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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. First female theatre manager in London; was also an actor and singer; managed first theatre to have a box set; Olympic Theatre in London
Comic opera
New Lyceum on Fourth Avenue (NYC)
Islamic Culture
Lucy Elizabeth Bartolozzi Vestris
2. A synthesis of music - dance - acting - and acrobatics; it was first performed by strolling players in markets - temples - courtyards - and the streets
Little Theatre Movement
Peking Opera
Poetic Realism
Expressionism
3. Thought that inner truths could be hinted at only through symbols; sought to replace the specific and concrete with the suggestive and metaphorical; usually had little plot or action and tended to baffle the audience
Symbolism
Off Broadway
The Interpretation of Dreams
Voltaire
4. No spoken dialogue - entirely sung; comes from the Latin word 'work' and may have originally meant 'works in music' or 'musical works for the stage'; first operas were in Italy in late 1500s
Wole Soyinka
Opera
Existentialism
Fourth Room
5. Closely tied to ritual - and it uses color - dance - song - and movements to exaggerate - stylize - and symbolically represent life
The Origin of the Cakewalk
Operetta
overture
non-Western Theatre
6. Type of Islamic theatre which is created by lighting two-dimensional figures and casting their shadows on a screen; the audience watches the silhouettes while a narrator tells a story
Early European travelers and missionaries
Shadow Theatre
Burlesque
Oscar Wilde
7. 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
Jo
Three kinds of Kabuki plays
dance musicals
Theatre of Cruelty
8. 'The Father of Realism'; was initially a Romantic writer and his early plays were verse dramas largely based on Norwegian history and folk literature; plays presented complex - sometimes distrubing - views of human society; A Doll's House (1879) - Gh
Jean-Paul Sartre
Japanese Theatre
Restoration
Henrik Ibsen
9. A program of sketches - singing - dancing and songs pulled from previous sources
Revue (Musical Review)
Naturalism
Eugene Ionesco
Opera
10. Sigmund Freud's book which analyzes the character of Oedipus and Hamlet
The Interpretation of Dreams
Jean-Paul Sartre
Absurdism
Avant-Garde
11. Most famous English actress - born into poverty - started out singing in taverns and selling oranges in theatres - became the King's mistress
Oscar Wilde
Nell Gwynn
Louis Daguerre
Ki
12. Bandits discuss rival systems of goverment while waiting for an attack
Minstrel Show
Man and Superman (1903)
George Bernard Shaw
Naturalism
13. One of the most influential thinkers of the Enlightenment - French poet - essayist - and playwright whose writing often got him in trouble with the church; built a theatre on his own estate so he could freely present his plays
Voltaire
Oscar Wilde
Emile Zola
Early European travelers and missionaries
14. Grew out of the theatre of Thespis in Ancient Greece; passed from the Athenians to the Romans to the medieval Europeans
Western Drama
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Friedrich Nietzsche
Romantics
15. The artist imposes his own internal state onto the outside world itself; expressionism is a subjective account of an objective perception; expressionist plays use deliberate set distortion
Happenings
Catholic and Protestant Missionaries
Bunraku movements
Expressionism
16. Wooden clappers used in Kabuki
Noh drama
Harold Pinter
Ki
Eugene Ionesco
17. A blend of melody and drama and refers to the background music often played during these performances
Melodrama
Mie pose
Wole Soyinka
Eugene Ionesco
18. A production of British actor Charles Kean; had realistic costumes - set and props that he had researched to make sure they were historically correct
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19. Holds that human beings are naturally alone - without purpose or mission - in a universe that has no God
Theatre of Cruelty
Existential Absurdism
Shadow Theatre
Absurdism
20. A program of unrelated singing - dancing and comedy numbers
Absurdism
Variety Show
Anton Chekhov
Expressionism
21. Staged inexpensive - noncommercial productions of artistically significant plays in small - out-of-the-way theatres
Goethe
Composer
Little Theatre Movement
The Adding Machine (1923)
22. Told stories about common people who felt grand emotions and suffered devastating consequences (Enlightenment)
Painted-face roles
Fatima Gallaire-Bourega
Domestic Tragedies
Emile Zola
23. Plays about the issues of the day that were in Manhattan neighborhoods
Jean-Paul Sartre
Opera
Off Broadway
The Adding Machine (1923)
24. Romanian-born French playwright best categorized as a hilarious absurdist; The Bald Soprano (1949) & Rhinoceros (1959)
Eugene Ionesco
Variety Show
Daguerreotype
Dance of the Forest
25. 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
Ta'ziyeh
Absurdism
Vaudeville
The Jazz Singer
26. Writers who felt science was not adequate to describe the full range of human experience - and their writings stressed instinct - intuition - and feeling
Denis Diderot
Daguerreotype
Peking Opera
Romantics
27. Wrote 'high comedies' which were cerebral socially relevant plays that had an intellectual scope so vast they forced audiences to reassess their values; Man and Superman (1903) & The Quintessence of Ibsenism (1891)
Dance of the Forest
Aphra Behn
George Bernard Shaw
Kabuki
28. One of the most famous Sanskrit dramas - a love story in seven acts written by the playwright Kalidasa
Shakuntala
Louis Daguerre
Shadow Theatre
Emile Zola
29. Showed middle-class characters finding happiness and true love (Enlightenment)
Sentimental Comedies
Performance Art
The Communist Manifesto
Africa
30. Contemporary form of Sanskrit Theatre - dramatized version of the Hindu epic poems Ramayana and Mahabharata
Off Broadway
Fatalist Absurdism
Kathakali
Eugene Ionesco
31. Instead of learning how to conjure real emotions - actors of Sanskrit drama studied for many years to learn representations of emotions through:
Japanese Theatre
Intermezzi
Highly Stylized Gestures
Realism
32. Result of western influence - a toned down version of Kabuki - told stories of everyday life - particularly those of women - women played women's parts (whereas Kabuki was all male)
Theatre of Cruelty
Ballad Operas
Shimpa
Symbolism
33. Comic operas that mixed popular songs of the day with spoken dialogue
Highly Stylized Gestures
Ta'ziyeh
Lucy Elizabeth Bartolozzi Vestris
Ballad Operas
34. The men who play female roles are called:
John Millington Synge
Ritual Theatre
onnagata
Maxim Gorky
35. The sung words
Lyrics
Daguerreotype
Early European travelers and missionaries
Theatre of Cruelty
36. Most famous surrealist and was a French writer and director; studied Asian religions - mysticism - and ancient cultures; declared theatre should should wake the nerves and heart; argued that proscenium arch theatres create a barrier between the audie
Existential Absurdism
Antonin Artaud
Comic opera
Nell Gwynn
37. Most famous Restoration-era woman to make her living by writing plays
Little Theatre Movement
Shakuntala
Harold Pinter
Aphra Behn
38. Estrangement; essentially the alienation effect
Bunraku movements
Ken Saro-Wiwa
Verfremdung
Showstopper
39. 1. theatre has an actor who plays a character - theatre is artificial - and 2. theatre usually has a story with a conflict - conflict is key to all drama
Oscar Wilde
Dadaism
philosophy - astronomy - science - and religion
Two traits that distinguish theatre from ritual
40. The time period that glorified humans' power to reason and analyze - a period of great philosophical - scientific - technological - political - and religious revolutions
The Enlightenment
Bertolt Brecht
A Trip to Coontown
Sentimental Comedies
41. Russian playwright whose play The Lower Depths (1902) took look at people living in cellar of Moscow flophouse
Existential Absurdism
Maxim Gorky
Book
Japanese Theatre
42. Type of Islamic theatre - religious drama of Iran which allowed for actors - both professional and amateur - and has been performed in open-air playing spaces and on some occasions in specially constructed indoor stages for hundreds of years
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43. 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
Beaumarchais
Characters in the Peking Opera
Little Theatre Movement
Poetic Realism
44. Built in Venice in 1637
Harold Pinter
First Public Opera House
Eugene O'Neill
Emile Zola
45. Type of theatre greatly influenced by Buddhism and Shinto; originates in ritual
Realism
The Koran
Japanese Theatre
Louis Daguerre
46. Comic operas that mixed popular songs of the day with spoken dialogue
Ballad Operas
Comic opera
rock musical
The Communist Manifesto
47. A robust and spectacular version of Noh; named after the characters for 'song' - 'dance' - and 'skill'; created by a woman named Okuni - owner of a brothel
Kabuki
Jean-Paul Sartre
non-Western Theatre
The Living Theatre
48. Recorded conversations of slum dwellers in Dublin and used their words verbatim in his plays
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49. Play by Wole Soyinka; celebrates Nigerian independence but also warns against returning to Nigeria's violent past
Little Theatre Movement
Jukebox musicals
Western Drama
Dance of the Forest
50. A production of British actor Charles Kean; had realistic costumes - set and props that he had researched to make sure they were historically correct
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