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Theater
terms
101
Film, Theatre & Television
Undergraduate 1
12/09/2012

Additional Film, Theatre & Television Flashcards

 


 

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Term
Apron
Definition

part of the stage closest to audience in front of proscenium. extends past proscenium. Elizabethan theater has no proscenium so the entire stage is basicallt an apron stage.

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Term
arena theater
Definition
audience sits on all sides of the stage
Term
catharsis
Definition
emotional cleansing initiated by tragic experience; for the character it is the recognition and acceptance of his or her error; for the audience it is the sum total of the pity and fear created by the play.
Term
ceremony
Definition
action performed formally and meant to sanction a religious, social, or political contept. Lacks the deeper significance of a ritual. Ex) graduation or swearing in
Term
choreography
Definition
arrangement and movement of performers onstage. orchestrated movement of actors, dancers, stage combat
Term
choric speech
Definition
spoken by a group; describes offstage action
Term
chorus
Definition
group (usually 12-15) of singer-dancers in greek drama. participate in or comment on the action of the play. In elizabethan theater, the chorus was one person who spoke prologue, epilogue, and commented on action
Term
City Dionysia
Definition
spring festivals held in honor of Dionysus in reek city-states; tragic and comic plays were presented there
Term
comedy
Definition
primary dramatic genre that ends happily and treats subject matter lightly
Term
diction
Definition
one of Aristotle's six elements of drama; language of the play and the manner in which it is spoken; also refers to clarity with which actors speak
Term
dikē
Definition
greek for "the natural order of things"
Term
Dionysia
Definition
communal celebrations in ancient Greece held in honor of the god Dionysus; central to event was a three day theatrical competition
Term
Dionysus
Definition
Greek god of wine and-by extension-creativity, passion, and irrational behavior
Term
dithyramb
Definition
hymns sung in honor of Dionysis in ancient greece; according to Aristotle, these hymns gradually developed into plays
Term
drama
Definition
composition in verse or prose that portrays the actions of characters in conflict; the literary form of a play; a series of events involving intense conflict
Term
drao
Definition

greek for "to act" or "to do"

"drama" derives from this term

Term
episode
Definition

advance storyline

equivalent of an act in a greek play

Term
epode
Definition
lyric poem sung by greek chorus in tragedy; one of three parts of stasimon
Term
exodos
Definition
formal song of exit for greek chorus; sums up meaning of the play. Ex) last choric speech in Oedipus
Term
farce
Definition
comic genre depends on an elaboritely contrived, usually improbably plot, broadly drawn stock characters, and physical humor. exist to entertain. amoral.
Term
foreshadowing
Definition
hint at events or actions to come. creates suspense.
Term
genre
Definition

category of play characterized by form, style, and content

ex) tragedy, comedy, melodrama, farce

Term
hamartia
Definition
greek. means "missing the mark". refers to the tragic flaw or error in judgment that leads to downfall of tragic hero
Term
hubris
Definition
tragic flaw. usually ascribed to excessive pride or arrogance. Ex) Oedipus thought he could escape fate, Creon thought he could go against the gods, prometheus stole fire from the gods
Term
hypokrites
Definition
originl greek term for "actor" meant "answerer"
Term
imitation
Definition
representing another person through voice and gesture. one of the founding principles of theatrical arts.
Term
irony
Definition
unexpected reversal of fortune in a drama in which characters expect exact opposite of what occurs. 2. dramatic irony is when a character is deprived of knowledge that other characters and the audience share
Term
low comedy
Definition
comedy that usually relies on physical humor or cruel wordplay. less sophisticated
Term
metatheater
Definition
dramatic genre that purposefully blurs the distinction between a play-as-a-work-of-art and life itself to establish a link between the artificial world of the stage and the real world of the audience
Term
mimesis
Definition
greek for imitation through physical and vocal means
Term
mythos
Definition
the story
Term
ode
Definition
song sung by chorus in greek play; usually between episodes of the plot. comment on action. strophes,antistrophes,epodes
Term
orchestra
Definition
the large circle in a greek thetaer in which the chorus sang, danced, and stood during a play. located between audience and logeion.
Term
peripeteia
Definition
aristotles term for reversal, when the fortunes of a protagonist dramatically change.
Term
perspective
Definition
technique used by sceneic designers of representing on a flat surface the spatial relation of objects as they might appear to the eye.
Sebastiano Sterlio. Bright painted scenery for comedy, dark toned scenery for tragedy.
Term
pit
Definition
seating (or standing) area immediately in front of the stage in restoration and 18th c theaters
Term
play
Definition
literary genre in which a story (plot) is presented by actors imitating characters before an audience.
Term
play-within-a-play
Definition
brief play inserted into the agtion of a larger play, often to comment on or illuminate the other play. EX) NOTHING ON in Noises off. Mousetrap play in Hamlet
Term
plot
Definition
first of aristotles six elements. structure of a play's storyline
Term
poetic justice
Definition
moral doctrine that requires that the good be rewarded and the bad be punished. influential on the resolution of melodramas and sentimental comedies
Term
poetics
Definition
aristotles treatise on dramatic theory and stage practice; defines and discusses tragedy
Term
praxis
Definition
action of a story, arrangement of events of the story calculated to bring about a desired respinse from the audience
Term
prologue
Definition
opening action of a greek play. usually a dialogue between two or three characters. establishes problem of play. it now refers to an opening section that is not part of the first scene or act.
Term
proscenium
Definition
picture frame stage. separates the stage from the auditorium and provides the arch that frames it. Ex) pineapple on proscenium arch in peter and the star catcher
Term
recognition
Definition
a character discovers a truth previously unknown. in tragedy it is the awareness of the error in judgment that leads to the character's downfall
Term
reversal
Definition
dramatic change of fortune. in tradgedy its what leads to the character's downfall, in comedy, it brings about a happy ending
Term
ritual
Definition
formal and customarily repeated act that holds more significance than a ceremony. ex) baptism, wedding
Term
scene
Definition
secondary division of a play. acts may be divided into scenes
Term
scenery
Definition
backdrops, furniture, other visual accessories that help define locale and mood of a play
Term
set
Definition
scenery constructed fo a play, usually 3 d
Term
setting
Definition
locale of a plays action and scenic elements that help define it
Term
skene
Definition
hut or buliding that served as scenic background for greek theater. provided area for actors to change, masked their entrances, and denoted locale. 3-5 doors
Term
slapstick
Definition
physical humor; beatings, pratfalls, chases. Ex) Noises Off, 3 stooges
Term
spectacle
Definition
one of 6 aristotlean elements of drama; refers to visual elements of play--scenery, costume, movement, gesture, etc.
Term
sporagmos
Definition
scapegoat or sacrificial victim who takes on suffering for the greater good of the tribe or community. tragic hero. ex) Oedipus
Term
theatron
Definition
greek for "the seeing place" ; area of greek theater where audience sat
Term
thrust stage
Definition
surrounded by the audience on 3 sides
Term
tragedy
Definition
central character is conflicted by external or internal force. conflict ends disastrously for character and provokes fear and pity in audience
Term
Front-of-House
Definition
Anything from the business end of the theater. Open to the public
Term
House
Definition
Area from the door to the curtain
Term
booth
Definition
glass room where stage manager calls the show
Term
stage manager
Definition
supervisor of stage and actors
Term
house curtain
Definition
Closes the proscenium and serves as an indication of the beginning or end of an act or scene
Term
backstage
Definition
everything behind the curtain
Term
wings
Definition
area immediately adjacent to the stage
Term
legs
Definition
long, narrow curtains. mask backstage
Term
boarders (teasers)
Definition
Piece of MASKING that runs above the SCENERY horizontally, across the stage. Usually made of black velour.
Term
Batten
Definition
holds lights, legs, flies, or drops
Term
fly space
Definition
space above the stage
Term
Aristotles Six Elements
Definition
PLOT- the soul of tragedy
CHARACTER- moral fiber of the protagonist/ major characters
THOUGHT- theme/ how a moral or ethical choice is presented in the play, debated, talked about, explained, demonstrated
DICTION- the language, appropriateness of language to character who is speaking
SONG- the chorus
SPECTACLE- everything we see other than plot, character, thought, diction, song. Spectacle includes scenery, costumes, make-up, masks, kothourni, etc.
Term
Simple Plot
Definition
appeals to simpletons, character meets his/her doom through obvious obstacles. ex) disaster movies
Term
Complex plot
Definition
occurs when protagonist has a scene of recognition (right before the climax, protagonist understands that he/she is responsible for his/her own doom)
Recognition takes place at the same time as the reversal (characters fortunes completely flip)
Term
Black box (experimental)
Definition
explores audience-actor relationships. most flexible theater space. can be redesigned for each production
Term
found space
Definition
doing theater in a space not designed for theater
Term
grooved scenery
Definition
indigo jones
Term
realistic scenery
Definition
attempts to recreate a photographic representation of the real world on stage
Term
periaktos
Definition
a 3-sided revolving apparatus painted with scenery and used at each side of the stage in ancient Greek theaters.
Term
ekkyklema
Definition
wheeled platform rolled out through a skênê in ancient Greek theatre. used to bring interior scenes out into the sight of the audience.
used in tragedies for revealing dead bodies because it was sacrilegious to show a character dying on stage.
Term
box set
Definition
a proscenium arch stage and three walls. create the illusion of an interior room on the stage. Attributed to Tom Robertson
Term
mechane
Definition
Crane used in Greek theatre,made of wooden beams and pulley systems, used to lift an actor into the air, deus ex machina
Term
extreme representational theater
Definition
the fourth wall
Term
Aldolphe Appia
Definition
3D characters, 3D scenery, levels, opposition to realistic scenery
Term
Gordon Craig
Definition
overwhelming, towering sets. Sets extend up past proscenium arch. opposition to realistic scenery.
Term
Objectives of scene design
Definition
1. create environment for actor
2. set tone and style of production
3. establish and evoke locale and period of play
4. provide central image or metaphor for production
Term
Objectives of Lighting Design
Definition
1. provide visibility
2. enhance actors
3. has element of surprise and discovery
4. illuminates subject of play
5. use shadows for effect
Term
warm light
Definition
imitates sun (brightness)
yellows, pinks
Term
cool light
Definition
darkness, mystery, night time
blues, magentas
Term
General Illumination
Definition
whole stage lit at same level
Term
Specific Illumination
Definition
various areas lit to focus audience attention
Term
Highlighting
Definition
Combined General and specific illumination
Term
Objectives of Costumes
Definition
1. identify status and personality
2. separate chaarcters visually
3. meet the needs of individual performers
4. evoke and indicate time&place
5. express mood and style of play
Term
Objectives of Make-up
Definition
1. highlight features that wash out under bright light
2. indicate age and age progression
3. should observe style and mood of play
Term
4 levels of discourse
Definition
Mythic: the characters are infinitely above us (gods)
Heroic: characters are human, still above us. have flaws/ weaknesses and qualities we want to emulate (tragedy)
Realistic: we see ourselves in the characters (good comedy, good serious play)
Ironic: characters are below us, we look down on them and usually find them funny ex) farce
Term
Principles of Comedy
Bergson's "On Laughter"
Definition
1. Strictly HUMAN. We laugh at animals because they are exhibiting human characteristics. We laugh at hats because of the way they were made by people.
2. ABSENCE OF FEELING. All logos. aesthetic distance.
3. SENSE OF COMMUNITY. We laugh in a group. implies a secret complicity with others. fuller the theater the more uncontrollable the laughter of audience.
4. LACK OF ELASTICITY: When a person falls, we laugh because it was unintentional and because it was due to a rigidity of momentum or inelasticity. HUMAN BODY must remind us of a MACHINE.
Term
Aristotle's Poetics says...
Definition
immitation is an essential part of being a human being.
Tragedy is better than comedy because it appeals to our best instincts of imitation. We look up to characters in a tragedy and strive to imitate them
Term
scrim
Definition
piece of gauze cloth that appears opaque until lit from behind, used as a screen or backdrop.
Term
cyclorama
Definition
curved backdrop at the rear of a theater stage, extends around to the proscenium arch in a U-shape; usually painted to simulate the sky.
Term
drop
Definition
curtain that can be lowered and raised onto a stage from the flies; often used as background scenery
Term
green room
Definition
backstage room for performers to rest when not on stage
Term
follow spot
Definition
high-intensity spotlight used to follow action
Term
spotlight
Definition
strong beam of light that illuminates only a small area, used especially to center attention on a stage performer.
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