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Test your basic knowledge |
Theatre Appreciation 2
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
performing-arts
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. A flexible performance space (usually small) in which the actor/audience configuration can be easily changed for each production
Antiquarianism
Hypokrites
Black box
Scenic Designer
2. Designs costumes for the show
Costume Designer
Aristotle
Rendering
Stage manager
3. Commercial (meant to make profit). Non-profit (profits go to production of future plays. May be professional or amateur.)
Verisimilitude
Cycles
Types of professional theater
Director
4. Seats less than 100; amateur.
Off-off-Broadway
Aristotle
University Wits
Blocking
5. Greatest dramatist of all time
Conflict
Types of professional theater
William Shakespeare
Callbacks
6. The actors recall of sights - sounds - touch - and smell from specific past events.
Aesthetic Distance
Avant-Garde
Director
Sense memory
7. Attributed to writing over 700 plays
Bertolt Brecht
Eugene Scribe
Designer
Protagonist
8. A chart that records items of clothing worn by each actor in each scene of the play
Costume plot
Liturgical Drama
Director
Chorus
9. Historical accuracy
Bertolt Brecht
Antiquarianism
Slapstick
Concept
10. Action - place - time
Pageants
Stage Manager
collaborator
Neoclassic unities
11. Creates a visual home for the play
Pageants
Scenic Designer
Stage Manager
Skene
12. A drafting of the plan of the set as seen from overhead. A ground plan shows where any scenic pieces or set props (such as furniture) are to be placed
Thespis
Ground plan
Morality Plays
Aristotle's Six Elements of a Play
13. Designs costumes for the show
Actor's tools
Royalty
Mystery Plays
Costume Designer
14. 'old comedy'. Lewd humor - attacks on government
Aristophanes
Empathy
Eugene Scribe
Director
15. A group of performers working together vocally and physically. A chorus of approximately 12-15 singer-dancers who interacted with and responded to the actors was an important element of ancient Greek theatre.
Arena
Romantic Theory
Chorus
The Orestia
16. When line of action suddenly switches
Neoclassic unities
University Wits
Chorus
Reversal
17. Causal play structure. A ? B ? C
Broadway
Liturgical Drama
Catharsis
Linear Plot
18. Passageways located underneath the seating that generally give access to the stage. (there are some in Maybee theatre
Avant-Garde
Duke of Saxe Meiningen
Vomitories
Blocking
19. Wrote the Orestia which is the only surviving trilogy
Dionysus
Designer's job
Aeschylus
Linear Plot
20. When line of action suddenly switches
Wings
Reversal
Playwright
Raked Stage
21. Plot - character - thought - language - music - spectacle
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22. 'dancing space'
Romanticism
Orchestra
Representational
Dramaturg
23. Grecian attributed to writing the first tragedies then acting in them.
Thespis
Arena
Proscenium
Verse
24. Humanity's struggle with good and evil
Arena
Musical Theatre
Morality Plays
Upstage
25. Work developed actors in realism and naturalism
Protagonist
Callbacks
Casting Director
Constantin Stanislavski
26. An actor/ audience configuration in which the audience is on only one side of the performance area; all audience members face the same direction.
Morality Plays
Chorus
Proscenium
Royalty
27. An actor/audience configuration in which the audience is on 3 sides of the performance area. (maybe theatre)
Subtext
Representational
Theatron
Thrust
28. Movement based on study of ancient Greek and Roman culture
Neoclassicism
Cycles
Melodrama
Ground plan
29. Father of Epic theater - wanted people to think about what they were seeing - alienation effect.
Types of professional theater
Cycles
Bertolt Brecht
Romanticism
30. A movement that rejected nearly every aspect of neoclassicism - celebrated the natural world - and valued intense emotion and individuality.
Copyright
Book musical
Slapstick
Romanticism
31. Group of influential - educated Renaissance playwrights
Royalty
University Wits
Rendering
Neoclassic goals defining verisimilitude
32. In charge of communication and call cues. 'Busiest person in theater.'
Designer's job
Stage manager
Thespis
Book musical
33. The central element of causal plot; two forces working against each other
Protagonist
Reversal
Conflict
Romanticism
34. Written by Aeschylus. Only surviving trilogy
Neoclassic goals defining verisimilitude
The Orestia
Playwright
Antagonist
35. A group of performers working together vocally and physically. A chorus of approximately 12-15 singer-dancers who interacted with and responded to the actors was an important element of ancient Greek theatre.
Constantin Stanislavski
Chorus
Designer
Types of professional theater
36. Attempts to represent reality on stage
Stage Manager
Prose
Thrust
Representational
37. Planned actor movement
Blocking
The Orestia
Theatron
Neoclassicism
38. Helps establish mood - place - & intensity with the use of light
Neoclassic unities
University Wits
lighting designer
Dramaturg
39. Directors who operate with total control
Melodrama
Dialogue
Auteur
Director
40. Generally rhyming
Components of Production
Auteur
Verse
Hypokrites
41. In a proscenium theatre - spaces offstage left and right for actors - crew - and scenery not yet in the visible performance space
Wings
Designer
Empathy
Raked Stage
42. Spoken words
Slapstick
Dialogue
sound designer
Chorus
43. Causal play structure. A ? B ? C
Proscenium
Blocking
Producer
Linear Plot
44. Scenery
Dramaturg
Types of professional theater
Skene
lighting designer
45. Plays written before 1923 are no longer protected
Thrust
Vomitories
Henrik Ibsen
Public Domain
46. Theatre where Shakespeare's company of actors worked primarily
Linear Plot
The Globe
Liturgical Drama
Actor's tools
47. A drafting of the plan of the set as seen from overhead. A ground plan shows where any scenic pieces or set props (such as furniture) are to be placed
Presentational
Components of Production
Director
Ground plan
48. An actor/audience configuration in which the audience is on 3 sides of the performance area. (maybe theatre)
Romanticism
Neoclassic unities
Thrust
Auditions
49. Oversees artistic aspects of show
Director
Melodrama
Proscenium
Perspective Scenery
50. Invented by the Italians - a large open arch that marks the primary division between audience and performance space in a proscenium space. The proscenium arch frames the action of the play for the audience and limits the view of backstage areas
Orchestra
Proscenium
Wings
Designer's job