tell you to concentrate on your schoolwork instead.
  5. Your friends inform you that you are definitely not on trend, but you are generally happy with how you look.
  6. You hear your favourite designer is a hateful misogynist.
  7. A famous fashion brand steals your hat design.
  8. You turn up for a modelling assignment to be told you’re too fat: “Go home and lose weight!”
  9. Your parents refuse / refused to buy you the latest trendy clothes, instead buying clothes at the market / charity shop.
  10. You disapprove of your partner’s clothes, but they refuse to modernise their wardrobe because they hate shopping.
  11. Your purchases don’t fit, but the shop refuses a refund.
  12. You go overdrawn due to your excessive purchases.

Talking about Pictures

  1. Describe the pictures below.
  2. Discuss them.
  3. Compare them.
  4. Create a quiz about them using different question types: comprehension, wh-, yes/no, true/false/unknown, etc.
  5. Improvise a dialogue or story.

Picture A:

Let’s Talk About… Fashion - Picture A

Let’s Talk About… Fashion – Picture A

Picture B:

Let’s Talk About… Fashion - Picture B

Let’s Talk About… Fashion – Picture B

Answers:

Let’s Talk About… Fashion - Answers

Let’s Talk About… Fashion – Answers

Note: vowel sounds are indicated with Clear Alphabet. For more about Clear Alphabet, please click here.

 Images by: pandreykulikov and Pexels from Pixabay


This material is completely free to use, so please feel free to share it widely!

If you have any feedback about these free resources, we’d love to hear from you! Please leave a comment or review below or on Facebook or Twitter.