"That's all right," said the dog, "It's an old story and a sad one, but I can tell it to you now."
What is personification?
I'm a small, nocturnal animal who likes to be in teapots.
Who is the Dormouse?
What are the two major categories of drama?
What are comedy and tragedy?
What does "set" refer to?
What are the items on a stage that create the "world" of the play?
What is a fake, false, assumed name for writing?
"And, from across the square, five very tall, thin gentlemen regally dressed in silks and satins, plume hats, and buckled shoes rushed up..."
I'm found in a child's poem, making tarts.
Who is the Queen of Hearts?
What country is usually credited with the development of drama as a form?
What is Greece?
What is "setting" in a book?
What are time, place, and culture of the story?
Why may have Charles Lutwidge Dodgson used a pen name?
What is because he was a respected professor at Oxford and the author of five books on advanced mathematics?
If someone says, "down the rabbit hole," or "following a rabbit trail," this is an ______________ to Alice in Wonderland.
What is an allusion?
I'm a young boy who was always bored until I got in my little car and started driving.
Who is Milo?
In Shakespearean drama, how can you tell which category of drama a play is?
What is comedy/marriage, tragedy/death?
If you want a character to speak his thoughts alone on stage...
What is a soliloquy?
Who was the story Alice in Wonderland told to?
Who is Alice Liddell and her two sisters?
"O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!"
What is alliteration?
I cry about soup.
Who is the Mock Turtle?
This tells actors where to go, how to act, how to say their lines, etc.
What are stage directions?
If you want a long speech to an audience...
What is a monologue?
What is a benefit of drama?
What is it is an occasion, it is a live audience, it is a corporate experience, etc.?
The term "mad as a hatter"...
What is a simile?
I am the first character from Wonderland that Alice meets.
Who is the White Rabbit?
These are items on stage to help the actor make the play more realistic.
What are props?
What is the difference between a Scene and an Act in a play?
What is a scene is shorter and a portion of a longer act?
What is a problem or drawback of drama?
What is it is expensive, it is dependent on the skill of the actors, it is a one-time event, limited by stage/set, etc.?