1 / 8

Theatrical Vocabulary

Theatrical Vocabulary. Words to know before the curtain rises…. Activity Goal. Goal 1: Create a meaningful four quadrant vocabulary sheet for a theatrical vocabulary word. Goal 2: Share your vocabulary findings with the class.

nathan
Download Presentation

Theatrical Vocabulary

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Theatrical Vocabulary Words to know before the curtain rises…

  2. Activity Goal • Goal 1: Create a meaningful four quadrant vocabulary sheet for a theatrical vocabulary word. • Goal 2: Share your vocabulary findings with the class. • Goal 3: Write down the gist of everyone else’s vocabulary words. • Bonus: Create a word wall poster for your word.

  3. Theatrical Vocab. Step 1 Instructions Words Scenes Acts Character List Stage directions Monologue Elements of Plot Play Dialogue • Choose one of the words or phrases. • Write it down – spelled correctly – in your journal. • Write what you think you already know about it.

  4. Theatrical Vocab. Step 2 Directions Sections Definition Examples Illustrations Connections/Questions • Set up four quadrants on a blank sheet of paper with room to write your word in large letters in the middle. • Label the quadrants with the section titles. (If you see one with a / choose either.)

  5. Theatrical Vocab. Example • Word: Prologue • Definition: introduction; speech or poem addressed to the audience at the beginning of a play • Examples: In Romeo & Juliet a poem describes how their families hate each other • Connection: Prologues help establish the SETTING and CONFLICT • Question: Level 4: Why do you think the playwright used a prologue to set the scene?

  6. Theatrical Vocab. Step 4 • Create your vocabulary sheet. • Make sure you are thorough in each quadrant. • Make the letters as big and legible as possible. • Make your definition and example clear for a person who is not already familiar with the word. • Find your examples in the literature book.

  7. Theatrical Vocab. Examples • Here are examples of examples for each word: • Acts – Traditional tragedies have 5 Acts (matching the plot mountain) such as in Hamlet • Scenes – Amount varyfrom play to play in Wicked Act 1 Scene 1 seems to show the death of the main character, but in scene two it goes back to her being in school • Character List – In the play A Christmas Carol the cast list includes Scrooge, Marley, and Mrs. Cratchit • Stage directions – In the play Rhinoceros a famous stage direction is “He becomes a rhinoceros, and the actor puts on a rhino mask.” • Monologue – In the play A Streetcar Named Desire Blanche has famous monologues about her life • Elements of Plot – In the resolution of Romeo and Juliet the main characters die. • Play Dialogue – “I bite my thumb, sir,” is some of the early dialogue in Romeo and Juliet.

  8. Theatrical Vocab. Step 5 • Prepare to share with the class. • If you are working with a partner or group, decide who is going to present what to the class. • Finally, write down everyone else’s words and their basic meanings.

More Related