Top Banner
DRAMA NOTES
18

DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama: A play is written to be acted out not read. It is to be presented in a limited time.

Jan 19, 2016

Download

Documents

Charles Beasley
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

DRAMA NOTES

Page 2: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

Basic requirements of the genre called drama:A play is written to be acted out not read.It is to be presented in a limited time.It must appeal to a wide audience.It cannot be reexamined.

Page 3: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

Plot Elements:Protagonist- hero or central characterFlashback- background material to enrich a character, clarify the situation, or provide motivationDeus ex machina- “god from machine”—an event which solves a conflict but cannot be explainedPoetic justice- the good rewarded, the evil punishedClimax- turning point in the action—highest point

Page 4: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

SETTING

• Aristotle’s dramatic unities:• action• time• place

• Setting can: • reveal character• influence the actions of characters• provide atmosphere

Page 5: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

DIALOGUE AND VERSE

• It must advance the action.• It must be to the point with no words

wasted.• Blank verse-unrhymed verse written in

iambic pentameter, or ten (10) syllable lines, in which every second syllable is stressed.• Iambic pentameter- the most common verse

line in English poetry

Page 6: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

CHARACTER

Characters are revealed through•other characters’ conversation•physical appearance•speech and action

Page 7: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

THOUGHTS ARE REVEALED THROUGH:

• confidant- a character who has understanding with the main character and “draws him out”

• aside- a speech directly to the audience in a “stage whisper”; other characters on stage

• soliloquy- a speech delivered by a character alone on the stage and who is supposedly unaware of the audience

• dramatic monologue- speech made by one character while several other characters are on stage

• prologue- introduction to a poem, sets the scene, basic idea of the poem or play, introductory lines or verses spoken (written in sonnet form)

Page 8: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

POETIC TERMS

P

rose- language without metrical structure

V

erse-poetic language and style

V

erse will correspond with station:

Rich people speak in rhyme - Poor people don’t.

L

ook out for: Similes, metaphors, personification,

foreshadowing, irony, puns, oxymorons. --it’s ALL deliberate!

Page 9: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

OTHER POETIC TERMS• Couplet- two consecutive lines of rhymed poetry

“There I’ll come when I’m a man with a camel caravan.”

• Conceit- a kind of metaphor which makes a comparison between two startling different things—provides the framework for the entire poem.

• Dramatic irony- audience perceives something that a character in the story or play does not knowThe audience knows that Juliet is not dead, but Romeo believes that she is.

• Chiaroscuro- a deliberate contrast of light and dark to highlight movement or intensify a particular figure or setting

• Round character- realistic being who possesses a complex or multifaceted array of traitsRomeo is a round character who is dazed, inconsistent, hot-blooded, sensible, resourceful, and rash.

Page 10: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

TYPES OF PLAYS

•Tragedy•Comedy•Melodrama (related to tragedy)•Farce (related to comedy)

Page 11: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

TRAGEDY

•it is serious•demonstrated a universal truth•a character faces a moral issue•the main character is defeated

Page 12: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

COMEDY

•pictures life accurately•mocks human nature

Page 13: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

MELODRAMA

•related to tragedy•the hero has a serious struggle•he usually wins

Page 14: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

FARCE

•related to comedy•paints a ridiculous picture of life•simple, absurd.

Page 15: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

CHARACTERISTICS OF A SHAKESPEAREAN TRAGEDY

• Fall from prosperity of a person of high rank.• Tragedy ends with death of main character• Death changes something vitally• Main character drags some lesser characters down

with him when he falls• Death of tragic character result of

• tragic flaw in one’s character• bad choice of the tragic hero

• Action is shown all the way through –from beginning to end. (Greek tragedy-action begins in the middle and has flashbacks.)

Page 16: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

“ROMEO AND JULIET”T

ragedyW

ritten in 1595S

et in Verona, ItalyT

hemes: parental control vs. rebellious teens; fate vs. free will; impulsive behavior vs. self-control

Page 17: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

PLAY’S SOURCE

B

orrowed from a poem by Arthur Brooke, “The

Tragical Historye of Romeus and Juliet” (1562)

S

hakespeare gave the story new life and beauty

Page 18: DRAMA NOTES. Basic requirements of the genre called drama:  A play is written to be acted out not read.  It is to be presented in a limited time.

QUESTIONS TO PONDER

1

. Is the play truly a tragedy?

2

. How powerful is the role of fate?

3

. How much of your destiny can you control?

4

. Does love really conquer all? Is love enough?

5

. How do my decisions affect others and am I responsible for that?