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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. French physicist - mathematician - and philosopher - expressed the essence of Romanticism
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Theatre of Cruelty
Blaise Pascal
Islamic Culture
2. All lines are sung - usually to grand classical music; Madama Butterfly (1904)
Naturalism
The Black Crook
Opera
John Millington Synge
3. Wooden clappers used in Kabuki
Total Theatre
Six Characters in Search of an Author (1922(
Verfremdung
Ki
4. 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
Existentialism
Vaudeville
Ballad Operas
Expressionism
5. Writes the music
Lucy Elizabeth Bartolozzi Vestris
Composer
Ta'ziyeh
Absurdism
6. Used giant puppets and actors to enact parables denouncing the Vietnam War and materialism
The Student Prince
Three kinds of Kabuki plays
box set
Bread and Puppet Theatre
7. Have become living traditions that are handed down from father to son
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8. Elmer Rice; about a man named Mr. Zero Who is fired from his job and replaced by an adding machine
George Bernard Shaw
Chikamatsu Monzaemon
Bunraku movements
The Adding Machine (1923)
9. Exposed the squalid living conditions of the urban poor and explores scandalous topics like poverty - venereal disease and prostitution; 'Sordid Realism'
Ken Saro-Wiwa
Naturalistic Plays
Comedy of Manners
Shimpa
10. Built in Venice in 1637
First Public Opera House
Ki
Symbolism
philosophy - astronomy - science - and religion
11. 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
Lorraine Handsberry
Happenings
A Trip to Coontown
Sanskrit Drama
12. Peking Opera was dramatically altered when:
book musicals
Communists took control
Ritual Theatre
Beaumarchais
13. A dialogue that captures the incoherence - broken language - and pauses of modern speech; usually marked by surreal distortion and impending danger; from writing of Franz Kafka
Straight Plays
Restoration
Kafkaesque
Three kinds of Kabuki plays
14. Characterized by a light-hearted - fast-moving comic story - whose dialogue is interspersed with popular music; Guys and Dolls (1950)
Denis Diderot
musical comedy
Lorraine Handsberry
Performance Art
15. 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
Voltaire
Noh drama
Gotthold Lessing
Three kinds of Kabuki plays
16. Sarcastic label of Scribe's plays; the sympathetic protagonist suffers at the hands of an evil antagonist in the course of intense action - suspense - and contrived play devices; ending is always happy and the loose ends are neatly tied up
dance musicals
Melodrama
well-made plays
John Millington Synge
17. Showed middle-class characters finding happiness and true love (Enlightenment)
Shakespeare's King John
Sentimental Comedies
Das Kapital
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
18. Instead of learning how to conjure real emotions - actors of Sanskrit drama studied for many years to learn representations of emotions through:
The Origin of the Cakewalk
Highly Stylized Gestures
Friedrich Nietzsche
Bertolt Brecht
19. Goethe's most famous Romantic play
Faust
Two traits that distinguish theatre from ritual
musical
Lucy Elizabeth Bartolozzi Vestris
20. A form of musical entertainment featuring bawdy songs - dancing women - and sometimes striptease
Kathakali
Burlesque
non-Western Theatre
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
21. Writes the book
Librettist
Beaumarchais
Vaudeville
Sean O'Casey
22. 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
book musicals
Shavian Comedies
Samuel Beckett
Opera
23. The audience remains alienated from the performance so they could critically consider the play's themes
Comedy of Manners
New Lyceum on Fourth Avenue (NYC)
Communists took control
Alienation Effect
24. People who dismissed Traditional African Theatre because it was so unlike anything they knew
Early European travelers and missionaries
Friedrich Nietzsche
Voltaire
box set
25. The men who play female roles are called:
onnagata
box set
Ballad Operas
3 components of Musical Scripts
26. One of the most popular Kabuki and Bunraku playwrights - who - like Shakespeare - wrote crowd-pleasing plays that combined poetry and prose in dramatic tales of comedy - tragedy - love - and war
Lorraine Handsberry
Andre Antoine
Jukebox musicals
Chikamatsu Monzaemon
27. Spoken lines of dialogue as well as the plot
Book
Shimpa
The Jazz Singer
Africa
28. Two types of traditional Japanese theatre
Noh drama and Kabuki
Ballad Operas
Nell Gwynn
Comic opera
29. Includes all other forms of drama - from the ancient ritual theatre of Africa to the traditional theatre of Asia to the shadow and puppet theatre of Muslim lands
New Lyceum on Fourth Avenue (NYC)
Shadow Theatre
Das Kapital
Non-Western Drama
30. 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)
Broadway Shows
Samuel Beckett
Poetic Realism
Bread and Puppet Theatre
31. Most famous Restoration-era woman to make her living by writing plays
Aphra Behn
Non-Western Drama
musical comedy
Ziegfield Follies
32. 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
Emile Zola
Gotthold Lessing
Six Characters in Search of an Author (1922(
The Student Prince
33. Elmer Rice; about a man named Mr. Zero Who is fired from his job and replaced by an adding machine
Ki
Natyasastra
Happenings
The Adding Machine (1923)
34. French physicist - mathematician - and philosopher - expressed the essence of Romanticism
Jukebox musicals
Blaise Pascal
Oscar Wilde
Reprise
35. 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)
Fatima Gallaire-Bourega
Shimpa
overture
Sentimental Comedies
36. Holds that human beings are naturally alone - without purpose or mission - in a universe that has no God
Characters in the Peking Opera
Natyasastra
Existential Absurdism
Western Drama
37. Life has no purpose and they confused and antagonized audiences by refusing to adhere to a coherent set of principles - mirroring the madness of the world
Domestic Tragedies
Melodrama
Dadaism
rock musical
38. More serious plot and theme; West Side Story (1957)
Kathakali
musical
Absurdism
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
39. One of the most famous Sanskrit dramas - a love story in seven acts written by the playwright Kalidasa
Dance of the Forest
Catholic and Protestant Missionaries
Characters in the Peking Opera
Shakuntala
40. Said that the free enterprise system is seriously flawed and is a cause of great human misery because it exploits the poor
Kathakali
Minstrel Show Structure
Das Kapital
Henrik Ibsen
41. Grew out of the theatre of Thespis in Ancient Greece; passed from the Athenians to the Romans to the medieval Europeans
musical comedy
Western Drama
Lyricist
musical
42. Known for life-like sets that used hand-painted screens and gas-powered lighting effects to stage realistic sunrises and storm clouds; invented the DAGUERREO-TYPE - which was an early form of photography
Louis Daguerre
The Living Theatre
Japanese Theatre
Three kinds of Kabuki plays
43. Spoken lines of dialogue as well as the plot
Book
Avant-Garde
Melodrama
Broadway Shows
44. Recorded conversations of slum dwellers in Dublin and used their words verbatim in his plays
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45. Including operetta - developed out of intermezzi
Comic opera
philosophy - astronomy - science - and religion
Existential Absurdism
Maxim Gorky
46. Based off the idea that before a problem can be solved - society must first understand that the problem exists; 'attack the message - not the messenger'
Fatima Gallaire-Bourega
dance musicals
Problem plays
Ta'ziyeh
47. Most famous English actress - born into poverty - started out singing in taverns and selling oranges in theatres - became the King's mistress
Burlesque
Noh actors' stylized performance techniques
The Origin of the Cakewalk
Nell Gwynn
48. Only cost a nickel
Nickelodeons
Regional Theatre
Expressionism
Peking Opera
49. 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
Lorraine Handsberry
The Cherry Orchard (1904)
Two traits that distinguish theatre from ritual
Goethe
50. 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
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Shavian Comedies
Shadow Theatre
Surrealism