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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 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
Romantic Playwrights
Ritual Theatre
Showstopper
2. Form of theatre that mixed traditional African ritual theatre and Western-style drama; encouraged African nationalism - glorified Africa's past - and advanced African customs - rituals - and culture; also dealt with serious political themes and appla
First Public Opera House
Three kinds of Kabuki plays
Total Theatre
The Student Prince
3. Peking Opera was dramatically altered when:
Burlesque
Communists took control
Reprise
Shimpa
4. All lines are sung - usually to grand classical music; Madama Butterfly (1904)
Islamic Culture
Jukebox musicals
Opera
Music
5. 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
Oscar Wilde
Jo - Ha - and Kyu
Mie pose
Sanskrit Drama
6. 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
Fatalist Absurdism
Ken Saro-Wiwa
Domestic Tragedies
Opera
7. A German poet - director and playwright who challenged traditional ideas about theatre; became a communist after watching policement shoot 4 unarmed civilians; The Life of Galileo (1938) - Mother Courage and her Children (1939) & The Caucasian Chalk
Bread and Puppet Theatre
Bertolt Brecht
The Cherry Orchard (1904)
Quintessence of Ibsenism (1891)
8. The orchestrated melodies
Characters in the Peking Opera
Naturalistic Plays
Africa
Music
9. Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature (2005); The Dumb Waiter (1957)
overture
Chinese Theatre
Harold Pinter
Noh drama
10. One of the most famous Sanskrit dramas - a love story in seven acts written by the playwright Kalidasa
Faust
Blaise Pascal
Shakuntala
Hilarious Absurdism
11. Closely tied to ritual - and it uses color - dance - song - and movements to exaggerate - stylize - and symbolically represent life
Samuel Beckett
Emile Zola
non-Western Theatre
Absurdism
12. An extreme form of realism; an acurate 'documentary' of everyday life - including its seamy side
Noh drama
Comic opera
Mie pose
Naturalism
13. Uses rock music - the rock and roll of the 1950s (Grease) - the psychedelic rock of the 1960s (Hair) or contemporary pop and rock (Rent)
rock musical
Naturalism
Goethe
Aphra Behn
14. 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
Anton Chekhov
Ballad Operas
rock musical
Revue (Musical Review)
15. One of the most valuable historical records of Indian theatre; an encyclopedic book of dramatic theory and practice; has 37 chapters and covers every aspect of classical Indian drama - also a treatise on dramatic theory and philosophy - states that t
Existential Absurdism
Ken Saro-Wiwa
Natyasastra
Book
16. Divided into fatalist - hilarious and existentialist
non-Western Theatre
Painted-face roles
Jukebox musicals
Absurdism
17. Play by Wole Soyinka; celebrates Nigerian independence but also warns against returning to Nigeria's violent past
Painted-face roles
Dance of the Forest
Little Theatre Movement
Reprise
18. Uses rock music - the rock and roll of the 1950s (Grease) - the psychedelic rock of the 1960s (Hair) or contemporary pop and rock (Rent)
onnagata
Ki
Catholic and Protestant Missionaries
rock musical
19. 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
Antonin Artaud
Jukebox musicals
Ken Saro-Wiwa
Kafkaesque
20. An early form of theatre; it used theatrical techniques such as song - dance - and characterization - but it was still firmly rooted in religion
Ki
Andre Antoine
Fourth Room
Ritual Theatre
21. 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
onnagata
Wole Soyinka
Comic opera
Friedrich Nietzsche
22. A German poet - director and playwright who challenged traditional ideas about theatre; became a communist after watching policement shoot 4 unarmed civilians; The Life of Galileo (1938) - Mother Courage and her Children (1939) & The Caucasian Chalk
Goethe
Bertolt Brecht
Shakuntala
Sanskrit Drama
23. '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
The Jazz Singer
Henrik Ibsen
Three kinds of Kabuki plays
Happenings
24. By Swedish Playwright August Strindberg; fourteen-act play that follows the disconnected logic of a dream
Denis Diderot
A Dream Play (1902)
Off Broadway
Expressionism
25. One of the most well-known Muslim Playwrights - who uses her plays not only to express herself but also to prompt discussions about such topics as violence against women - religious fanaticism - and female sexual desire
Denis Diderot
Naturalistic Plays
Japanese Theatre
Fatima Gallaire-Bourega
26. What western theatre is often called:
Fourth Room
Ha
Aristotelian
Western Drama
27. The want for more 'genuine' sets - more 'honest' acting - and dialogue to be modeled after everyday speech - influenced by ideas of CHarles Darwin - Sigmund Freud and Karl Marx
Henrik Ibsen
Alienation Effect
Absurdism
Realism
28. Most famous Restoration-era woman to make her living by writing plays
Aphra Behn
The Enlightenment
Dadaism
Friedrich Nietzsche
29. 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
Absurdism
Chinese Theatre
Antonin Artaud
non-Western Theatre
30. Holds that human beings are naturally alone - without purpose or mission - in a universe that has no God
rock musical
Eugene Ionesco
Existential Absurdism
Ki
31. All lines are sung - usually to grand classical music; Madama Butterfly (1904)
Opera
Expressionism
3 components of Musical Scripts
Straight Plays
32. Big-time vaudeville who performed a series of lavish musical reviews on Broadway
Operatic Musicals
Ziegfield Follies
Avant-Garde
Samuel Beckett
33. Feature the work of a director-choreographer
Aphra Behn
Fourth Room
dance musicals
Quintessence of Ibsenism (1891)
34. A period of licentious gaudiness inspired by the elaborate styles that Charles II brought with him from the French Court
Bread and Puppet Theatre
Off-Off-Broadway
Librettist
Restoration
35. 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
Revue (Musical Review)
Naturalistic Plays
George Bernard Shaw
Non-Western Drama
36. Developed from the dance-prayers of Buddhist priests; has five possible subjects: the deities - the deeds of heroic samurai - women - insanity - and famous legends
Noh drama
Two traits that distinguish theatre from ritual
The Communist Manifesto
Hilarious Absurdism
37. 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
Sanskrit Drama
John Millington Synge
Verfremdung
Kabuki
38. Most famous Restoration-era woman to make her living by writing plays
Fourth Room
Aphra Behn
Louis Daguerre
Eugene O'Neill
39. 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)
George Bernard Shaw
The Koran
non-Western Theatre
well-made plays
40. 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
Man and Superman (1903)
A Trip to Coontown
Gotthold Lessing
Lucy Elizabeth Bartolozzi Vestris
41. Russian playwright whose play The Lower Depths (1902) took look at people living in cellar of Moscow flophouse
Maxim Gorky
Hilarious Absurdism
Non-Western Drama
Mie pose
42. Founded in 1946 by Julian Beck and Judith Malina; dedicated itself to contemporary social issues and highly political - easthetically radical plays
The Living Theatre
The Student Prince
well-made plays
Fatima Gallaire-Bourega
43. Any artist or work of art that is experimental - innovative or unconventional; some styles would be symbolism - expressionism - futurism - Dadaism - surrealism - and absurdism
Avant-Garde
First Public Opera House
Ziegfield Follies
Shakespeare's King John
44. Second part of a Noh play - protagonist performs a dance that expresses his or her concern
well-made plays
Maxim Gorky
Ha
Broadway Shows
45. 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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46. Second part of a Noh play - protagonist performs a dance that expresses his or her concern
Ha
Communists took control
Mie pose
Theatre of Cruelty
47. A synthesis of music - dance - acting - and acrobatics; it was first performed by strolling players in markets - temples - courtyards - and the streets
Off Broadway
Peking Opera
Dadaism
philosophy - astronomy - science - and religion
48. Characters were not individuals but types; standard roles included scholar - lover - hero - maiden - old woman - coquette - virtuous wife - and acrobatic warrior-maiden
Characters in the Peking Opera
Operetta
The Living Theatre
Two traits that distinguish theatre from ritual
49. Play that takes place in a mental institution - the audience sits on the stage with the actor-patients
Kordian (1962)
Mie pose
Aristotelian
Ritual 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
Melodrama
Henrik Ibsen
Regional Theatre
Three kinds of Kabuki plays