Toggle Navigation
Games
Blog
News
Class PIN
Join for Free
Sign in
Toggle Navigation
Games
PIN
Join for Free
Blog
Pricing
News
Contact us
Help center
Sign in
Study
Drama
0
%
0
0
0
Back
Restart
A speech performed to an audience is ___________.
Monologue
Oops!
Okay!
This is what the actors wear.
Costumes
Oops!
Okay!
This is a comment made by a character but not heard by other characters onstage.
Aside
Oops!
Okay!
This is the central message or lesson about life in a play.
Theme
Oops!
Okay!
What is the word used to describe various items on the stage, such as furniture?
Props
Oops!
Okay!
What is the play's main struggle?
Conflict
Oops!
Okay!
What is a dialogue?
A conversation between two or more people or characters
Oops!
Okay!
What is the background of the play?
Scenery
Oops!
Okay!
What is the term for the author of a play?
Playwright
Oops!
Okay!
This is the villain; someone who opposes the main character in a play or novel.
Antagonist
Oops!
Okay!
This is a division within a play, like a chapter divides parts of a novel.
Act
Oops!
Okay!
These are the playwright's notes about special effects.
Stage directions
Oops!
Okay!
A person or animal in a play
Character
Oops!
Okay!
These are the playwright's notes to actors, directors, and readers.
Stage directions
Oops!
Okay!
What is the term for introducing the play's basic situation?
Exposition
Oops!
Okay!
This is an example of what? "Lights turn on and shine on the beautiful Sandy Olsson."
Stage directions
Oops!
Okay!
These are movable objects, like swords or pens, that actors use on stage.
Props
Oops!
Okay!
This is the word for the main events of a play.
Plot
Oops!
Okay!
Acts in a play are broken up into smaller parts called ______________.
Scenes
Oops!
Okay!
What is the play's most exciting part?
Climax
Oops!
Okay!
What is a story written to be performed in front of an audience?
Drama
Oops!
Okay!
What is the time and place of a play?
Setting
Oops!
Okay!
How the character looks, what he or she says, and how he or she acts reveals the character's ______________.
Personality
Oops!
Okay!
This is the written form of a play.
Script
Oops!
Okay!
This is when a character speaks to himself or herself on stage.
Soliloquy
Oops!
Okay!
This is the main character in a play or novel.
Protagonist
Oops!
Okay!
Your experience on this site will be improved by allowing cookies.
Allow cookies