Term
American Selective Realism |
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Definition
playwrights like Tennessee Williams (A Streetcar Named Desire, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof), Arthur Miller (Death of a Salesman, A View from the Bridge), and Edward Albee heightened certain details of action, scenery, and dialouge while omitting others; hence SELECTIVE realism. |
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antiestablishment playwrights who dealt with dissolving British Empire, class conflict, and political disillusionment; slightly modified realism. |
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German movement in the 1960's that was based on historical documents; their goal being to convince audiences they were watching history unfold. |
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Term
Antecedents to American Musical |
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Definition
vaudeville (variety acts), burlesque (dramatic sketches/songs that satirized other theatrical forms), minstrel shows (variety show were white performers wore blackface), and operettas (romantic musical peice featuring melodic solos, duets, and choruses interspersed with spoken dialouge). |
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wrote Little Johnny Jones and Forty-Five Minutes From Broadway; his musical shows featured songs w/American flavor and more realistic dialouge, and better plot development. |
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frivolous, silly songs which emerged from American musicals. |
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innovative w/carefully integrated songs and no chorus. |
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Term
Rodgers & Hammerstein: Oklahoma! |
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Definition
the duo began the era of the American book musical that seamlessly unifies story, music, lyrics, and dance. Oklahoma was choreographed by Agnes de Mille. |
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built around an idea rather than a story. |
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