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The play begins when all the roads of the past converge at one crucial intersection in the present - in other words at the climax |
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Begins early in the story and does not compress the action but expands it. In the episodic drama the action moves outward to embrace additional elements. |
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A unit of action in a play (silent) |
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The event in a play that begins the action leading to the climax |
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The technical term for the revelation of background material. The revelation of information that the audience must know in order to understand the meanings the play write intends. |
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The moment when it is recognized if the force or counterforce is stronger. |
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What is the main responsibility of an audience member? |
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To not interfere with other audience member experience, and to use your imagination. |
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The experience of mentally entering. |
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Broadway Regional Repertory Amphitheater/Outside Greek Theater College/University/H.S. |
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Full account of an event or a series of events usually told in chronological order. |
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A selection of scenes taken from the story. |
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2 ingredients to make a plot work: |
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1)Action: what a character is going after 2)Conflict: what arises when the action encounters a) a complication or b) something that interferes with the action |
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5 structural rules/conventions of text |
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1)limited space 2)limited time 3)strongly opposed forces (protagonist/antagonist) 4)balance of forces 5)incentive and motivation |
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(physical) Things thrown in the pathway of the character |
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Outside things that add a new twist in the plot |
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most common structure of a play (climax forms at end) usually occurs in a short amount of time with few characters. |
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more like Shakespeare. Epic. Climax is usually at the beginning and resolved at the end. Usually over a longer period of time and many characters. |
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The proscenium stage is also known as the |
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Advantages of the proscenium stage |
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offers many oppurtunities for spectacle. can hold realistic scenery |
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Disadvantage of a proscenium stage |
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The thrust space has the audience on how many sides? |
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Most popular venue for today: |
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Advantages of a Thrust Space: |
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-More intimate (audience closer to the stage) -You can also hide spectacle |
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Disadvantages of a Thrust space: |
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-Can't hide bigger spectacle -Not a side space for actors to go to |
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The audience is on how many sides of an Arena space? |
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Advantages of an arena space: |
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-Nothing separating you from actors/action -More intimate than the Proscenium stage and the thrust |
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Disadvantages of the Arena Space: |
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-You can't hide spectacle -Can't use large scenic pieces |
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Advantages of modified/found spaces: |
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Disadvantages of modified/found spaces: |
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-No spectacle -No exits for actors |
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French word meaning "category" or "type" In theatre, genre denotes the category into which a play falls: for example, tragedy, comedy, tragicomedy. |
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