EVALUATION (One-Act Play)

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EVALUATION:

A. TRUE OR FALSE
Read each statement carefully. Write
TRUELALA if the sentence is true and WITITIT if the
sentence is false.
1. One-act play is written in a concise manner with
beginning, middle and an ending.
2. One-act play has breaks in the action and consist
of intervals.
3. There are more than 2 to 3 principal characters in a
one-act play.
4. One-act play is divided into 4 stages namely,
Exposition, Climax, Conflict and Denouement.
5. Drama is a dramatic work that actors present on
stage.

B. Choose the correct answer from the word pool.

One-act play Proscenium stage Dramatist


Playwright Thrust stage Play
Script In-the-round stage Stage
Scene Traverse stage Director
________6. Designated space for the performance of
productions.
________7. A person who is skilled in the production
of a play.
________8. A division of an act, in which a certain
portion of the play unfolds, usually separated by
location or time.
________9. A play that takes place, from beginning to
end, in a single act.
________10. The author of a play.
________11. _________is the oldest known fixed
type of staging in the world, and it is thousands of
years old.
________12. It is a form of theatrical stage which is
also commonly known as an alley, corridor stage or
catwalk.
________13. A stage where the audience sits on
three sides of a rectangular stage.
________14. This type of stage is positioned at the
center of the audience – i.e., there is audience around
the whole stage.
________15. A written version of a play or movie.
PART/ELEMENT OF A ONE-ACT PLAY

1. The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet


TITLE
by William Shakespeare 2. PLAYWRIGHT

3. CHARACTERS 4. CASTS
Romeo John
Juliet Mary
Capulet, her father Greg
Gregory Leonard
Sampson Ben
5. SETTING 6. STAGE DIRECTIONS
Act 1
Scene 1: Verona, a public place
(Enter Sampson and Gregory, with swords and
bucklers, of the house of Capulet.)
7. NAME OF CHARACTERS 8. DIALOGUE

SAMPSON: Gregory, o’ my word we’ll not carry coals.


GREGORY: No, for then we should be colliers.
SAMPSON: I mean, an we be choler, we’ll draw.
GREGORY: Ay, you live, draw your neck out o’collar.

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