Test Bank for Revel for Explore Theatre: A Backstage Pass, 2nd Edition

Preview Extract
Chapter 2: The Text 2โ€1 Multiple Choice Questions 2โ€1.1 You are at your local theatre witnessing a play about a king. This king wields much power and is liked by his subjects, but he has insatiable greed. His greed causes him to lose what matters most in his life, and the play ends with a soliloquy about how he wishes he could change what he did. You leave the theatre feeling pity for the king, even though he caused his own fate. According to Aristotleโ€™s The Poetics, what genre of play did you just witness? a. b. c. d. historical epic tragedy tragicomedy comedy Page Ref: Tragedy Skill: Applied Topic: Characteristics of a tragedy Answer: b. 2โ€1.2 Which of the following is an example of โ€œtextโ€? a. b. c. d. a website a play a screenplay all of these choices Page Ref: Introduction Skill: Factual Topic: Types of text Answer: d. 2โ€1.3 You are watching a performance in which there seems to be no linear narrative. The story has fragmented language and there is no clear closure at the end, only your own interpretations. Which type of plot structure are you most likely seeing? a. b. c. d. climactic episodic postmodernism the โ€œWellโ€Madeโ€Playโ€ format Page Ref: Plot Skill: Applied Topic: Types of plot structure Answer: c. 2โ€1.4 You are in the audience of a production in which the protagonist comments on how he wants to raise money for his hometown to save it from a giant corporation. This statement would most likely give us a look into which of the four character information types? a. b. c. d. physical or biological social psychological moral/ethical Page Ref: Character Skill: Applied Topic: Characteristics of types of characters Answer: c. 2โ€1.5 When given a play to read for an assignment in class, you wonder if there is one thing you can skip in reading. Which of the following could you not read? a. b. c. d. the title the cast list the stage directions none of these choices Page Ref: Reading and Analyzing a Play Skill: Applied Topic: Script analysis Answer: d. 2โ€1.6 You are watching a play. You are at the point toward the beginning when information is being given about various aspects of the characters and the action. Where in the plot is the play right now? a. b. c. d. inciting incident exposition point of attack denouement Page Ref: Plot Skill: Applied Topic: Characteristics of plot points Answer: b. 2โ€1.7 You see a performance in which one theme is clearly stated in the dialogue between the characters. Since it was so obvious, you feel that this is the only theme from the play. Is this a valid response? a. b. c. d. yes, shows only have one theme no, themes are never stated directly in dialogue yes, playwrights try to make their themes very clear like such no, there is a chance there is another, less obvious, theme Page Ref: Thought Skill: Applied Topic: Themes Answer: d. 2โ€1.8 A sad tale dealing with the lesser social class being suppressed by a higher class but ultimately resolving in a happy ending will have which of the following characters in the story? a. b. c. d. tragic hero harlequin narrator a crossโ€dressing character Page Ref: Comedy Skill: Conceptual Topic: Characteristics of different genres Answer: b. 2โ€1.9 In his work The Poetics, Aristotle defines the six elements of theatre. What are they? a. b. c. d. plot, character, theme, language, music, spectacle plot, character, theme, theory, sound, spectacle plot, theme, theory, language, music, setting character, theme, language, spectacle, resolution, theory Page Ref: Aristotleโ€™s Six Elements Skill: Factual Topic: The Poetics Answer: a. 2โ€1.10 What is a denouement? a. b. c. d. the point in a play where something takes a turn for the worse some silly French word the point in a play where all the loose ends are tied up; resolution an occurrence that sets the dramatic action of the play in motion Page Ref: Plot Skill: Factual Topic: Plot points Answer: c. 2โ€1.10 What is often the most accurate way to convey information about a character? a. b. c. d. what the character does what others say about the character what the character says description (e.g. stage directions) Page Ref: Character Skill: Factual Topic: How to identify character traits Answer: a. 2โ€1.11 What is catharsis? a. b. c. d. a purging of emotion caused by a tragedy pride in a tragic hero an ending to a play that leaves questions unanswered the playwrightโ€™s implied theme Page Ref: Tragedy Skill: Factual Topic: Characteristics of genres Answer: a. 2โ€1.12 In a scene from the famous Sophocles play Oedipus Rex, Oedipus begins one of his many lines with โ€œYou are at prayer, and in answer,/if you will heed my words/and minister to your own disease,/you may hope for help and win reliefโ€.โ€ He then continues to speak for another 70 lines. He is not the only person on stage and he is directly speaking to another character. What kind of language element is this? a. b. c. d. soliloquy aside narration monologue Page Ref: Diction or Language Skill: Applied Topic: Characteristics of types of language Answer: d. 2โ€1.13 While analyzing a script you decided that you could skip over analyzing one item that is not crucial to the play. Which element was it? a. b. c. d. the exposition the minor characters the logic none of these choices Page Ref: Reading and Analyzing a Play Skill: Applied Topic: Script analysis Answer: d. 2โ€1.14 After reading the play Antigone, by Sophocles, you interpret it as a story of six girlfriends who begin to feud with one another when a popular boy says heโ€™s moving across town. This interpretation of the play is a. b. c. d. right, the old story could be translated to a new context for other audiences. wrong, a better interpretation would be one where the boy dies. right, there are no wrong interpretations. wrong, this interpretation is hard to support. Page Ref: Reading and Analyzing a Play Skill: Applied Topic: Play interpretation Answer: d. 2-1.15 ________ reimagined the concept of โ€œmusicโ€ as โ€œorganized noiseโ€ in 1966. a. b. c. d. Edgard Varรจse Aristotle Henrik Ibsen sharon bridgforth Page Ref: Music Skill: Factual Topic: Analyzing music Answer: a. 2-1.16 Based on the timing with which Aristotle wrote The Poetics (c. 335 B.C.E.), we can deduce that his writings on ancient Greek tragedy are founded on a. b. c. d. his experiences seeing performances. predictions about future theatre works. treatises written by other theorists. artifacts from past performances. Page Ref: Approaches to Play Analysis Skill: Applied Topic: Historical play analysis Answer: d. 2โ€2 True/False Questions 2.2.1 Texts can be a book, story, poem, play, screenplay, website, visual art, video game, film, TV show, or performance of a play; even the body can be read as a text. Page Ref: Introduction Skill: Factual Topic: Types of text Answer: True. 2โ€2.2 The twoโ€dimensional script is all that is needed for a show; you are experiencing a complete theatrical production when you read a script. Page Ref: Introduction Skill: Factual Topic: Page to stage Answer: False. 2โ€2.3 Characters are always people. Page Ref: Character Skill: Factual Topic: Fundamentals that create a character Answer: False. 2โ€2.4 Dramatic action is found in the stage directions written in the play. Page Ref: Introduction Skill: Factual Topic: Page to stage Answer: False. 2โ€2.5 When assessing a character, you can simply make a list of physical traits. Page Ref: Character Skill: Factual Topic: How to analyze character Answer: False. 2โ€2.6 During the initial performances of his work, Shakespeareโ€™s actors had weeks to prepare with the complete script. Page Ref: Reading and Analyzing a Play Skill: Factual Topic: Sides versus scripts Answer: False. 2โ€2.7 The historical emphasis on the play as text is shifting over to the performance as text. Page Ref: Reading and Analyzing a Play Skill: Factual Topic: Page to stage Answer: True. 2โ€2.8 You just bought tickets to see The Bacchae with a friend; you should tell your friend that the show is action-packed, with little exposition because it has a climactic plot structure. Page Ref: Plot Skill: Applied Topic: Difference characteristics of different plot structures Answer: False. 2โ€2.9 Sexual comedy as we see the genre today (American Pie, Not Another Teen Movie, Scary Movie) was frowned upon by all ancient Greeks. In fact, the first comedy including sex and debauchery didnโ€™t exist until the Middle Ages. Page Ref: Comedy Skill: Factual Topic: History of comedy Answer: False. 2โ€2.10 Euripides won only four contests for his plays, perhaps because his often violent, melodramatic, sexual subjects were thought unsuited to the Greek stage, but he was extremely popular in later periods. Page Ref: Tragedy Skill: Factual Topic: History of genre popularity Answer: True. 2โ€3 Completion (fillโ€inโ€theโ€blank) Questions 2-3.1 Comedy of ________ shows the ludicrous results of placing characters in unusual circumstances. Page Ref: Comedy Skill: Factual Topic: Characteristics of different types of comedy Answer: situation 2-3.2 ________โ€”the most popular theatrical form of the nineteenth century in Europe and Americaโ€”grew out of the nineteenth century Industrial Revolution. Page Ref: Melodrama Skill: Factual Topic: History of melodrama Answer: Melodrama 2-3.3 During a show in which characters are trying to solve a murder mystery, the characters find a note left by the murderer and are about to discover the murdererโ€™s identity. This moment is mostly likely the ________. Page Ref: Plot Skill: Applied Topic: Characteristics of different plot points Answer: climax 2โ€3.4 ________ plays have a direct linear arrangement. Page Ref: Plot Skill: Factual Topic: Plot structures Answer: Climactic 2โ€3.5 ________ plays are ordered into episodes by the exploration of a theme. Page Ref: Plot Skill: Factual Topic: Plot structures Answer: Episodic 2โ€3.6 When a character speaks to the audience for an extended time, such a speech is called a ________. Page Ref: Diction or Language Skill: Factual Topic: Types of language within a play Answer: soliloquy 2โ€3.7 It is vital that you support your reading and analysis of any play with specific ________ from the text. Page Ref: Approaches to Play Analysis Skill: Factual Topic: Play analysis; reading a play Answer: evidence 2โ€3.8 In classical Greek tragedies, the ________ is a serious personal misjudgment in the character that leads to the climax. Page Ref: Tragedy Skill: Factual Topic: Elements of a tragedy Answer: tragic flaw or hamartia 2โ€3.9 ________ conveys character, plot, and theme and is the playwright’s primary tool. Page Ref: Diction or Language Skill: Factual Topic: Characteristics of language Answer: Language 2โ€3.10 The ________ are the fictional people who perform the actions in the play and are the primary elements out of which plots are created. Page Ref: Character Skill: Factual Topic: Characteristics of character Answer: characters 2โ€4 Short Answer/Essay Questions 2โ€4.1 Use Aristotle’s six elements to analyze a contemporary work of dramatic fiction (play, film, etc.). Identify how the work arranges the six elements (which ones play a larger role in the production) and suggest how that arrangement can help audiences better understand the main idea or theme of the production. Page Ref: Aristotleโ€™s Six Elements Skill: Conceptual Topic: Aristotleโ€™s six elements Answer: A student may choose to look at a movie such as Moulin Rouge and note that the movie is structurally different than most other films in that after plot, the most important elements of the movie are music and spectacle, as the movie theme centers around the ideas of romantic, ideal love. 2โ€4.2 Compare a contemporary comedy to an ancient one and identify how each work is similar or different from the other. Identify the structure of each script (how long are the scenes or acts, where is the climax, how is the conflict resolved), and suggest how the ancient work could be presented to a contemporary audience. Page Ref: Comedy Skill: Conceptual Topic: Comedy Answer: A student could compare Lysistrata to American Pie and show that American Pie seeks to do little more than glorify the naรฏve male fantasy of losing oneโ€™s virginity while Lysistrata, though in its original production had male actors playing women, has throughout history exposed the follies of man in regard to war and masculinity when in reality it is better to make love, not war. 2โ€4.3 Identify three melodramas (historic or contemporary, film or theatre) and compare how each work follows the rules of melodrama (or not). Which one speaks most strongly to you, and why? Page Ref: Melodrama Skill: Conceptual Topic: Melodrama fundamentals Answer: Students could discuss any type of melodrama beginning with Uncle Tomโ€™s Cabin and moving into classic motion pictures such as Gone with the Wind or Star Wars. A student could show how Uncle Tomโ€™s Cabin focused more on the ideas of good versus evil and how Gone with the Wind more epitomizes the romantic, idealist nature of melodramas rather than setting out to achieve all the goals that the play Uncle Tomโ€™s Cabin planned. 2โ€4.4 Use Aristotle’s six elements to analyze a nonโ€traditional text (like a painting, five minutes watching a street corner, or your own clothes). How do each of the elements highlight aspects of this nonโ€linear text? Page Ref: Aristotleโ€™s Six Elements Skill: Conceptual Topic: Aristotleโ€™s six elements Answer: Students could discuss pants with writing on the back side and the effects an article of that nature has socially, the sounds of a street corner when the walk sign is green versus when a car is attempting to turn left as other cars zoom past, or how a Norman Rockwell painting tells a story through spectacle that also makes you care about his characters.

Document Preview (12 of 189 Pages)

User generated content is uploaded by users for the purposes of learning and should be used following SchloarOn's honor code & terms of service.
You are viewing preview pages of the document. Purchase to get full access instantly.

Shop by Category See All


Shopping Cart (0)

Your bag is empty

Don't miss out on great deals! Start shopping or Sign in to view products added.

Shop What's New Sign in