Characters
Parts of the Play
Literature
Parts of the Play 2
Random
100

a personality in a story

What is a character?

100

An episode within a play

What is a scene?

100

A type of drama in which the characters experience reversal of fortune, usually for the worse. In this type of play, suffering awaits many of the characters, especially the hero.

What is Tragedy?

100

Movement patterns of actors on the stage. Planned by the director to create meaningful stage pictures.

What is blocking?

100

A dramatic character who does not change.

What is Static Character?

200

A character that shows one or few characteristics

What is a flat character?

200

A part or division of a play (like a chapter of a book)

What is an act?

200

The hidden meaning behind the text.

What is Subtext?

200

A group of characters who comment on the action of a play without participating in it.  It consists of a character/narrator coming on stage and giving a prologue or explicit background information or themes.

What is a chorus?

200

A character who is depicted with such psychological depth and detail that he or she seems like a "real" person. 

What is Round Character?

300

A character used to set off another character by contrast

What is a foil character?

300

conversation between characters

What is dialogue?

300

 This negative term implies both arrogant, excessive self-pride or self-confidence, and a lack of some important perception or insight due to pride in one's abilities. This overwhelming pride inevitably leads to a downfall. (Taken from http://web.cn.edu)

What is Hubris?

300

serves a specific purpose: it gives the spectator a moment of “relief ” with a light-hearted scene, after a succession of intensely tragic dramatic moments. Typically these scenes parallel the tragic action that they interrupt. 

What is comic relief?

300

The first incident leading to the rising action of the play. Sometimes is an event that occurred somewhere in the character’s past and is revealed to the audience through exposition.

What is Inciting Incident?

400

a character who opposes the main character

What is an antagonist?

400

the order or arrangement in which events happen in a story

What is structure?

400

A speech meant to be heard by the audience but not by other characters on the stage.  Only the audience can hear the private thoughts of the characters.

What is a Soliloquy?

400

Words spoken by an actor directly to the audience, but not "heard" by the other characters on stage during a play.

What is an aside?

400

When an external source resolves the entanglements of a play by supernatural intervention. The Latin phrase means, literally, "a god from the machine." The phrase refers to the use of artificial means to resolve the plot of a play.

What is Deus Ex Machina:

500

The main character in a work of fiction

What is a protagonist?

500

a lengthy uninterrupted speech by one character to another

What is a monologue?

500

defining features or common agreement upon strategies and/or attributes of a particular literary genre.

What are Conventions?

500

The purging of the feelings of pity and fear. According to Aristotle the audience should experiences this at the end of a tragedy.

What is a Catharsis?

500

Literally the action of untying.  is the final outcome of the main complication in a play. Usually occurs AFTER the climax (the turning point or "crisis"). It is sometimes referred to as the explanation or outcome of a drama that reveals all the secrets and misunderstandings connected to the plot.

What is denouement (or resolution)

600

A recognizable character type found in many plays. Comedies have traditionally relied on such characters as the miserly father, the beautiful but naïve girl, the trickster servant.

What is Stock Character?

600

A device in which a character holds a position or has an expectation reversed or fulfilled in a way that the character did not expect but that the audience or readers have anticipated because their knowledge of events or individuals is more complete than the character’s.

What is Dramatic Irony?

600

Samuel Taylor Coleridge first used the term in 1817. In its most basic form the term means that we accept something as real or representing the real when it obviously is not. In drama this is a crucial condition, as we must put aside put aside our __________ and accept the premise presented as real for the duration of the performance.

What is Suspension of Disbelief?

600

The imaginary thing that separates the spectator/audience from the action taking place on stage. In a traditional theatre setting (as opposed to a theatre in the round) this imaginary thing has been removed so that the spectator can “peep” into the fictional world and see what is going on. If the audience is addressed directly, this is referred to as “breaking the _______.”

What is The Fourth Wall?

600

A playwright's descriptive or interpretive comments that provide readers (as well as actors and directors) with information about the dialogue, setting, and action of a play.


What are Stage Directions?

700

Undergoes an important change in the course of the play- not changes in circumstances, but changes in some sense within the character in question -- changes in insight or understanding or changes in commitment, or values.

What is a Dynamic Character?

700

The first stage of a fictional or dramatic plot, in which necessary background information is provided” (highered.mcgraw-hill.com). 

What is Exposition?

700

Epic theatre (German: episches Theater) is a theatrical movement arising in the early to mid-20th century from the theories and practice of a number of theatre practitioners who responded to the political climate of the time through the creation of a new political theatre.

What is Brechtian Theatre?

700

"In the midst of things" (Latin); refers to opening a plot in the middle of the action, and then filling in past details by means of exposition or flashback.

What is "In Medias Res"?

700

Limiting the time, place, and action of a play to a single spot and a single action over the period of 24 hours.

What are "The Unities"?

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