The Process & Roles
Performance Styles
Performance Elements & TEAM
Production Elements
Miscellaneous
100

This is the step in the theatre-making process that includes research, asking questions, and generating initial ideas for a piece of theatre.

What is Inquiry?

100

This style of theater breaks the "fourth wall" and often includes song, dance, and larger-than-life characters.

What is Musical Theatre?

100

a performance element that specifically uses facial expressions, gestures, and stance to communicate to an audience.

What is Body Language or Movement?

100

This design element uses flats, backdrops, and props to create the physical environment on stage.

What is Scenic or Set Design?

100

This is the underlying purpose or message that a theatre-maker wants to communicate to the audience.

What is Intentions?

200

The theatre making role responsible for generating the ideas and writing a script/story for a piece of theatre.

What is the Creator?

200

This style of performance relies on a single actor using only body movements, gestures, and facial expressions to tell a story without speaking.

What is Mime?

200

a performance element that you warm-up using tongue twisters, breathing exercises, etc.

What is Voice?

200

The use of specific noises to create an atmosphere or signify an action, such as a phone ringing or a door slamming.

What are Sound Effects or Sound Design?

200

This type of stage configuration has the audience seated on two opposite sides of the playing space, creating a runway-like effect.

What is Traverse?

300

This is the final step in the theatre-making process AFTER Presenting/Performing.

What is Evaluating?

300

A modern form of drama that presents real events and testimonies to expose and analyze social or political issues.

What is Documentary Theatre?

300

This is what T.E.A.M. stands for in terms of moments within a piece of theatre.

What is Tension, Emotion, Atmosphere, and Meaning?

300

The manipulation of a light source's brightness, which can be used to direct the audience's focus or create a specific mood.

What is Intensity?

300

These are the two IB Theatre assessments we will work on this school year.

What is the Production Proposal and Solo Theatre Piece?

400

The role responsible for the overall vision of a production. This person leads the actors and designers in meeting the intentions and audience impact of a piece of theatre.

What is the Director?

400

This form of theater, popularized by Antonin Artaud, uses intense sensory experiences and shocks the audience with visceral imagery and sound to confront their deepest anxieties.

What is Theatre of Cruelty?

400

This element of T.E.A.M. is the dominant emotional feeling or mood created by the play's dramatic action and all of its production elements. It is the overall feeling a performance evokes in an audience.

What is Atmosphere?

400

The use of different fabrics and surfaces to reflect light, create visual interest, and suggest a character's social status or personality.

What is Texture?

400

Based on IB Theatre rubric command terms, you don't want to LIST or OUTLINE, but rather one of these Level 3 and 4 level terms.

What is DESCRIBE or EXPLAIN?

500

This is the number of steps in the theatre-making process and the same number of main roles in the theatre-making process.

What is four (4)?

500

A style developed by Bertolt Brecht that uses techniques like narration and placards to alienate the audience, encouraging them to think critically rather than just emotionally.

What is Epic Theatre?

500

three performance elements to use and practice as a performer in theatre.

What is Movement Skills, Vocal Work, Breathing Exercises, Relaxation Exercises, Characterization Exercises, Focus and Concentration Exercises, Energizing Exercises, Use of Emotions, Use of space, Working with others, and Eye Contact?

500

a list of five different production elements.

What is scenic/set, props, costume, hair, makeup, light, sound, and special effects?
500

This type of staging involves the audience moving freely through the performance space, following the actors as they move from one location to another.

What is Promenade?