You'd Better Know This
Good to Know...
Things
10/10 Would Know This for the Exam
Stuff You Really REALLY Should Know
100

Name the four main stage directions

Upstage

Downstage

Stage Left

Stage Right

100

What is an ensemble?

A group working together to achieve a goal.

100

What is a "good voice"?

Loud and easy to understand
100

An actor's onstage movements are called:

Blocking

100

The clear, precise, pronunciation of speech is called

articulation

200

arm or leg farthest away from the audience

Upstage limb

200

feed back that is negative and not specific and not helpful to the person receiving it and does not use theatrical vocabulary

Weak constructive criticism

200

Filling a space with your voice is called:

Projection

200

Who oversees all aspects of the production of a play?   

The director

200

What are body movements that people use to create emphasis or meaning?

Gestures

300

What is the definition of theatre?

Theatre is the art of writing, acting, and producing plays.

300

Who takes the words of the playwright and brings a character to life?

The actor

300

Why is the front of the stage called downstage?

It’s DOWN towards the audience.

300

Why isn’t “stage left” really “stage right”?

It’s from the actor’s point of view.

300

What does Ms. Brown call stage fright?

“Nervous anticipation”

400

saying or doing something that is not in keeping with the character one is portraying

breaking character

400

 break in the middle of a stage show, about 15 minutes long

Intermission

400

What does a play wright do?                             

Writes the play.

400

What is constructive criticism? 

Sharing observations and suggestions in a way that offers an actor a clear path to improvement

400

How you behave in the drama classroom or in an auditorium in order to get along and be a good person in the theatrical world is called:

theatre etiquette 

500

the playing of dramatic scenes without written dialogue and with minimal or no predetermined dramatic activity

Improvisation

500

The Scottish Play.....It's bad luck to say the name of this play inside an auditorium.

 MACBETH

500

The audience will  know what a pantomimed object is by how you: 

1.  Hold it

2. React to it

3. Interact with it

500
  • What body parts shape the sound into words? (lips, teeth, tongue, jaw)

articulators

500

What body parts push the air out of your body as a sound? (diaphragm, lungs, trachea)

resonators

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