SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
Theatre Basics
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. Nigerian playwright that was executed for trying to protect the Ogoni people against encroachments of Shell oil company
Showstopper
Ken Saro-Wiwa
The Black Crook
Off Broadway
2. Writes the book
Aphra Behn
Theatre of Cruelty
Shimpa
Librettist
3. Brought Western-style theatre to Africa to dramatize Bible stories in order to win converts
Chinese Theatre
Six Characters in Search of an Author (1922(
Catholic and Protestant Missionaries
Jo - Ha - and Kyu
4. A blend of melody and drama and refers to the background music often played during these performances
Melodrama
The Interpretation of Dreams
Composer
Minstrel Show Structure
5. Elaborate geometrical designs were used for these roles which included supernatural beings - warriors - and bandits; the color of the make-up indicated the character's personality
Lyricist
Western Drama
Western Drama
Painted-face roles
6. Grew up in poverty and put himself through medical school and set up free clinics in Russia to help the poor; The Seagull (1896) - Uncle Vanya (1899) Three Sisters (1901) & The Cherry Orchard (1904); placed on stage the lazy chaos of lives crushed by
Lucy Elizabeth Bartolozzi Vestris
Hilarious Absurdism
Anton Chekhov
Maxim Gorky
7. More serious plot and theme; West Side Story (1957)
philosophy - astronomy - science - and religion
musical
Naturalism
Noh drama and Kabuki
8. French philosopher often called the Father of the Romantic movement; argued that people could find happiness in a 'state of nature' and that they should learn from nature rather than the artificial and corrupted teachings of society
Aphra Behn
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Comic opera
Music
9. Most popular type of theatre during the Restoration; often featured great wit and wordplay and told stories about sexual gratification - bedroom escapades - and humankind's unrefined nature when it comes to sex
The Enlightenment
Hilarious Absurdism
The Jazz Singer
Comedy of Manners
10. Smaller - less expensive alternative experimental theatres; flourished in lofts - basements - coffeehouses and any found space usable
Off-Off-Broadway
Ballad Operas
Off Broadway
Kathakali
11. Bandits discuss rival systems of goverment while waiting for an attack
Eugene O'Neill
Burlesque
Burlesque
Man and Superman (1903)
12. Grew up in poverty and put himself through medical school and set up free clinics in Russia to help the poor; The Seagull (1896) - Uncle Vanya (1899) Three Sisters (1901) & The Cherry Orchard (1904); placed on stage the lazy chaos of lives crushed by
Existentialism
John Millington Synge
Operetta
Anton Chekhov
13. Islam's holy book - contains a warning about 'graven images' similar to the one in the Bible - prohibition applies to dolls - statues - portraits - and people playing a character
Chinese Theatre
The Koran
Shadow Theatre
Henrik Ibsen
14. Attacked the evils and restrictions of society; tried to reveal the higher reality of the unconscious mind with fantastic imagery and contradictory images; performances were often violent and cruel as they tried to shock the audience into the realiza
Blaise Pascal
Six Characters in Search of an Author (1922(
Catholic and Protestant Missionaries
Surrealism
15. Proclaimed 'God is dead...and we have killed him.'; felt taht absence of God was a tragedy - but believed human beings needed to accept the tragedy and move forward in a world that was unjust and meaningless
Nickelodeons
Friedrich Nietzsche
Emile Zola
Expressionism
16. Set out to break all the neoclassical rules - attacked the three unities
Romantic Playwrights
George Bernard Shaw
Vaudeville
Little Theatre Movement
17. A synthesis of music - dance - acting - and acrobatics; it was first performed by strolling players in markets - temples - courtyards - and the streets
Avant-Garde
Peking Opera
Romantics
Off Broadway
18. A blend of melody and drama and refers to the background music often played during these performances
Little Theatre Movement
Showstopper
Sean O'Casey
Melodrama
19. The time period that glorified humans' power to reason and analyze - a period of great philosophical - scientific - technological - political - and religious revolutions
Realism
Absurdism
Shimpa
The Enlightenment
20. Spoken lines of dialogue as well as the plot
overture
Ballad Operas
Book
Romantic Playwrights
21. Writes the lyrics
Lyricist
Catholic and Protestant Missionaries
Alienation Effect
Total Theatre
22. A program of sketches - singing - dancing and songs pulled from previous sources
Noh actors' stylized performance techniques
Librettist
Revue (Musical Review)
book musicals
23. Improved the daguerreotype and created modern photography; was also an English physicist
William Fox Talbot
Chinese Theatre
Early European travelers and missionaries
A Trip to Coontown
24. Most famous of the absurdist playwrights; best considered a fatalist - although work is sometimes hilarious and can ask existential questions; Endgame (1957) Krapp's Last Tape (1958) and Happy Days (1961); Waiting for Godot (1953)
Lyricist
First Public Opera House
Samuel Beckett
Dance of the Forest
25. The men who play female roles are called:
Louis Daguerre
onnagata
The Jazz Singer
Fatalist Absurdism
26. A sudden - striking pose (often with their eyes crossed - chin sharply turned - and big toe pointed towards the sky) in Kabuki accompanied by several powerful beats of wooden clappers
musical
Mie pose
non-Western Theatre
Voltaire
27. The German equivalent to Diderot; was a playwright - critic - and Enlightenment philosopher Who wrote tragedies and comedies about the middle-class; his greatest play was Nathan the Wise
Henrik Ibsen
Gotthold Lessing
The Cherry Orchard (1904)
Aristotelian
28. Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature (2005); The Dumb Waiter (1957)
Daguerreotype
Kathakali
Ballad Operas
Harold Pinter
29. Used giant puppets and actors to enact parables denouncing the Vietnam War and materialism
Intermezzi
book musicals
Nickelodeons
Bread and Puppet Theatre
30. A popular form of stage entertainment from the 1880s to the 1940s; included a dozen or so slapstick comedy routines - song-and-dance numbers - magic acts and juggling or acrobatic performances
well-made plays
Vaudeville
Performance Art
Samuel Beckett
31. Recorded conversations of slum dwellers in Dublin and used their words verbatim in his plays
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
32. History plays about major political events of the past - domestic plays about the loves and lives of merchants and townspeople - and dance-dramas about the world of spirits and animals
Characters in the Peking Opera
Happenings
Ha
Three kinds of Kabuki plays
33. One of the most important French philosophers of the Age of Reason - wrote and edited the first encyclopedia; was also a dramatist who penned books on the techniques of acting; authored The Paradox of Acting - a book that attached the pompous declama
Goethe
Kathakali
The Communist Manifesto
Denis Diderot
34. No protagonist; deals with a family of characters who tell many stories at once; the fact that characters on stage take no action may inspire audience members to be motivated for the opposite in real life
George Bernard Shaw
The Cherry Orchard (1904)
The Koran
Aphra Behn
35. Sigmund Freud's book which analyzes the character of Oedipus and Hamlet
The Interpretation of Dreams
Minstrel Show
Comedy of Manners
Ballad Operas
36. Form of drama that dominated theatre in India for a thousand years; named for the ancient Indian language in which its plays are performed; combine the natural and the supernatural - the believable and unbelievable
Two traits that distinguish theatre from ritual
Variety Show
The Living Theatre
Sanskrit Drama
37. Exposed the squalid living conditions of the urban poor and explores scandalous topics like poverty - venereal disease and prostitution; 'Sordid Realism'
Opera
Reprise
Naturalistic Plays
Avant-Garde
38. Said that the free enterprise system is seriously flawed and is a cause of great human misery because it exploits the poor
Das Kapital
Jo - Ha - and Kyu
Samuel Beckett
well-made plays
39. Staged inexpensive - noncommercial productions of artistically significant plays in small - out-of-the-way theatres
Little Theatre Movement
Shakuntala
Chikamatsu Monzaemon
Vaudeville
40. Holds that human beings are naturally alone - without purpose or mission - in a universe that has no God; not a negative - for without God humans can create their own existences - purpose and meaning
A Trip to Coontown
Shadow Theatre
Daguerreotype
Existentialism
41. Big-time vaudeville who performed a series of lavish musical reviews on Broadway
Kabuki
Minstrel Show Structure
Ziegfield Follies
non-Western Theatre
42. Built in Venice in 1637
Melodrama
First Public Opera House
Mie pose
Anton Chekhov
43. Divided into fatalist - hilarious and existentialist
Absurdism
Lucy Elizabeth Bartolozzi Vestris
The Black Crook
The Living Theatre
44. Attacked the evils and restrictions of society; tried to reveal the higher reality of the unconscious mind with fantastic imagery and contradictory images; performances were often violent and cruel as they tried to shock the audience into the realiza
Revue (Musical Review)
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Surrealism
The Living Theatre
45. Showed middle-class characters finding happiness and true love (Enlightenment)
Sentimental Comedies
Existentialism
The Koran
Romantic Playwrights
46. Closely tied to ritual - and it uses color - dance - song - and movements to exaggerate - stylize - and symbolically represent life
non-Western Theatre
Jean-Paul Sartre
The Living Theatre
Kyu
47. Earliest form for photography
Faust
Daguerreotype
women could legally appear on stages in England
Fatima Gallaire-Bourega
48. French Enlightenment playwright; was an inventor and thinker who spent countless hours at the leading intellectual salons of France; most famous plays are The Barber of Seville - and The Marriage of Figaro - his plays reflect the attitudes of the Enl
Vaudeville
Showstopper
Beaumarchais
Andre Antoine
49. The sung words
Performance Art
Total Theatre
Lyrics
non-Western Theatre
50. A permanent - professional theatre outside NYC; founded in 1947 by Margo Jones; stage new plays alongside commercial hits and historical plays; appeal to the intellectual audiences that Hollywood seldom serves
Happenings
dance musicals
Chinese Theatre
Regional Theatre