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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. Goethe's most famous Romantic play
Faust
Librettist
Communists took control
Straight Plays
2. 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
Reprise
The Black Crook
Expressionism
Lorraine Handsberry
3. A synthesis of music - dance - acting - and acrobatics; it was first performed by strolling players in markets - temples - courtyards - and the streets
Music
Peking Opera
Highly Stylized Gestures
Shavian Comedies
4. The sung words
William Fox Talbot
Gotthold Lessing
Lucy Elizabeth Bartolozzi Vestris
Lyrics
5. Closely tied to ritual - and it uses color - dance - song - and movements to exaggerate - stylize - and symbolically represent life
Ki
Minstrel Show Structure
non-Western Theatre
Burlesque
6. 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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7. More serious plot and theme; West Side Story (1957)
Painted-face roles
musical
Characters in the Peking Opera
well-made plays
8. Told stories about common people who felt grand emotions and suffered devastating consequences (Enlightenment)
Domestic Tragedies
Two traits that distinguish theatre from ritual
Romantic Playwrights
Jo - Ha - and Kyu
9. A program of sketches - singing - dancing and songs pulled from previous sources
Revue (Musical Review)
The Black Crook
Operetta
Six Characters in Search of an Author (1922(
10. First black woman playwright to be producted on Broadway; Raisin in the Sun based of her actual childhood
Lorraine Handsberry
John Millington Synge
Bread and Puppet Theatre
Friedrich Nietzsche
11. Type of theatre that grew out of ritual - incorporated acting - music - storytelling - poetry - dance - costumes - and lots of masks to create a theatre that combined ritual and ceremony with drama
The Black Crook
Eugene Ionesco
Precolonial African Theatre
Early European travelers and missionaries
12. Wrote plays about the rugged lives of Irish peasants using their dialect; Riders to the Sea (1904) & The Playboy of the Western World (1907)
The Communist Manifesto
Aphra Behn
John Millington Synge
Blaise Pascal
13. 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
The Koran
Western Drama
The Jazz Singer
Friedrich Nietzsche
14. Most famous American expressionist playwright who won Nobel Prize for Literature (1936); A touch of the Poet (1935) - The Iceman Cometh (1939) - A Long Day's Journey into Night (1956) & A Moon for the Misbegotten (1952); The Hairy Ape (1952)
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15. What western theatre is often called:
Aristotelian
Nell Gwynn
Lorraine Handsberry
Noh actors' stylized performance techniques
16. A form of musical entertainment featuring bawdy songs - dancing women - and sometimes striptease
women could legally appear on stages in England
Painted-face roles
Quintessence of Ibsenism (1891)
Burlesque
17. 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
Vaudeville
Happenings
Highly Stylized Gestures
Samuel Beckett
18. Unstructured theatrical events on street corners - bus stops and anywhere else people gathered
Oscar Wilde
Nickelodeons
Happenings
The Koran
19. Wooden clappers used in Kabuki
Bunraku movements
Ha
Friedrich Nietzsche
Ki
20. 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
well-made plays
Verfremdung
The Enlightenment
William Fox Talbot
21. 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
Vaudeville
Jean-Paul Sartre
Lyricist
Three kinds of Kabuki plays
22. 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'
Problem plays
Sean O'Casey
A Dream Play (1902)
Naturalism
23. 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
Faust
Noh drama
Mie pose
Romantics
24. In Sigmund Romberg's play the king young heir to the throne sacrifices his personal happiness for the good of the kingdom when he sorrowfully pulls himself away from his true love in order to marry a princess whom he does not love
Shakespeare's King John
The Student Prince
Das Kapital
Catholic and Protestant Missionaries
25. Theatre was not seen as being of value to society - so plays were not an important part of:
Islamic Culture
Eugene Ionesco
Lyrics
Off-Off-Broadway
26. Studied the history of class conflict
Lyrics
Antonin Artaud
The Communist Manifesto
book musicals
27. Kabuki borrowed many of these movements to make Kabuki acting highly stylized and almost puppet-like
Samuel Beckett
Bunraku movements
Denis Diderot
Three kinds of Kabuki plays
28. 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
Vaudeville
overture
Shakuntala
Reprise
29. Recorded conversations of slum dwellers in Dublin and used their words verbatim in his plays
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30. The first 'talkie' movie; featured white actor Al Jolson in blackface performing in a minstrel show
Absurdism
Bread and Puppet Theatre
Ha
The Jazz Singer
31. A big production number that usually receives a torrent of applause that literally stops the show
Lorraine Handsberry
Showstopper
Regional Theatre
Mie pose
32. Any artist or work of art that is experimental - innovative or unconventional; some styles would be symbolism - expressionism - futurism - Dadaism - surrealism - and absurdism
Total Theatre
well-made plays
Realism
Avant-Garde
33. The first all-black show to pay at a top Broadway theatre
Emile Zola
The Koran
The Origin of the Cakewalk
Romantic Playwrights
34. Including operetta - developed out of intermezzi
Surrealism
Naturalistic Plays
Jukebox musicals
Comic opera
35. A program of unrelated singing - dancing and comedy numbers
Highly Stylized Gestures
Jukebox musicals
Symbolism
Variety Show
36. Writes the music
Domestic Tragedies
Composer
Symbolism
musical comedy
37. 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)
Samuel Beckett
Domestic Tragedies
Henrik Ibsen
Vaudeville
38. 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
non-Western Theatre
musical
Ken Saro-Wiwa
Antonin Artaud
39. Uses rock music - the rock and roll of the 1950s (Grease) - the psychedelic rock of the 1960s (Hair) or contemporary pop and rock (Rent)
Faust
Symbolism
rock musical
Minstrel Show Structure
40. 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
John Millington Synge
Regional Theatre
Lorraine Handsberry
Music
41. 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
Naturalism
Shadow Theatre
Natyasastra
Romantics
42. 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
Mie pose
Total Theatre
Realism
Ha
43. Comic operas that mixed popular songs of the day with spoken dialogue
Ta'ziyeh
Noh actors' stylized performance techniques
John Millington Synge
Ballad Operas
44. Set out to break all the neoclassical rules - attacked the three unities
Romantic Playwrights
overture
Ballad Operas
The Cherry Orchard (1904)
45. 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
Emile Zola
Chikamatsu Monzaemon
Bunraku movements
Shakuntala
46. All lines are sung - usually to grand classical music; Madama Butterfly (1904)
Lucy Elizabeth Bartolozzi Vestris
Comic opera
Ritual Theatre
Opera
47. Holds that human beings are naturally alone - without purpose or mission - in a universe that has no God
Avant-Garde
George Bernard Shaw
Existential Absurdism
Showstopper
48. Composed and produced by Bob Cole - lyrics by Billy Johnson; story of a con man and used minstrel stereotypes and spoofed Chinatown; in one scene a young black man sings about he and his date were denied entry to a nightclub cuz He was black and this
A Trip to Coontown
Comic opera
New Lyceum on Fourth Avenue (NYC)
Burlesque
49. 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
Japanese Theatre
Opera
Beaumarchais
Broadway Shows
50. Composed and produced by Bob Cole - lyrics by Billy Johnson; story of a con man and used minstrel stereotypes and spoofed Chinatown; in one scene a young black man sings about he and his date were denied entry to a nightclub cuz He was black and this
Naturalism
A Trip to Coontown
Absurdism
The Origin of the Cakewalk