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Drama Terms Notes D-d-d-d-d-unit!
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Drama A literary work intended for performance by actors on a stage.
Also known as a play. When it is written for a movie, it is called a screenplay.
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Playwright Also known as the author or writer of a drama. Examples:
William Shakespeare, Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, Oscar Wilde
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Act A major division of a play. Acts may be further divided into scenes. May be used to indicate a change in time or place.
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Scene A division of an act or of the play itself. An act is usually made of several scenes.
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Line What the actors speak on stage. Could also be called dialogue when spoken between characters.
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Dialogue A speech between two or more characters. Example:
MR. JONES: How are you? GABBY: I’m doing well!
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Monologue A speech that is to be spoken by just one person. It can be spoken to another character or the audience.
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Soliloquy A speech in which an actor, usually alone onstage, speaks his/her thoughts aloud. The actor is not speaking to anyone but her/himself. They are thinking out loud to themselves.
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Prologue An introduction to a play. It gives you background knowledge of the characters and setting. Fresh Prince Prologue Theme
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Stage Directions An instruction written into the script of a play, showing stage actions and/or movements of performers. Usually italicized. Example: KATHY: Hey! [runs across stage] Come back here! JACOB: [jumps over the bushes] Leave me alone!
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Tragedy A type of drama in which the protagonist has really bad things happen to her/him. Usually, some or all of the main characters die.
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Comedy A funny drama with a happy ending.
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Props Object used in a play.
Examples: costumes, buildings, weapons, etc.
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Figurative Language Uses words or expressions with a meaning that is different from the literal interpretation. This can be found in any type of literature. Just know that it shows up in dramas/plays. Examples: Similes, metaphors, hyperbole, symbolism, personification, alliteration, onomatopoeia, idiom
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Dramatic Irony When the audience knows something that a character in the play does not.
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Theme Life lesson of the play. It’s the main point the playwright is making. Examples: Love can make you either happy or sad. Exercise can save your life.
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You Already Know! Dramas contain many of the same elements of other forms of literature! Examples: Conflict, protagonist, antagonist, climax (turning point), characterization, narrator, theme, figurative language Do you know all of these terms?
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