Term
|
Definition
-made Brecht's epic theatre
-used history to comment on history
-reminded audience they were in the theatre |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
alienated the audience, so they would think and not feel |
|
|
Term
How did Brecht remind the audience they were in the theatre? |
|
Definition
-used open stagecraft
-put musical numbers into his plays
- used puppets
- used narrators
-used film |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- wrote the play "Waiting for Godot"
-made his characters be stuck in bizarre situations
- his plays had circular/static plots
-used sparse language |
|
|
Term
Name the 5 trends in contemporary theatre |
|
Definition
1. adaptations in history & literature
2. Non-traditional movement
3. Puppetry
4. use of video/film
5. docudrama/ethnography |
|
|
Term
Adaptations of History & Literature |
|
Definition
-adapations of novels
-exploration of historic events/people |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- use of clowing/mime/acrobatics
- physical acting styles (i.e viewpoints)
- often combined with classical texts |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- used to enhance/tell the story
-create fantasy worlds |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- create scenery
- contract reality vs scenic reality |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- combines elements of drama & documentary
-dramatizes real peoples' words
- based on true events, speeches, interviews |
|
|
Term
Film/Television Adaptations |
|
Definition
-film translated to stage (and back again)
- musicals and non-musicals |
|
|
Term
Who is Stephen Adly Guirgis? |
|
Definition
- a playwright, actor, and director
- an artistic director of the LABrynth Theater in NYC
- writer for NYPD Blue & the Sopranos |
|
|
Term
What is the Last Days of Judas about? |
|
Definition
- a fictionalized court case of Judas Iscariot, set in purgatory |
|
|
Term
Who wrote the Last Days of Judas? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
When did the Last Days of Judas premeire? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What did Stephen Adly Guirgis do when he was writing The Last Days of Judas? |
|
Definition
-consulted with a catholic priest |
|
|
Term
Who are the witnesses in the Last Days of Judas? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are the two functions of an actor? |
|
Definition
1. to create an intellectual and emotional illusion
2. to project the illusion from stage to audience |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
behaving truthfully under imaginary circumstances |
|
|
Term
What are the four actor's tools? |
|
Definition
1. body
2. voice
3. imagination
4. intellect |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
how should the actors move, walk, stand? |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
how does the actor behave like the character? |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
What does the character mean?
How is the audience going to react? |
|
|
Term
What are the two type of training an actor must go through? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What kind of movement training does the actor undergo? |
|
Definition
1. flexibility
2. strength training
3. dance training
4. stage combat
|
|
|
Term
Why does the actor undergo movement training? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the actor learns how to change their movement to how the character would move (we have our own unique way of moving and we need it to be how the character would move) |
|
|
Term
What kind of voice training does the actor undergo? |
|
Definition
-projection
-articulation
-singing training
-dialects |
|
|
Term
Why does the actor undergo voice training? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are the 4 stages that the actor goes through? |
|
Definition
1. preparation
2. rehearsal
3. performance
4. end results |
|
|
Term
How does the actor prepare? |
|
Definition
-by analyzing the script and the character
- analyze the given circumstances
- what does the character want?
- what does the character say?
- how does the character say it?
-what does the character mean?
-what does the character do?
- what do others say about the character? |
|
|
Term
What are the given circumstances? |
|
Definition
all the information the playwright has given in the script |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the hidden meaning in the play/ the characters' actions |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
most of the time it is inferred, but sometimes it is written in the play |
|
|
Term
What does an actor do during rehearsal? |
|
Definition
- rehearsal process
- collaboration
- improvisation
- curiosity
- willing to fail
- lines & blocking |
|
|
Term
What is the rehearsal process? |
|
Definition
experimentation then selection |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
learning to adapt & respond |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
wanting to discover something new about the character/ the situation/ the play |
|
|
Term
What is the "lines and blocking" part of the actor's rehearsal? |
|
Definition
memorizing the lines and blocking |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is important in the performace part of the stages the actor's must go through? |
|
Definition
- having energy
- being "in the moment"
- knowing your space
- feeding off other actors/ the audience
|
|
|
Term
What are the end results of the actor's stages? |
|
Definition
- stage presence
- consistent performances
- safety
- believability
- artistic integrity |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
an actor's ability to draw in the audience's attention |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are the three things the designer does? |
|
Definition
1. support the performers
2. create the world of the play
3. inform the audience of what is going on |
|
|
Term
What are the 4 main types of designers? |
|
Definition
1. scenic designer
2. costume designer
3. lighting designer
4. sound designer |
|
|
Term
What are 4 other types of designers? |
|
Definition
1. make-up designer
2. properties designer
3. video/animation designer
4. puppet designer |
|
|
Term
What does a scenic designer do? |
|
Definition
-all scenic elements: color, texture, lines, perspective
- furniture (finding it/buying it)
- creates drawings and models |
|
|
Term
What does a costume designer do? |
|
Definition
-reveals/completes the character
- chooses the props tied to a character
- creates costume renderings |
|
|
Term
What does a lighting designer do? |
|
Definition
- chooses the illumination
- chooses what to highlight, shadow, color
- creates light plots
(a blueprint for lighting) |
|
|
Term
What does a sound designer do? |
|
Definition
-composes/chooses the music
- chooses/creates the sound effects |
|
|
Term
What does a make-up designer do? |
|
Definition
-illuminates the actor's face
- uses creative effects
(animals, injuries, prosthetics) |
|
|
Term
What does a properties designer do? |
|
Definition
- small objects on stage, not tied to costume
-set dressing |
|
|
Term
What does the video/animation designer do? |
|
Definition
- creates interactive effects
-can create the videos/animations used as scenery |
|
|
Term
What does the puppet
designer do? |
|
Definition
- makes fantasy worlds with puppets
-there are international styles of puppets |
|
|
Term
What is the designer's
process? |
|
Definition
1. read the script
2. meet with the director
3. research, create collages
4. initial drawings
5. consult w/ the director, other designers
6. finalize designs: renderings, models, blue prints
7. build process |
|
|
Term
Early Women's Roles:
Women in the time of the Greeks and Shakespeare |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Were women allowed in the audience during the time of the Greeks? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Were women allowed in the audience during the time of Shakespeare? |
|
Definition
yes, but they were mostly prostitutes |
|
|
Term
The actress/ prostiture overlap |
|
Definition
women were used as entertainment |
|
|
Term
What were women who danced and played music called in Greece? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
women in Japan that performed satires and danced
-- theatres were linked to brothels |
|
|
Term
What were women entertainers called in the U.S? |
|
Definition
Ziegfield girls
*they were Broadway girls |
|
|
Term
Why were women banned from stage? |
|
Definition
considerred too dangerous and scintilating |
|
|
Term
When women were banned from the stage, what did people in India do? |
|
Definition
men played women's roles until the 1870s |
|
|
Term
When were women banned from the stage in Japan? |
|
Definition
women were banned in 1629 |
|
|
Term
When were women banned from the stage in Europe? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
In Europe what did women actually perform in? |
|
Definition
- medieval pageants (bible stories)
- Italian Improv comedy |
|
|
Term
Who performed the parts of women in plays in Europe until some time after Shakespeare? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Is gender flexible onstage? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What was first applied to theatre in the 1980s? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
How early were feminist ideas applied works? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What do the roles of men/women tell us about? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a collection of scenes/images/ sounds given to the audience in which the audience decides what is happening/they get the general impression of what is happening |
|
|
Term
What are the characteristics of women and theatre? |
|
Definition
- montage
- non- linear
- gender switching
- role doubling |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
when an actor plays two or more roles |
|
|
Term
What does non-linear mean? |
|
Definition
jumping back & forth in time |
|
|
Term
What is gender switching? |
|
Definition
when actors of one gender play the opposite gender |
|
|
Term
Who are 5 women in theater today? |
|
Definition
1. Anna Deavere Smith
2. Julie Taymor
3. Eve Ensler
4. Anne Bogart
5. Sarah Ruhl |
|
|
Term
Who is Anna Deavere Smith? |
|
Definition
- actress, playwright
- examines current events through interviews-- docudrama
- typically will perform all the characters
- explores identities: gender, racial, ethnic |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- a director and designer
- studied bunraku
- works in theatre, opera, and film
-adapts film for stage |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Japanese puppetry used in Lion King |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- a playwright and actor
- her plays explore women's bodies and sexuality
|
|
|
Term
What play did Eve Ensler write? |
|
Definition
The Vagina Monologues-- based on interviews - use of humor and oral history
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a director that founded the SITI Company
-she thinks three things are important |
|
|
Term
What are the three things that Anne Bogart thinks are important in theatre? |
|
Definition
1. something to say
2. technique
3. passion |
|
|
Term
What style of acting did Anne Bogart develop? |
|
Definition
the viewpoints style of acting |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-uses blend of styles: realistic, nonrealistic, etc.
- bringing myth into the present
-examination of male&female roles
- challenging use of design |
|
|
Term
What did queer mean in the beginning? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What happened to the term queer? |
|
Definition
LGBT community reclaimed it |
|
|
Term
What does queer mean today? |
|
Definition
something that doesn't conform to the normative |
|
|
Term
What does queer theatre focus on? |
|
Definition
studying and questioning the mainstream |
|
|
Term
What is a stereotype about gay men and theatre? |
|
Definition
that all gay men love musical theatre |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-allows people to become something else
-allows people too celebrate who they are |
|
|
Term
Until ___, querness was downplayed by playwrights |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
How were early gay characters portrayed? |
|
Definition
as flamboyent and effeminate |
|
|
Term
How were early lesbian characters portrayed? |
|
Definition
as destructive, seductive, decadent, doomed, and unhappy |
|
|
Term
How were gay and lesbian stereotypes used in theatre? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What was the first American play that is completely about homosexuality? |
|
Definition
Boys in the Band by Mart Crowley
(1968) |
|
|
Term
What was Boys in the Band about? |
|
Definition
8 gay men from different backgrounds
-suggested that gay men were unhappy |
|
|
Term
What homosexual play compares "gay" versus "straight" behavior? |
|
Definition
La Cage aux Folles by Harvey Fierstein and Jerry Herman
(1973) |
|
|
Term
What play uses a lot of camp? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
satirical humor that uses extreme stereotypes |
|
|
Term
What was one of the first plays about AIDs? |
|
Definition
The Normal Heart by Larry Kramer (1985)
|
|
|
Term
What is The Normal Heart about? |
|
Definition
- it is a critique of the govts innaction in the face of the AIDs epidemic
- criticizes the gay culture for promiscuity |
|
|
Term
What is Angels in America about? |
|
Definition
- addresses American identity, destiny, history
-religion and spirituality
- gay & straight relationships |
|
|
Term
What is the Laramie Project? |
|
Definition
- A Brechtian docudrama
- created from interviews, journals, news clips
-combat homophobia / hate crimes |
|
|
Term
Who wrote the Laramie Project? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What play is about a German transgendered person named Charlotte Von Mahlsdorf? |
|
Definition
I am My Own Wife by Doug Wright (2003) |
|
|
Term
What is I am My Own Wife based on? |
|
Definition
real interviews with Charlotte Von Mahlsdorf, who survived Nazi and Communist Germany despite being transgendered |
|
|
Term
What form of theatre is a celebration of life, has emotional impact, and is complex and changing? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What was the first American musical? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- had french ballet fancers + American melodrama
-toured for 40 years |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a play that incorporates music and uses spectacle and lots of emotion |
|
|
Term
What was the first black musical on Broadway?
|
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
vaudeville comedy, ragtime, and opera |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- a musical about workers & entertainers
- had a subplot about interracial relationships |
|
|
Term
What musical firmly establishes the form of the American musical? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What musical was written by the Gershwins? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is Porgy & Bess referred to as? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is Porgy and Bess about? |
|
Definition
- a black tenement on Catfish Row
- music invokes mood, atmosphere |
|
|
Term
What musical is a love story set in the American plains? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- it does not have a kickline!
- uses contemporary folk dance |
|
|
Term
What musical is about immigrants in NY? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is West Side Story an update of? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What tells the story in West Side Story? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who is Stephen Sonheim and what did he write? |
|
Definition
- edgy, musically complex work
-he wrote:
- Sweeney Todd
- Into the Woods
- Assassins |
|
|
Term
Who is Andrew Lloyd Weber and what did he write? |
|
Definition
- an internationall successful composer
- began theatre merchandising
- used reality tv to cast his musicals
wrote: Jesus Christ Superstar
Cats
The Phantom of the Opera |
|
|
Term
What is the Rock Musical? |
|
Definition
where songwriters use rock music to tell a larger story |
|
|
Term
What was popular in the 1960s and revived by Rent in the 1990s? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Where do ideas for theatre come from today? |
|
Definition
- original ideas
- movie/tv adaptations
- jukebox musicals
- literary adaptations |
|
|
Term
What is a jukebox musical? |
|
Definition
takes an existing body of work by an artist and creates a production around it |
|
|
Term
Where is commercial theatre centered? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
When did Broadway begin and who developed it? |
|
Definition
it was developed in the 20th century and the Theatre Syndicate monopolozed the area |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- it draws big talent
- it has a tourist audience
- it is a risky investment |
|
|
Term
What succeeds on Broadway? |
|
Definition
- musicals
- light comedy
- proven imports
- revivals
- serious plays
- plays like Stomp! and Blue Man Group |
|
|
Term
What do the most successful Broadway production receive? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What does it mean when someone is trying to get their EGOT? |
|
Definition
emmy, grammy, oscar, tony |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-centered in Greenwich Village
- trial ground New York
-young artists
- there are smaller theatres
- lower cost
|
|
|
Term
What do "off-broadway" production receive as an award? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Where is regional theatre? |
|
Definition
outside NYC
-widespread around the U.S. |
|
|
Term
What does every major city have? |
|
Definition
regional professional theatre |
|
|
Term
What is the longest running regional professional theatre? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is regional professional theatre a source for? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What does regional professional theatre develop? |
|
Definition
new audiences, plays, and playwrights |
|
|
Term
What is senior adult theatre? |
|
Definition
Theatre for people over 50
with audiences of all ages
-provides creative opportunities for people in retirement
-educates people about the issue of aging |
|
|
Term
What was the firs senior adult theatre? |
|
Definition
The Senior Repertory of Ohio
(Columbus, 1984) |
|
|
Term
What theatre group is a children's theatre group? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What type of theatre introduces students to performing arts and is the most conservative? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
When did college theatre become big? |
|
Definition
After WWII as a result of the GI bill |
|
|
Term
What is community theatre? |
|
Definition
-used a recreation and for experimentation
- supported by local businesses |
|
|
Term
What does outdoor drama do? |
|
Definition
- celebrates area history
-uses a lot of spectacle |
|
|
Term
Name four notable outdoor dramas: |
|
Definition
- Trumpet in the Land
- Tecumseh
- Blue Jacket
- The Living Word |
|
|
Term
Why does live interaction make a difference? |
|
Definition
- we can see things in 3D
- get a broad view
-the audience chooses where to focus
- important to remember in a digital age
-collaboration is an important skill |
|
|
Term
Every aspect of theatre is a _________. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
There is a difference between _____ _____ & how it is ______. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Can a realistic story be told in a presentational way? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What does live interaction focus on? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What does live interaction try to do? |
|
Definition
capture what it is to be human |
|
|