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Drama

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Comedy humorous play where characters confront themselves and others with amusing results. ... Musical a play that relies on music. Contemporary Genres. Opera ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Drama


1
Drama
  • IB English 11
  • Brad Hutchinson
  • 2006

2
What is a play?
  • A play is not a piece meant to be read alone,
    but it is also an event It takes place in real
    time and occupies space.

3
What is a play?
  • A difference between a play and a short story or
    novel is that the entire written part of a play
    is dialogue and some stage direction. The
    conflict has to be carried out in dialogue. The
    setting is completely represented on the stage.
    The director decides how to present the authors
    wordshow to design the set and the way that he
    or she wants the actors to give their lines.

4
Word Derivations
Where do those words come from?
  • Theater is derived from the Greek word for to
    watch.
  • Audience is derived from the Latin word for to
    hear.
  • Tragedy is derived from the Greek word for goat
    song.
  • Drama is derived from the Greek word for action
    or deed.
  • These words show that the intention of drama is
    to be an action/a display presented to an
    audience.

5
Basic Genres
  • Aristotle listed two basic genres for drama
  • Comedy
  • Tragedy

6
Contemporary Genres
  • We now recognize ten basic genres of drama.

7
Contemporary Genres
  • Tragedyserious play where characters confront
    human suffering, decline and often death. It
    should elicit both pity and terror in the members
    of the audience. Pity for the characters and
    terror that something of this sort might happen
    to them.

8
Contemporary Genres
  • Comedyhumorous play where characters confront
    themselves and others with amusing results.
    Should elicit laughter more than shock. A comedy
    is a play about a system of social values in
    which a protagonist has a series of
    misadventures, and all is made right in the end.
    This protagonist is brought out of the mainstream
    and then returned to his or her rightful place in
    the world at the end. They have happy endings
    for the protagonist.

9
Contemporary Genres
  • Melodramaserious play with a trivial theme.
    Melodramas usually present a struggle between
    obviously good and obviously evil. The audience
    usually has little reaction to the play other
    than being glad that the good guys won or sad
    that the bad guys won.

10
Contemporary Genres
  • Farcehumorous play on a trivial theme.

11
Contemporary Genres
  • Tragicomedytragedy that ends happily
  • Types of tragicomedy
  • Problem play treats a social issue
  • Domestic tragedy is a tragedy where the
  • protagonist lacks the insight or heroic stature
  • expected of a tragic hero.
  • Mixture play is one where major themes are
  • dealt with in both comedic and tragic fashion.

12
Contemporary Genres
  • Dark comedya comedy that ends tragically

13
Contemporary Genres
  • Historytreats historical events

14
Contemporary Genres
  • Documentarytreats recent historical events and
    uses pieces of documentation such as newspaper
    articles, trial transcripts and so forth.

15
Contemporary Genres
  • Musicala play that relies on music

16
Contemporary Genres
  • Operaplay that is entirely music

17
Drama Terms
  • Protagonistmain character
  • Antagonistperson or force blocking the desire of
    the protagonist
  • Foilcharacter who is opposite in type to the
    protagonist and is used to highlight
    characteristics of the protagonist
  • Soliloquya speech given by a character that is
    not directed at another character, gives the
    characters thoughts
  • Monologuea long speech by one character, can be
    a soliloquy

18
Drama Terms
  • Dramatic ironyaudience knows more than the
    characters on stage
  • Asidecomments delivered by a character that are
    directed to the audience

19
Time Sequence of a Play
  • The gathering of the audienceto exist, a play
    requires an audience. This means one needs
    publicity, tickets, seating and so forth.

20
Time Sequence of a Play
  • The transitionafter the audience is gathered and
    seated, they must be brought together as a
    community focused on the play itself. This can
    be the program, music, lobby displays, lighting.
    The transition ends when the lights dim, and the
    curtain is raised.

21
Time Sequence of a Play
  • The expositionthe scenes that give the
    background information that the audience must
    have to understand the conflict. The Greeks
    started their plays with a prologue speaking to
    the Muse that preceded the Choruss entrance.

22
Time Sequence of a Play
  • The conflictconflict and confrontation are the
    ways that a play becomes dramatic. A conflict
    arises from the choices inherent in any
    situation. What will the characters choose? The
    conflict can also be brought about by a character
    (who incites conflict) or who does something that
    throws the other characters into conflict. After
    the conflict is introduced, the conflict is
    heightened until it can go no further (rising
    action).

23
Time Sequence of a Play
  • The climaxthis is the point of no return. The
    conflict has gotten too intense, and the choices
    have been made. The characters must now live
    with the consequences of their actions.
    Aristotle described the climax as the catharsis
    (purification) when the protagonist recognizes
    a fundamental truth (anagnorsis) and then must
    act to reverse his or her former ignorance
    (peripetieia) of a horrific deed unknowingly
    performed (pathos). At the climax, the conflict
    is at its most extreme. Some sort of change must
    happen. The characters must make some kind of
    recognition.

24
Time Sequence of a Play
  • The denouementliterally means the
    unknottingresolutionsignals to the audience
    that a new understanding of life, situation, self
    has been reached. This can be a tidy ending
    (all unknotted) or ambiguous and ironic.

25
Time Sequence of a Play
  • The curtain callhere the audience sees the
    actors as normal people again (no longer the
    characters of the play) and the audience is
    dismissed from the theatera return to normal
    life.
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