In fiction, point of view refers to the narrative voice of the story, the speaker or guiding intelligence through which the characters and actions are presented.
In drama, the term refers generally to a play's perspective or focus—the ways in which dramatists direct attention to the play's characters and their concerns.
incongruity between what happens and what was expected
This type of situational (as opposed to verbal) irony refers to circumstances in which characters have only a partial, incorrect, or misguided understanding of what is happening, while both readers and other characters understand the situation completely.
a contrast between the intended and literal meanings
This type of situational (as opposed to verbal) irony refers to circumstances in which characters have only a partial, incorrect, or misguided understanding of what is happening, while both readers and other characters understand the situation completely.
relating to the shared knowledge and values of a society
Cultural or universal symbols—such as crosses, flags, snakes, and flowers—are generally understood by the audience or reader regardless of the context in which they appear.
applicable to or common to all members of a group or set
Cultural or universal symbols—such as crosses, flags, snakes, and flowers—are generally understood by the audience or reader regardless of the context in which they appear.
characteristic of or containing a symbolic meaning or moral
When a play offers consistent and sustained symbols that refer to general human experiences, that play can be construed as an allegory, or at least as being allegorical.
It is performance that makes a play immediate, exciting, and powerful. The elements of performance are the actors, the director and producer, the stage, sets or scenery, lighting, costumes and makeup, and the audience.
the precise staging of performers’ positions and movements
When they move about the stage according to patterns called blocking, they move as they imagine the characters might move—slowly, swiftly, smoothly, hesitatingly, furtively, stealthily, or clumsily, and gesturing broadly or subtly.
the part of a stage between the curtain and the orchestra
Most modern theaters feature an interior proscenium stage—a picture-frame stage that is like a room with one wall missing so that the audience can look in on the action.
the painted structures of a stage set suggesting a locale
Most productions use sets (derived from the phrase "set scenes," i.e., fixed scenes) or scenery to establish the action in place and time, to underscore the ideas of the director, and to determine the level of reality of the production.
Some productions employ a single, neutral set throughout the play and then mark scene changes with the physical introduction of movable properties (or props)—chairs, tables, beds, flower vases, hospital curtain-enclosures, trees, shovels, skulls, and so on.
a firm open-weave fabric used for a curtain in the theater
The result is that lighting has become an integral element of set design, especially when the dramatist uses a scrim (a curtain that becomes transparent when illuminated from behind), which permits great variety in the portrayal of scenes and great rapidity in scene changes.
the attire worn in a play or at a fancy dress ball
Actors make plays vivid by wearing costumes and using makeup, which help the audience understand a play's time period together with the occupations, mental outlooks, and socioeconomic conditions of the characters.
a humorous television program based on day-to-day situations
Television has brought film versions of plays to the home screen, together with innumerable situation comedies ("sitcoms"), continuous narrative dramas (including soap operas), made-for-TV films, documentary dramas ("docudramas"), short skits on comedy shows, and many other types.
a serialized program dealing with dramatic situations
Television has brought film versions of plays to the home screen, together with innumerable situation comedies ("sitcoms"), continuous narrative dramas (including soap operas), made-for-TV films, documentary dramas ("docudramas"), short skits on comedy shows, and many other types.
Television has brought film versions of plays to the home screen, together with innumerable situation comedies ("sitcoms"), continuous narrative dramas (including soap operas), made-for-TV films, documentary dramas ("docudramas"), short skits on comedy shows, and many other types.
The choruses were made up of young men who sang or chanted lengthy songs that the Athenians called dithyrambs; the choruses also performed interpretive dance movements during the presentations.
Soon, additional men from the choruses took acting roles, and the focus of the performances shifted from the choral group to individual actors. Greek tragedy as we know it had come into being.
a story with characters behaving in an extreme emotional way
Resembling tragedy but stepping back from tragic outcomes is melodrama, a form in which most situations and characters are so exaggerated that they seem ridiculous.
Created on Thu Jun 03 16:31:27 EDT 2021
(updated Mon Jun 21 09:26:04 EDT 2021)
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