The Dramatic ExperienceCUP Archive, 1. jaan 1965 - 164 pages |
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Page i
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Page vii
... comedy of manners ; the naturalistic character ; kinds of character , flat and round 5 WHAT'S IN A PLOT ? Plot versus theme ; total dramatic experience ; true dramatic structure ; subplots ; planes of action and related devices ; the ...
... comedy of manners ; the naturalistic character ; kinds of character , flat and round 5 WHAT'S IN A PLOT ? Plot versus theme ; total dramatic experience ; true dramatic structure ; subplots ; planes of action and related devices ; the ...
Page viii
Styan. 6 COMEDY , TRAGEDY AND THE MOOD OF THE AUDIENCE Kinds of drama ; comedy , farce and burlesque ; tragedy and melodrama ; tragicomedy and problem drama 7 DRAMA IN ITS MEDIUM 92 112 In the cinema ; radio drama ; the television play ...
Styan. 6 COMEDY , TRAGEDY AND THE MOOD OF THE AUDIENCE Kinds of drama ; comedy , farce and burlesque ; tragedy and melodrama ; tragicomedy and problem drama 7 DRAMA IN ITS MEDIUM 92 112 In the cinema ; radio drama ; the television play ...
Page 10
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Page 20
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Contents
THE STAGE ALIVE | 15 |
WORDS AND VOICES | 38 |
HOW REAL IS A CHARACTER? | 54 |
WHATS IN A PLOT? | 71 |
DRAMA IN ITS MEDIUM | 112 |
In the cinema radio drama the television play | 128 |
GLOSSARY | 141 |
BASIC READING LISTS | 147 |
153 | |
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Common terms and phrases
acting action actor audience begin behaviour born century character cinema comedy comic contrast convention create criticism death demanded dialogue died direct drama dramatist effect elements Elizabethan emotion English essential excitement experience face falling feeling figures gesture Greek Greek tragedy Hamlet hand hear hero human idea imagination important impressions interest Italy kind King Lady laughter Lear light living Macbeth manners meaning medieval mind mood morality movement naturalistic nature never pace particular pattern performance person play playwright plot poetic possible present question radio reader reading remains response Restoration scene sense Shakespeare share Shaw showing simple situation social soliloquy sound space speak spectator speech stage stand story structure style suggests television theatre theme thought tone tragedy true understanding unity verse visual voice whole writing written