9/24 Lists of terms



Things I am solid on:


Stage Directions (DL, DC, DR, CL, CC, CR, UL, UC, CR)

Dialogue- Back and forth conservation between 2 or more characters

Monologue- One character talking on stage

Set-pieces- Do not move

The Forth Wall- the invisible wall, not supposed to interact with the audience (although some performances require it)

Projections- How loud you can project your voice on a stage

Enunciation- level of clarity you pronounce with words with on stage


Faical expressions- emotions and reactions

Body language- communication by movement



Cue lines- tell the actor when to start



Narrator- person who tells the story

Characters in play

Point of view- (I, you, him her, or God's view, Limited point of view)

Setting- Takes place

Climax- Most intense part

Conflict- struggles between characters

Genre-
1. Musical
2. Straight- drama, fiction, comedy, poetry,

Protagonist= Main character
Antagonists+ Conflicting character

Plot- Events that happen in the play
Rising action
Climax
Falling action
Resolution




Things I am still not sure of:

Stage crew- help with the production of the play

Cast- the actors

Given circumstances- What we know about the character

Ensemble- Made up of cast and stage crew

Structure- acts, scenes, prologue, epilogue

Blocking- Precise positions or movement of the actors on stage, controlled by the director

Props- coustunes

Types of theater:
1. Black box- simple performance space, large square black room
2. Proscenium stage- Auditorium, With a arch around the stage
3. Theater in the round- Audience surrounds the stage from all sides.
4. Thrust Theatre- Stage extends into the audience, audiences sit in three sides



Stage Pictures- Creating an image for the audience thats shows the role

Motivation- Why am I doing this? Objectives, you face obstacles

Famous People:
Uta Hagen- 9 Questions
Constantin Stanislavski- realist acting
Viola Spolin- theater games (improvisation)


Structure of a play:
Acts- part of the play broken up
Scenes- one part of a act

Order in what a play happens:
Exposition- the writer's way to give background information to the audience about the setting and the characters of the story.

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