Noises Off
Clue
Hello Dolly
A Doll's House
Theatrical Elements
World Knowledge
100

This character is the frustrated director of the play within the play.

Lloyd Dallas

100

This character is revealed to be an undercover FBI agent in one of the endings.

Mr. Green

100

This is the main character who plays matchmaker but seeks love herself.

Dolly Levi

100

This is the protagonist who eventually leaves her family at the end of the play.

Nora Helmer

100

This comedic genre often involves exaggerated characters, improbable situations, and frantic entrances and exits.

Farce

100

This river is the longest in the world and flows north through northeastern Africa into the Mediterranean Sea.

The Nile
200

This prop is repeatedly lost, thrown, or misused in both rehearsals and performances.

Sardines

200

This is the setting of the film where all the murders take place.

Mansion

200

Dolly tries to set up this grumpy half-millionaire but ends up with him herself.

Horace Vandergelde

200

This character represents the patriarchal authority Nora is trying to escape.

Torvald Helmer

200

This style uses humor to expose and criticize social flaws, institutions, or human behavior—often with irony or exaggeration.

Satire

200

This iconic structure was originally built to honor the entrance to the World’s Fair in 1889 and is now one of the most visited monuments on Earth.

The Effel Tower

300

The physical chaos in Act II reflects the breakdown of personal relationships off-stage.

Disorganized stage action mirrors the actors' emotional instability and tangled romantic entanglements?

300

The repeated use of characters arriving one after the other at the door is an example of this comedic principle.

Rule of Three

300

Cornelius and Barnaby's exaggerated efforts to appear wealthy and worldly reflect this comedic element

Farce

300

Nora’s childlike language and behavior in the early acts are examples of this technique often used in satire.

Exaggeration

300

This comedic principle relies on a pattern in which something happens once, then again, and then a third time with a twist or payoff.

Rule of Three

300

This ancient city was buried by Mount Vesuvius in 79 A.D. 

Pompeii

400

The back-and-forth entrances and exits in Act II represent this comedic style.

Slapstick

400

One way the film uses farce in its structure or plot.

Fast-paced sequence of mistaken identities / slamming doors / over-the-top accusations?

400

The romantic subplots in Hello, Dolly! align with these characteristics of romantic comedy.

Mismatched couples, Misunderstandings, and end in Multiple successful pairings, typical of romantic comedy conventions

400

This recurring motif in A Doll’s House—from macaroons to dance performances—illustrates Nora's need to perform roles imposed on her by society.

Appearance versus reality

400

This genre often includes mistaken identities, witty banter, and ends in marriages or pairings, but also subtly critiques romantic ideals

Romantic Comedy

400

This powerful teenage environmental activist from Sweden gained global recognition for her “Fridays for Future” school strike movement.

Greta Thunberg

500

The Play, Noises Off, critiques the nature of theatrical performance itself through the use of...

Satire

500

In Clue, the use of multiple endings serves as a satire of this genre.

Murder mystery or detective genre?

500

Dolly’s manipulation of social situations is an example of

Satire on gender or class roles

500

This character, initially portrayed as a villain, becomes a vehicle for Ibsen’s exploration of redemption and the social consequences of reputation.

Krogstad

500

This physical comedy technique relies on exaggerated, sometimes violent movement—such as falling down stairs or getting hit with a door—to create humor and tension.

Slapstick

500

This Scandinavian country has more lakes than any other nation in the world.

Finland

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