DRAM 115 - Quiz 2

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Neoclassicism's most famous "rule" is adherence to the three unities. What are they?

"Time, place and action" (the idea that a play's story should last as long as it takes the audience to watch it, that it should take place in a single setting, and have one main action)

What did "twelfth night" mean?

"What you will"

Shakespeare used iambic pentameter (5 metrical feet of "iambs") because it aided his actors in memorization, it carried imagery and metaphor better than prose, and because the rhythm echoes the human heartbeat. Sometimes, for effect, he changed the rhythm and used trochees (opposite to iambs) whose different rhythm caught the ear of the audience and allowed other words and images to be emphasized. A example of a word having the rhythm of a "trochee" is:

"allow"

What does momento mori mean?

"remember that you must die"

Commedia dell'arte

*"Comedy performed by professionals" *improvised plots with stock characters *lots of physical comedy *comic routines called "lazzi" *influenced Moliere's concept of characterization *popular through Europe during 1500s

Renaissance

*"rebirth" of classical thinking *move away form medieval thinking *embrace of classical thinking *celebration of human achievement *Humanism - celebrated the idea that humans had worth and value, life is worth embracing *studies focused on what it meant to be human (they studied lots of Greek and Roman things) *Invention of printing press *exploration of new world *scientific revalations *first theatre in Europe was based on classical roman design *HUGE CHANGES IN THINKING AND SELF PERCEPTION

Roman Comedy

*Atellan Farce *Plautus and Terence *Eliminated chorus, added more music *Comic devices - mistaken identities, eavesdropping, farce/physical humor

Why did Roman theatre collapse?

*Catholic church was rising and became official religion at the end of the 300s *The church looked down on impersonations; associated theatre with immorality *Church promised excommunication to any actor

Moliere

*Jean-Baptiste Poquelin *Had a law degree but fell in love and joined an acting company *learned by finding out what people liked

Roman Theaters

*Orchestra - cut in half; where rich people/dignitaries sat *Raised stage (pulpitum) separate from orchestra *Now in an enclosed building; totally artificial environment *Front scaena - huge back wall *Free-standing buildings *Stage house (scaena) - elaborate, formal background with 2-5 doorways (enclosed audience view) *Actors are only men (they were professionals) *Actors wore masks

Medieval Stage

*Platforms outside church - called "mansions" *Pageant wagons - with a changing area, elaborate costumes *Special effects - "Hell-mouths" with smoke and fire for sinners *Rising professionalism - actors, plays, music, spectacle *Audience goes to the theatre again

Roman Tragedy

*They barely did it *Seneca

Horace (65-8 BCE)

*Wrote "Ares Poetica" (the Art of Poetry), like Aristotle, influential to Renaissance authors *Recommended theatre should have a moral purpose as well as to entertain *"Teach and Please"

The Globe Theatre

*built just outside of London from remnants for The Theatre *sat about 3,000 people *stage about 5' high

Shakespeare's language

*early modern English *based on old english, latin, scandinavian, and french *he invented words (hostile, manager, obscene, addiction, investment, assassinate, writ, etc.)

Christopher Marlow

*first to write in iambic pentameter *Marlow's mighty lines *inspired Shakespeare's writing

Shakespeare

*joined the Lord Chamberlin's Men in London *Married Anne Hathaway and had Susanna 6 months later (maybe felt trapped in marriage)

Mystery Plays/Cycle Plays/Craft Plays

*performed by trade/craft guilds *performed around time of Feast of Corpus Christi *Stories from the bible *Organized into "cycles" of up to 48 plays that took days to perform *Civic as well as religious function *revived interest in drama *fostered a growing professionalism

Morality Plays

*performed by traveling professionals *plays featured the moral testing of a contemporary, Christian "everyman" *used distinctive form of allegory, where abstract ideas (death, greed, sloth, good deeds, etc.) are given personal form (a dramatic character)

With no religious sanction of theatre...

*plays turn to secular subjects *classical texts offer "new" forms *national drama can now develop (each country had their own style of theatre) *no civic support - theatre must now be commercial and make money *relationship to society now changed *plays had to be something people wanted to see

Seneca (5 BCE - 65 BCE)

*wrote "closet dramas" influential to Renaissance authors (Shakespeare) *Subject/Treatment: violent, bloody, featuring revenge, ghosts, magic, and the supernatural *Five-Act form *Focus on psychological motivation (talking on stage about feelings) *Use of soliloquies and asides to audience

What significance did the ban on religious drama have on theatre?

- Increased focus on classical and secular texts - Theatre no longer was a community sponsored event - Encouraged the rise of the professional acting troupe - Theatre not had to survive on its commercial and artistic merits

Shakespeare used Iambic Pentameter because...

- It aided in the memorization for the actors - It imitated classical forms - It carried imagery and metaphor better than prose - It echoed human heartbeat

Comic devices implemented by "New Comedy" included:

- Mistaken identities - Eavesdropping - Farce/Physical Humor

What aspect(s) of Elizabethan stage practice does Shakespeare elucidate when a character in one of his plays (Henry V) says to the audience, "Think, when we talk of horses, that you see them/Printing their proud hoofs in the receiving earth;/For 'tis your thoughts that now must deck our kings,/Carry them here and there; jumping o'er times,/Turning the accomplishment of many years/Into an hour-glass..."

- The audience's imagination was utilized - The stage utilized a generalized playing area - Time and space were sometimes compressed - Few realistic stage settings were used

Elements of a Senecan Tragedy

-5 Acts -Soliloquy/aside/confidante -Elaborate speeches -Proverbial statements -Preoccupation with magic/death/supernatural -Single Passion -Evil of unrestrained emotion

Why use Iambic pentameter?

-Copied from Italian poets who were imitating classical authors -helps the actors speak images in text -helps the audience hear images in text -rhythm serves the climactic nature of English language -echoes the human heartbeat

What did Tartuffe have in terms of comic routines?

-lots of physical comedy -lazzi

What did the Renaissance bring on?

-moving away from medieval thinking -embrace of classical learning -celebration of human achievement -humanism

Elements of Neoclassicism:

-no chorus or soliloquies -no violence on stage -unity of time, place, and action

Mystery plays

-performed by trade guilds -were assigned stories related to their craft -civic as well as religious function -revived an interest in drama -fostered a growing professionalism -stories from the Bible

Describe the medieval stage.

-platforms outside stage (mansions) -pageant wagons- with a changing area, elaborate costumes -special effects (hell-mouths, smoke and fire) -rising professionalism

What happened after there were no religious sanctions of theatre?

-plays turn to secular subjects -classical texts offer "new" forms -national drama can now develop

What was characteristic after the fall of Rome?

-stability was gone -people clung to "the next life will be better" -people were illiterate -dialects formed

Morality play

-was about morality -performed by traveling professionals -plays featured the moral testing of a contemporary Christian "everyman"

Everyman seeks to impress three things:

1) An awareness of life's impermanence 2)An ability to discern the eternal in the midst of the transitory 3)A commitment to live life as if every day is your last

What two things must Malvolio do to earn Olivia's affection?

1) smile 2)wear yellow stocking with cross-guartering

What war was going on during Everyman?

100 Years War

How long does Everyman ask to be given to get his life in order?

12 years

Shakespeare's dates?

1564-1616

Shakespeares date

1564-1616

What years were Shakespeare alive?

1564-1616

When did William Shakespeare live?

1564-1616

By what year had morality plays disappeared?

1600

Corbus Christi year?

1624

When was the booming time for Roman theatre?

400s AD

Mystery plays were organized into cycles of up to how many plays?

48 plays, they took days to perform

Roman theatre peaked in

4th century BCE (300s)

When did the revival of drama in the church take place?

925 CE

Laturgical drama period?

9th and 10th century

Who does Everyman represent?

A broader humanity that must come to terms with death

What does a rhyming couplet signify?

A character searching for an answer

Cousin cannot travel with Everyman because of what?

A cramp in his toe

What is a closet drama?

A drama not performed when written because of political, technical, or cultural barriers or because they were intended to be only read.

EVERYMAN, the most famous example of a "morality" play, utilized the technique of giving abstract concepts (like death, strength, beauty, knowledge) human form. This technique is called __________.

Allegory

What distinctive form did morality plays use?

Allegory

Stock characters

An improvised style of comedy from the north of Italy called Atellan farce contributed what important feature to comic drama?

In Tartuffe, how is the action resolved?

An officer of the King intervenes on Orgon's behalf

M. Loyal

An officer of the law who serves Orgon's eviction papers.

Appears at the very end of the play with Everyman's Book of Reckoning to receive Everyman's soul

Angel

Who did Shakespeare marry?

Anne Hathaway

A figure of speech in which an opposition or contrast of ideas is expressed by parallelism of words that are the opposites of or strongly contrasted with each other

Antithesis

Cares for Sebastian

Antonio

Who coined Neoclassicism?

Aristotle

Why will Olivia swear off men?

Because she is mourning the loss of her brother, and her father

Why can Good Deeds not travel with Everyman?

Because she is so weak, Everyman paid no attention to her

Mystery plays, performed in cycles, were expressions of civic pride as well as religious devotion. They were based upon _________ _________ and were built and performed by ___________ __________

Biblical Stories, Trade Guilds

Olivia is in love with...

Cesario

Elements of drama include:

Characters, Action, Spectacle, Audience

Who fled to France?

Charles I

A rhetorical or literary figure in which words, grammatical constructions, or concepts are repeated in reverse order, in the same or a modified form

Chiasmus

"New Comedy" eliminated the ________ and added more ________ by making actors sing their parts

Chorus, Music

Orgon's brother-in-law who tries to get everyone to view things with calm and reason

Cleante

Seneca wrote "__________ ________" that became influential to Renaissance authors such as Shakespeare

Closet Dramas

Roman theatre focused more on these types of plays

Comedies

These plays were mainly for the middle class, and they emphasized rules of the household and man's relationship to society

Comedy

This improvised comedy with stock, masked characters was hugely popular throughout Europe

Commedia dell'arte

Allows Everyman to confess and repent for his sins. There is some confusion in the text about whether Confession is male or female

Confession

A romance

Constantly experimenting with form and boundaries, Shakespeare wrote THE TEMPEST to be neither a tragedy or a comedy, but having elements of both. This new genre has since been called:

A friend of Everyman's, who deserts him along with Kindred. 'Cousin' means 'related', so when Kindred forsakes Everyman, it represents family members - and perhaps close friends - deserting him

Cousin

Stories from the bible

Cycle dramas were groups of mystery plays put together as a town's yearly tribute to the church and as an expression of civic pride. Mystery plays were:

Orgon's son and Elmire's stepson who tries to prove Tartuffe a hypocrite and succeeds only in having himself disinherited

Damis

God's "mighty messenger," who visits Everyman at the very start of the play to inform him that he is going to die and be judged by God

Death

Shakespeare was very good at...

Describing what it felt like to be alive

Most scholars maintain that drama most likely originates from a...

Desire to imitate and tell stories; rituals intended to control forces above; desire for entertainment; ceremonies performed to pass along traditions and beliefs

In Tartuffe, this element of drama is used to resolve the action

Deus Ex Machina

Liturgical Drama

Dialogue on a sacred subject, set to music and usually performed with action, and linked to the LITURGY

Mariane's maid who functions as a cunning manipulator and commentator on the actions of the play

Dorine

The clever servant (Tartuffe)

Dorine

Orsino is the...

Duke of Illyria

Allegory

EVERYMAN, the most famous example of a "morality" play, utilized the technique of giving abstract concepts (like death, strength, beauty, knowledge) human form. This technique is called __________.

Orgon's second wife who represents a reasonable attitude toward life

Elmire

cleante

Elmire's brother

Where was Everyman written? What timeframe?

England; fifteenth and sixteenth centuries

By the 12t century, tropes had become...

Entire plays, outside of the liturgy

One of the first plays to be published in England

Everyman

The most widely read and frequently produced play written before the Elizabethan age

Everyman

The representative of "every man" - of mankind in general. He dresses in fine clothes, and seems to have had led a wild and sinful life. Throughout the course of the play, he is told that he is going to die (and therefore be judged) and undergoes a pilgrimage in which he absolves himself of sin, is deserted by all of his friends apart from good deeds, and dies

Everyman

Turning point of Everyman

Everyman's encounter with Good Deeds

What was the Feast of Fools?

Everything was turned upside down

Moliére was not subsidized by King Louis the Sun G-d (True or False)?

False

Shakespeare invented about 500 words (True or False)?

False (1500)

Represents friendship. Everyman's friend and the very first one to forsake him. Fellowship suggests going drinking or consorting with women rather than going on a pilgrimage to death

Fellowship

When Shakespeare implemented an extra syllable in the last foot of a line it was regarded as a "____________ ____________"

Feminine Ending

Seneca created the ________ _____ form

Five Act

Represents the Five Senses: sight, hearing, touch, taste, smell. One of the second group of characters who deserts Everyman in the second half of the play

Five Wits

Iambic Pentameter

Five stressed syllables, five unstressed syllables

Madame Pernelle's maid

Flipote

After the Restoration, English theatre became more like _____________

French theatre

Atellan Farce

From Roman theatre; improvised sketches based on "stock characters"

Who brought Old English?

Germanic Angles and Saxons

In the video screened in class, "Shakespeare In Love," when Gwyneth Paltrow steps in to play "Juliet" why does that make everyone in the theatre gasp?

Girls and women were not permitted on the Elizabethan stage

Appears only at the very beginning of the play. Angry with the way humans are behaving on Earth, God summons Death to visit Everyman and call him to account

God

The only character who accompanies Everyman for his entire journey is _________ __________?

Good Deeds

The only character who does not forsake Everyman - and at the end of the play, accompanies him to his grave. Good Deeds represents Everyman's good actions - nice things that he does for other people

Good Deeds

Goods represents objects - goods, stuff, belongings - and when Everyman's goods forsake him, the play is hammering home the fact that you can't take belongings with you to the grave

Goods

Who betrays Everyman who he thought would stand by him?

Goods

In Roman Theatre, the Orchestra was _________

Halved

What does Everyman do to strengthen Good Deeds?

He gives to the poor

What event occurred in Shakspeare's life at the time he wrote this play?

He lost his father

What effect did Moliere have?

He raised comedy to the same level as tragedy and gave stock characters more dimensions

What is one way Everyman tries to escape death?

He tries to bribe death

What interaction does Everyman have with Fellowship?

He will not die with Everyman but he will sin with him

A celebration of human achievement known as "___________" occurred during the ___________

Humanism, Renaissance

Where is Twelfth Night set?

Illyria

Where did women come into the theatre?

In French theatre

Where did Roman drama reemerge?

In the church because from the 500-800s there was instability after the fall of the Roman Empire and the church was the only place to become literate

Lazzi

In the scene from TARTUFFE (read in class) Orgon comes home and is informed by Dorine, the servant, of his wife's illness. However, rather than expressing concern for her he repeatedly asks, "And Tartuffe?" When Dorine informs him that Tartuffe (unlike his wife) is quite healthy, eating and drinking to his heart's content, Orgon repeatedly responds, "Poor fellow!" These comic repetitions are an example of:

Girls and women were not permitted on the Elizabethan stage

In the video screened in class, "Shakespeare In Love," when Gwyneth Paltrow steps in to play "Juliet" why does that make everyone in the theatre gasp?

Commedia dell' arte

In this improvised comedy with stock, masked characters were hugely popular throughout Europe (and would influence Moliere):

What significance did the ban on religious drama have on the theatre?

It increased focus on classical and secular texts, theatre no longer was a community sponsored event, it encouraged the rise of the professional acting troupe, theatre now had to survive on its commercial and artistic merits

the division of the scenes

It was a tradition in the French neoclassical theater for a scene to end when a new character appeared on stage or when a character left the stage.

Iambic Pentameter was copied from whom?

Italian poets

What day is the twelfth night?

January 6th

A friend of Everyman's, who deserts him along with Cousin; "Kindred' means "of the same family," so when Kindred forsakes Everyman, it represents family members deserting him

Kindred

Guides Everyman from around the middle of the play, and leads him to Confession. "Knowledge' is perhaps best defined as 'acknowledgement of sin"

Knowledge

What was used to convey the plays as actual events?

Language

In the scene amongst Marianne, Dorine, and Valere, the false exits of the characters is an example of _________

Lazzi

In the scene from TARTUFFE (read in class) Orgon comes home and is informed by Dorine, the servant, of his wife's illness. However, rather than expressing concern for her he repeatedly asks, "And Tartuffe?" When Dorine informs him that Tartuffe (unlike his wife) is quite healthy, eating and drinking to his heart's content, Orgon repeatedly responds, "Poor fellow!" These comic repetitions are an example of:

Lazzi

This festival was held every September in Rome, honoring __________ (Festival Name, Name of god)

Ludi Romani, Jupiter

Orgon's mother who is totally deluded by Tartuffe

Madame Pernelle

Flipote

Madame Pernelle's maid.

Played by a man (Tartuffe)

Madame Purnell

"I'll be revenged for the whole pack of you"

Malvolio

Olivia's maid

Maria

Orgon's daughter who is in love with Valère and who is being forced to marry Tartuffe

Mariane

Dorine

Mariane's maid

Valere

Mariane's suitor

What class would Everyman have affected?

Middle Class

What are examples of comic devices?

Mistaken identities, eaves-dropping, physical humor

__________ ___________ came to be during the time of Shakespeare

Modern English

Fell in love with Madelaine

Moliere

who is Tartuffe written by?

Moliere

Adhering to the unities of time, place and action (the idea that a play should take place in a single setting, in one day and have one main action) is most closely associated with ______________

Neoclassicism

"Time, place and action" (the idea that a play's story should last as long as it takes the audience to watch it, that it should take place in a single setting, and have one main action)

Neoclassicism's most famous "rule" is adherence to the three unities. What are they?

Did the Globe theatre have painted backdrops with one-point perspective?

No

Orsino is in love with...

Olivia

Sir Toby

Olivia's drunk uncle who marries Maria

Maria

Olivia's gentlewoman who marries Sir Toby

During the Renaissance in Europe, a move away from the permanent, ornate, universal background of the Roman (Terence) Stage and toward realistic scene painting was enabled by the development of ______ ________ _______ __________

One Point Perspective Drawing

In Moliére's Tartuffe, the play's single setting is ___________

Orgon's House

Mariane

Orgon's daughter

Madame Pernelle

Orgon's mother

Damis

Orgon's son

Elmire

Orgon's wife

The head of the house (Tartuffe)

Orgonne

"if music be the food of love, play on"

Orsino

Cesario is in love with....

Orsino

how does twelfth night begin?

Orsino listening to music and pining for Olivia

A figure of speech in which apparently contradictory terms appear in conjunction

Oxymoron

Where would EVERYMAN have been most likely originally performed?

Perhaps in a town square on a pageant wagon

Brought on by the Renaissance.

Perspective painting, proscenium arch

who wrote everyman

Petrus Dorlandus maybe

These two playwrights are attributed to creating "New Comedy"

Plautus, Terence

First permanent Roman theatre

Pompeii

Neoclassical Ideas

Purity in Form *Tragedy - royalty and nobility *Comedy - lower classes *5 lines of Alexandrines (12 syllable lines) Plausibility and Propriety *no chorus/soliloquies *no violence on stage *unity of time, place, and action (one story, one location, in the time it takes to watch it) *goal - to teach and to please

Drama returns with this first trope

Quem Quaeritis

During the renaissance, what culture was praised?

Roman

Plautus

Roman playwright who, along with Terence, is credited with establishing influential comic techniques

How was a Roman theatre different from a Greek?

Roman theaters were freestanding, Greek theaters were built into the hillside

Drama virtually disappeared after the collapse of ______ and began to revive, ironically, through the ___________: A chanted ________ embellishment of the dialogue, the most famous of which is the _________ ___________

Rome, Trope, Liturgical, Quem Queritis

A synonym for the "Stage House" in Roman theatre is known as _________, and it was elaborate, formal background with 2-5 doorways

Scaena

This Roman dramatist influenced Renaissance authors (especially Shakespeare) through the contribution of the 5-act form, soliloquies, bloody revenge themes, and elements of the supernatural

Seneca

This closet dramatist influenced Shakespeare

Seneca

What did Queen Elizabeth do that affected drama?

She banned all religious dramas

Wants to marry Olivia, thanks to Toby

Sir Andrew

Olivia's uncle, a partier

Sir TOby

Sir Andrew

Sir Toby's friend who attempts to court Olivia

The structure at the back of the stage, specifically in the Roman Greece era, it was a large and complex stone building with several levels is known as ___________?

Skene

Since Neoclassicism had to be plausible, there were no ___________ or Chorus, and a ___________ had to take place of the audience

Soliloquies, Friend

A domestic style of comedy called Atellan farce contributed what important aspect to Roman comic drama?

Stock Characters

Cycle dramas were groups of mystery plays put together as a town's yearly tribute to the church and as an expression of civic pride. Mystery plays were

Stories from the bible

Where did Shakespeare grow up?

Stratford

The second group of characters who deserts Everyman in the second half of the play

Strength, Discretion, Beauty

"Hang up my hairshirt"

Tartuffe

First permanent proscenium arch

Tetro Farnese, Parma

When a character is set up for an extreme, what can be assumed?

That they will fall

Seated about 2,000 to 3,000 people

The Globe Theater

This architectural feature enabled the Roman theatre to be freestanding not build into a hillside like the Greek theatre

The Proscenium Arch

This architectural feature helped to establish a single perspective on the play's action by framing the playing space

The Proscenium Arch

climax (Tartuffe)

The arrival of Valère with the news that Tartuffe is closing in thickens the plot and brings everything to a climax

What does ars moriendi mean?

The art of holy dying

What ended the Roman drama "era"?

The rise of the church

What were vice figures?

They demonstrated the distractions posed by earthly temptation

The proscenium arch

This architectural feature helped to establish a single perspective on the play's action by framing the playing space.

The Three Unities:

Time, Place, Action

These plays were mainly for nobility, exploring man's relationship to G-d and containing elevated language

Tragedy

When Moliére initially auditioned in front of the king he performed a ________, but the king did not like it

Tragedy

A foot consisting of one long or stressed syllable followed by one short or unstressed syllable is known as a __________

Trochee

Ironically, drama started to come back after the middle ages in the church, through a dramatized part of the religious service (which used embellished or expanded parts of the mass liturgy called _________.

Tropes

"Moliére" was not the playwright's real name. Jean Baptiste Poquelin changed it when he went into the theatre so as not to embarrass his family (True or False)?

True

Moliére delayed the entrance of Tartuffe until Act 3 so that his hypocrisy could be well-established before he appears (True or False)?

True

Moliére was sent to Illustra (Debtors) Prison and his father bailed him out (True or False)?

True

TRUE OR FALSE? Moliere delayed the entrance of TARTUFFE until Act 3 so that his hypocrisy could be well-established before he appears.

True

The goal of Neoclassicism is to teach and to please; it was meant to be morally uplifting and was meant to make human society better (True or False)

True

Sebastian

Violas twin brother who was also washed up from a ship wreck and lives with Antonio

It increased focus on classical and secular texts, theatre no longer was a community sponsored event, it encouraged the rise of the professional acting troupe, theatre now had to survive on its commercial and artistic merits

What significance did the ban on religious drama have on the theatre?

What is the moral crisis in Everyman?

When Death calls the sinner to account

1564-1616

When did William Shakespeare live?

When does art/theatre happen?

When we have the time and resources for it

What question does Everyman ask?

Will you be ready for death?

When Moliere satirized Parisian society in TARTUFFE, what about the prevailing production practice made that easier?

Women were allowed to perform on the stage, audiences members sometimes were seated on the stage next to the actors, the candles and chandeliers remained lit during the performance illuminating the audience as well as the actors, the play's characters would be dressed in similar fashions as the audience watching them

Does Everyman focus more on words or action?

Words

Were audience members ever allowed to be seated on the stage during Moliére's plays?

Yes

Were women allowed on the stage in Moliére's plays? How about Shakespeare's?

Yes, No

Everyman served what other purpose for the church?

a commercial purpose

Olivia is the daughter of....

a count who died

trochee

a foot with two syllables -first stressed second unstressed

orchestra in the Roman Theatre

a halved section where rich people sat

What type of drama is Everyman?

a morality drama, it is also allegorical

Olivia

a noble woman who is grieving and loves Cesario

Orsino

a nobleman who loves Olivia

Horace

a poet who wrote Ars Poetica (the art of poetry) -decided the idea that poetry is supposed to be moral and teach

Constantly experimenting with form and boundaries, Shakespeare wrote THE TEMPEST to be neither a tragedy or a comedy, but having elements of both. This new genre has since been called:

a romance

skaena

a stage house with an elaborate background

What is allegory?

a story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one.

In TARTUFFE, Moliere uses what piece of stage furniture to enable Elmire, the wife, to prove (finally!) Tartuffe's corrupt nature to Orgon, her husband?

a table

Orgon

a wealthy man who is under the influence of Tartuffe

During the Protestant Reformation

all plays were outlawed

Roman Theatre

all temporary inside a building raised stage only masked men actors

Shakespeare directs by...

allowing actors and audience to learn about the characters from language

What is a "feminine ending"?

an "extra" syllable in the last foot

feminine ending

an extra syllable at the end of a line

Ludi Romani

annual Roman theatre honoring Jupiter

neoclassicism

attempted to establish a code of theatrical rules that emulate classical roman theatre

Everyman wishes he had never...

been born

mystery plays

bible plays

Years of Terence

c. 190-159 BCE

Years of Plautus

c. 245-184 BCE

Years of Seneca

c. 5 BCE- 65 AD

"voice of reason" in tartuffe

cleante

atellan farce

comedy sketches by professionals with improvised plots and stock characters

plautus and terence

comedy writers who eliminated the chorus and added more music used comic devices

With no civic support, theatre must now be...

commercial

"god from the machine" to resolve the plot

deus ex machina

Where was Illyria supposedly?

east coast of the Adriatic

Everyman had simple or elaborate costumes?

elaborate

Tropes

elaboration or embellishment of the Christian liturgy

proscenium arch

established a single perspective by framing the playing space

What does "the wind and the rain" supposedly mean?

everyday is like one another; it will rain everyday so make of what you will in life

to be or not to be, that is the question

example of feminine ending

If music be the food of love play on

example of iambic pentameter

feed on her damask cheek, she pined in thought

example of trochee

Kindred

family; wouldn't go because he had a cramp in his toe

Feast of Corpus Christi

festival that included plays about stories from the bible *specific guilds produced specific plays

FIrst Folio

first complete compilation of Shakespeares plays, put together by some of his actors 7 years after he died

Trochee

foot with 2 syllables, the first stressed and the second unstressed

What is trochee?

foot with two syllables, the first stressed and the second unstressed

Why is Sir Toby using Sir Andrew?

for his money

Fellowship

friend; would rather party or kill someone

who is the only character that accompanies everyman to his grave?

good deeds

Good Deeds

good works; will go but is too weak; everyman must seek knowledge

why is Olivia mourning?

her brother died

Iambic pentameter is the same rhythm as?

human heartbeat

Tartuffe is driven by his...

human nature

What makes Lattzi what it is?

hyperbole and rhythm

what does Tartuffe mean?

hypocrite

Moliere satirizes the --------- not --------.

hypocrites, not true piety (church)

where does 12th night take place?

illyrian

What was a proscenium arch?

it helped to establish a single perspective on the drama's locale by framing the playing space

Neoclassical ideals: comedy was always with

lower classes

Olivia doesn't want to...

marry above her

The time of Shakespeare brought about...

modern English

Everyman was a ______________ play that got people re-interested in drama/theatre

morality

A theme of (Tartuffe)

nature can't be thwarted

The only character who accompanies Everyman to his grave is: A.Fellowship B. Kindred C. Goods D. Knowledge

none of these

What does Moliere accuse Daphne of?

of being an old prude who just criticizes people because she is no longer being pursued

M Loyal

officer

In the year 1200 plays were move...

outside

What was the standing room called?

partare

What were some of the things needed to be completed before Everyman can enter his grave?

penance, confession, contrition

morality plays

personified abstract qualities that present a lesson about good character

What is Chiasma?

play on words

tropes

plays about christian lithurgy

We associate Shakespeare with...

poetry, sonnets, iambic pentameter

The lower class speaks in...

prose

Viola

protagonist sister of Sebastian who was washed up from a ship wreck and disguised as a man named Cesario

iambic pentameter

provides rhythm that echoes the heart -10 syllable lines first unstressed second stressed

What does renaissance mean?

rebirth

renaissance

rebirth to classical from medieval -celebrates human achievement

Tartuffe is all in...

rhyme

Neoclassical ideals: tragedy was always with

royalty and nobility

What emotion do all of Feste's songs convey?

sadness

Roman stage house

scaena

Five-wits

senses; abandoned everyman at his grave

who wrote twelfth night

shakespeare

What three aspects does Everyman focus on?

sin, repentance, and death

What was Lazzi?

stock comedic routines that are traditionally associated with Commedia dell'arte

Goods

stuff; kills man after man, taking all their worth

What does "what you will" mean?

talks about sex and the possibility to create for yourself the life you want

Knowledge

tells everyman what to do to prepare to go to heaven

Was used as indoor performance space

tennis courts

Feste

the clown for Olivia and Orsino

tetro fernese

the first permanent proscenium arch

Malvolio

the head servant of Olivia who is self righteous and believes Olivia is in love with him

where is the setting for Tartuffe?

the house of Orgon

tetro olimpica

the oldest indoor theatre in Italy

Tartuffe

the religious hypocrite who wants Elmire

They had to rely upon whom to support dramas?

the rich

why does Orgon say he's postponed the wedding?

to be guided by heavens will

What is the goal of Neoclassicism?

to teach and to please

TRUE OR FALSE? The Roman theatre was different from the Greek theatre. One difference was that it was freestanding, not built into a hillside, made possible through the structural use of the Roman arch.

true

turmoil in writing reflects

turmoil in character

Perspective painting

using a vanishing point perspective that seems to transfer a 3D image and allude depth *Used as backdrops in European theatre

perspective painting

vanishing points, 2 dimensional

what did the letter ask Malvolio to do?

wear yellow stockings, wear the straps of his stockings crossed around his knee, be sharp tempered/rude, smile all the time

Shakespeare invented...

words

Seneca

wrote closet tragedies that were violent, had 5 acts, focused on inner motivation (soliloquies and asides)


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