15 Results for drama

The Aristotelian view of drama required an imitation of life, but his heroes were invariably members of the noble class. He regarded Sophocles' Oedipus Rex as the perfect play. Given this viewpoint, and given the stranglehold that Aristotle had over Europe over the next sixteen centuries, it is no...
How does Arthur Miller build the drama to the climax at the end of Act 1?At The Beginning of "A view from the bridge" by Arthur Miller Alfieri enters and immediately creates the atmosphere. The atmosphere of a place where crime was once set in the heart of the neighborhood. Alfieri tells us the audi...
Drama has to do with both conflicts and denials. How have dramatists in your study used either of these or both together to create plays that provoke interests or disturb the audience? Conflict is a struggle between two or more forces that creates tension on both sides and denial is the act of ref...
'What is the role of the inspector in the play as a whole?' In this Play the inspector plays various roles. He plays a socialist as he is against capitalist views and because he is not just looking out for himself but others as well. Also he is known to be a catalyst as he...
The following paper will present aspects of two fictional plays compared to a non-fictional play, The Laramie Project. The Glass Menagerie and Death of a Salesman are both fictional works but are reflections on the difficulties of life. A playwright of a fictional play text uses plot, setting, and...
The Common Man in the play A Man for All Seasons has a vital role. He is the link between the audience and the game itself. His purpose is to keep the audience from becoming too emotionally involved in the play, to destroy the idea of theatrical illusion, and to make the audience able to identify w...
A brief look at the history of dramatic representation shows a long and tumultuous past. I am just going to briefly touch down on medieval times. Because of its pagan associations, early Christians regarded the theater as disgraceful and held it in low esteem. Actors were forbidden to become memb...
There are likely as many similarities between these two plays as there are dramatic differences. And yet, both are extremely well- written, both allow the audience to peek into the living rooms and lives of interesting people, and both also put a microscope on socie...
For more than three hundred fifty years, Macbeth has been one of the most steadily popular of Shakespeare¡¯s tragedies. On the stage, it has also proved itself an enduring hit. Innumerable scholars and writers have taken so much interest in Macbeth that they have written hundreds of thousands of b...
Pre – 1914 Drama Coursework assignment Shakespeare's "much Ado About Nothing" Define the character of Claudio as it changes and develops throughout "much ado about nothing". "Much ado about nothing" is a typical romantic play with rich wealthy people,...
In playwright Judith Thompson\'s \"Lion in the Streets,\" the world is seen through the eyes of a young girl who has been murdered. Isobel (Alexandria Sage) wanders amidst the lives of family members and neighborhood people discovering death all around her - literally, spiritually, and morally. Sa...
Show how a production of A view from the Bridge can effectivelyemphasise the dramatic tension in the play.A view from the Bridge was written by Arthur Miller in 1955 as a 1 actplay and then in the following year of 1956 it was extended into a 2 actplay which is the version that is around today. The...
The FantastiksThe Fantastiks is the longest running play in American theatre history. I thought I was not going to enjoy the play, but I couldn't of been more wrong. I thought the play was hysterical; it had a simple story line that anyone could understand. I really liked that the themes of the pl...
The play "Death of a Salesman" by Arthur Miller takes place almostentirely in the head of its main protagonist, Willy Loman. The playcontinually evolves through a series of flashbacks to the past and flashesof what Willy is actually experiencing in the present. This allows theviewer of the p...
1) What was the play about? (brief synopsis) Mr. Kipps, the protagonist, has engaged a professional actor to help him learn to act out and reveal his play onstage to his family and friends. By the second act, a shy, timid, and nervous Kipps transforms into the superior actor. At this point, t...