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A-Level Edexcel: Drama & Theatre Glossary – Performance Exam 100% Correct!!

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acting area - ANSWERthe area within the performance space within which the actor may move in full view of the audience. Also known as the playing area acting style - ANSWERa particular manner of acting which reflects cultural and historical influences action - ANSWERthe movement or development of the plot or story in a play; the sense of forward movement created by the sense of time and/or the physical and psychological motivations of characters. analysis - ANSWERin responding to dramatic art, the process of examining how the elements of drama—literary, technical, and performance—are used antagonist - ANSWERthe opponent or adversary of the hero or main character of a drama; one who opposes and actively competes with another character in a play, most often with the protagonist apron - ANSWERthe area between the front curtain and the edge of the stage. arena stage - ANSWERtype of stage without a frame or arch separating the stage from the auditorium, in which the audience surrounds the stage area. (see theatre-in-the-round) articulation - ANSWERthe clarity or distinction of speech aside - ANSWERlines spoken by an actor to the audience and not supposed to be overheard by other ch

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A-Level Edexcel: Drama & Theatre
Glossary – Performance Exam 100%
Correct!!

acting area - ANSWERthe area within the performance space within which the actor may move in full
view of the audience. Also known as the playing area

acting style - ANSWERa particular manner of acting which reflects cultural and historical influences

action - ANSWERthe movement or development of the plot or story in a play; the sense of forward
movement created by the sense of time and/or the physical and psychological motivations of
characters.

analysis - ANSWERin responding to dramatic art, the process of examining how the

elements of drama—literary, technical, and performance—are used

antagonist - ANSWERthe opponent or adversary of the hero or main character of a drama; one who
opposes and actively competes with another character in a play, most often with the protagonist

apron - ANSWERthe area between the front curtain and the edge of the stage.

arena stage - ANSWERtype of stage without a frame or arch separating the stage from the

auditorium, in which the audience surrounds the stage area. (see

theatre-in-the-round)

articulation - ANSWERthe clarity or distinction of speech

aside - ANSWERlines spoken by an actor to the audience and not supposed to be overheard by other
characters on-stage.

black box - ANSWERa one-room theatre, without a proscenium arch; interior is painted black,
including walls, floor, and ceiling, and any drapes are also black.

blocking - ANSWERthe path formed by the actor's movement on stage, usually determined by the
director with assistance from the actor and often written down in a script using commonly accepted
theatrical symbols.

business - ANSWERa piece of unscripted or improvised action, often comic in intention,

used to establish a character, fill a pause in dialogue, or to establish a scene. An author may simply
suggest '________' to indicate the need for some action at that point in the play.

catharsis - ANSWERthe feeling of release felt by the audience at the end of a tragedy;

the audience experiences _________, or is set free from the emotional hold of the action, after
experiencing strong emotions and sharing in the protagonist's troubles.

character - ANSWERa person portrayed in a drama, novel, or other artistic piece.

, characterisation - ANSWERhow an actor uses body, voice, and thought to develop and portray a
character.

choreography - ANSWERthe movement of actors and dancers to music in a play.

chorus - ANSWERa group of performers who sing, dance, or recite in unison; in Greek drama, the
chorus was the group of performers who sang and danced between episodes, narrated off-stage
action, and commented on events.

climax - ANSWERthe point of greatest intensity in a series or progression of events in

a play, often forming the turning point of the plot and leading to some kind of resolution.

comedy - ANSWERa play that treats characters and situations in a humorous way. In

Shakespeare's time, a _____ was any play with a happy ending

that typically told the story of a likable character's rise to fortune.

In ancient Greece, comedies dealt almost exclusively with

contemporary figures and problems. Low _____ is physical rather

than intellectual _____; high _____ is more sophisticated,

emphasizing verbal with more than physical action.

comic relief - ANSWERa break in the tension of a tragedy provided by a comic character, a comic
episode, or even a comic line.

concentration - ANSWERthe actor's focus, also called centering; focusing on the work at hand, being
in character, or being in the moment.

conflict - ANSWERthe internal or external struggle between opposing forces, ideas, or interests that
creates dramatic tension.

contrast - ANSWERdynamic use of opposites, such as movement/stillness, sound/silence, and
light/darkness.

dénouement - ANSWERthe moment in a drama when the essential plot point is unravelled or
explained.

development - ANSWERprogression of the plot or conflict in a play.

dialogue - ANSWERspoken conversation used by two or more characters to express thoughts,
feelings, and actions.

dynamic - ANSWERthe energetic range of or variations within physical movement or the difference
between levels of sound

end on - ANSWERTraditional audience seating layout where the audience is looking at the stage from
the same direction. This seating layout is that of a Proscenium Arch theatre. (see also THRUST, IN THE
ROUND, TRAVERSE)

ensemble - ANSWERthe dynamic interaction and harmonious blending of the efforts of the many
artists involved in the dramatic activity of theatrical production.

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