“All the World’s a stage…” William Shakespeare
DRAMA
Comes
from the Greek word
‘dran’
Means ‘To act’ or ‘To do’
The doing/acting makes drama
DRAMA…
…is a story told in front of an audience.
TERMS
PLAYWRIGHT- the author of the play
PLOT- action of the play
SETTING- time and place
ACTS- Divisions within a play (much like chapters in a novel)
SCENES- smaller parts of an act.
ASIDE- lines that are spoken by a character directly to the audience.
DRAMATIC SPEECH
DIALOGUE- conversation between or among actors. It reveals the most about a characters. MONOLOGUE- long speech by a single character
CONFLICT
Types of Conflict
Internal- Character has conflict within himself. External- Character has conflict with an outside force, person, animal, etc.
STAGE DIRECTIONS
Written in italics or found in brackets [ ]
Describes scenery, lighting, costumes, props, movement of characters and the their emotions.
C- Centre Stage
L- Stage Left
R- Stage Right
U- Upstage or Rear
D- Down Stage or Front
THEATRE
Where a play takes place SET
Construction on the stage that shows time/place
Could also be called
Scenery
PROPS
Small moveable items that the actors use to make the actions look real
CHARACTERIZATION
The playwright’s technique for creating believable characters.
Each character has a motivation which influences his actions and decision. TYPES OF DRAMA
COMEDY- form of
drama that has a happy ending.
Humour comes from the dialogue and situations. TYPES OF DRAMA
TRAGEDY- drama in
which the events lead to the downfall of the main character, usually because of his own actions. This character often a person of great significance, like a king or a hero.
Function of tragedy was to create pity or fear in the audience which created a catharsis or emotional purging.
ITS FRAMEWORK
Characters are whom the audience cares about. The characters have a conflict or a problem
that