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Week 4 Warm-ups, Wrap-ups, and Vocabulary English 10/Drama.

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Presentation on theme: "Week 4 Warm-ups, Wrap-ups, and Vocabulary English 10/Drama."— Presentation transcript:

1 Week 4 Warm-ups, Wrap-ups, and Vocabulary English 10/Drama

2 Warm-up 1/27/14 Complete the warm-up on page 26 of your language book. Announcements: Huckleberry Finn Quote Project is due January 31 st, 2014. Latin and Greek Roots Test, Tuesday, January 28 th.

3 Warm-up 1/28/14 Complete the warm-up for Tuesday on page 26 of your language book. Announcements: Huckleberry Finn Quote Project is due January 31 st, 2014. Latin and Greek Roots Test Today! AR Test on Huckleberry Finn, Friday, January 31 st !!!

4 Warm-up 1/31/14 Complete the warm-up for Friday on page 26 of your language book. Announcements: Huckleberry Finn Quote Project is due Wednesday, February 5 th, 2014. AR Test on Huckleberry Finn, Friday, January 31 st !!! Next AR deadline is Friday, February 7 th !!!

5 Drama: Chapter 4 Vocabulary 1. Cue – words, actions, or technical effects that are signals to all onstage that something is about to happen or be said. 2. Down or downstage – front of the stage 3. Up or upstage – back of the stage 4. Cover – to ad-lib when smoothing over a mistake or to obstruct the audience’s view 5. Stage business – for example, picking up a book or opening a letter onstage. 6. Feeding – supplying lines or actions that can be used as fuel for laughs or to make a point.

6 Drama: Chapter 4 Vocabulary 7. C – symbol that represents the center of the stage 8. ad-lib – any improvised stage business or conversation. 9. Scene-stealing – diverting attention from the character that the audience should be watching. 10. Tempo – speed at which a play moves along. 11. Konstantin Stanislavski – director who developed a theory of acting known as “The Method.” 12. “magic if” – term that refers to the question, “What would I do if the events in this play were happening to me?” 13. Set props – items placed onstage for use by the actors.

7 Drama: Chapter 4 Vocabulary 14. Hand props – items carried onstage by an actor. 15. Typecasting – repeatedly casting someone in the same type of role. 16. Foil – role used for comparison with another character, usually the protagonist. 17. Ingenue – young female lead between the ages of 16 and 30. 18. Juvenile – young male lead between the ages 16 and 30. 19. Building a scene – using increased tempo, volume, and emphasis to bring a scene to its climax.


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