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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. Purgation of pity and fear experienced upon watching theater.
Prose
Catharsis
Sense memory
Pageants
2. Father of Epic theater - wanted people to think about what they were seeing - alienation effect.
Pageants
Stage Manager
Rendering
Bertolt Brecht
3. Controls the environment in the theatre - influence audience's emotional involvement - and communicate information (time and place).
Sense memory
Designer
University Wits
Neoclassic goals defining verisimilitude
4. An actor/ audience configuration in which the audience is on only one side of the performance area; all audience members face the same direction.
Vomitories
Types of professional theater
Proscenium
Cycles
5. Sentences/paragraph structure
Hypokrites
Prose
Plato
Stage manager
6. Second round of auditions to which specific actors are invited
Callbacks
Sense memory
Hypokrites
Catharsis
7. 'seeing place'
Components of Production
Theatron
Variables of costume design
Proscenium
8. Humanity's struggle with good and evil
sound designer
Early Church's reasons for distaining theatre
Proscenium
Morality Plays
9. Central character
Representational
Protagonist
Director
Subtext
10. Silhouette (overall shape) - color - texture - accent
Proscenium
Sense memory
Variables of costume design
Blocking
11. Emotional identification. Refers to audience participation
Proscenium
Empathy
Commedia Dell'Arte
Duke of Saxe Meiningen
12. The most popular form of performance in the 20th century
Musical Theatre
Downstage
Perspective Scenery
Melodrama
13. An actor/ audience configuration in which the audience is on only one side of the performance area; all audience members face the same direction.
collaborator
Romanticism
Henrik Ibsen
Proscenium
14. Psychological separation - or a sense of detachment; the recognition that what happens on stage is not reality; literally - 'the distance of art'
Sense memory
Aesthetic Distance
Producer
Costume Designer
15. Group of influential - educated Renaissance playwrights
Verisimilitude
Prose
Director
University Wits
16. Attempts to represent reality on stage
Director
Sense memory
Representational
Prose
17. 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.
Auditions
Chorus
Mystery Plays
Front of House
18. Changeable scenery for specific plays (tragedies - comedies - pastoral tragicomedies). Appeared as early as 1508 and standardized approaches to such scenery were popularized by Sebastian Serlio. Ex: Wings - flats
Perspective Scenery
Designer
Orchestra
Realism
19. The central element of causal plot; two forces working against each other
Bertolt Brecht
Copyright
Conflict
Eugene Scribe
20. Wrote the Orestia which is the only surviving trilogy
Off-Broadway
Aeschylus
Reversal
Aristotle's Six Elements of a Play
21. Appearance of truth
Sense memory
Verisimilitude
Romantic Theory
Melodrama
22. Body - voice - mind
23. Biblical stories. From word Misterium meaning crafts/guild
sound designer
Mystery Plays
Chorus
Representational
24. Person in charge of artistic aspect of theater production
Dramaturg
Director
Prose
The Globe
25. Plot - character - thought - language - music - spectacle
26. God of wine and fertility
Rendering
Dionysus
Reversal
Protagonist
27. Passageways located underneath the seating that generally give access to the stage. (there are some in Maybee theatre
University Wits
Proscenium
Duke of Saxe Meiningen
Vomitories
28. Creates a visual home for the play
Hypokrites
Emile Zola
Scenic Designer
Upstage
29. 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
Wings
Chorus
Proscenium
Costume plot
30. Body (dance - martial arts) - voice (projection - articulation - breathing) - and mind (improve - script analysis - character development)
31. Creates a visual home for the play
Scenic Designer
Antagonist
Miracle Plays
Proscenium
32. Causal play structure. A ? B ? C
Hypokrites
Linear Plot
Miracle Plays
Commedia Dell'Arte
33. Humanity's struggle with good and evil
Designer's job
Subtext
Morality Plays
Subplot
34. 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
Proscenium
Presentational
lighting designer
Aristotle
35. A flexible performance space (usually small) in which the actor/audience configuration can be easily changed for each production
Stage manager
Black box
Perspective Scenery
Catharsis
36. A picture created by a designer to communicate with other production personnel
Constantin Stanislavski
Upstage
Rendering
Protagonist
37. In a proscenium theatre - spaces offstage left and right for actors - crew - and scenery not yet in the visible performance space
Skene
Vomitories
Musical Theatre
Wings
38. Generally rhyming
Verse
Empathy
Broadway
Subplot
39. Actor in 5th century Greece
Perspective Scenery
Hypokrites
Aristophanes
Antiquarianism
40. created by Augest von Schegel - the replacement of neoclassical structure: form should be directed by subject matter - not classical precedent. Romantics were fascinated with natural forces - the unexplainable - gothic - and mystical. Romantics drama
Romantic Theory
Aristophanes
Theatron
Representational
41. Artistic decisions meant to communicate a specific interpretation of a play to the audience.
Theatron
Concept
Downstage
Aristotle
42. Plays performed by the clergy in latin as part of the worship service in Christian monasteries and cathedrals during the Middle Ages.
Liturgical Drama
Neoclassic goals defining verisimilitude
Cycles
Dialogue
43. 'old comedy'. Lewd humor - attacks on government
Aristophanes
Components of Production
Protagonist
Emile Zola
44. Idea/script - sets - lights - costumes - props - performers
Dionysus
Components of Production
Verisimilitude
Eugene Scribe
45. Scenery
Skene
Aristotle
Romantic Theory
Producer
46. Was in favor of theater
Catharsis
Skene
Aristotle
Henrik Ibsen
47. Convincing actors were too powerful a tool of persuasion
48. Plays written before 1923 are no longer protected
Types of professional theater
sound designer
Representational
Public Domain
49. 'old comedy'. Lewd humor - attacks on government
Royalty
Designer
Henrik Ibsen
Aristophanes
50. Recognize plays as intellectual property of playwright
Front of House
Stage manager
Vomitories
Copyright