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Reading Drama: GED Test Prep (page 4)

By LearningExpress Editors
LearningExpress, LLC
Updated on Mar 9, 2011

Stage Directions

Stage directions are the playwright's instructions to the director and actors. They often include specific details about how the characters should look, the tone of voice they should use when they speak, significant gestures or actions they should take, and the setting, including costumes, props, and lighting. Stage directions can help us understand tone and reinforce the theme of the play. For example, the stage directions for Waiting for Godot, as we noted earlier, are intentionally few; the emptiness of the stage is meant to echo the play's exploration of the emptiness in our lives. Similarly, the stage directions in Susan Glaspell's 1916 play Trifles show us how uneasy the women feel when they begin to piece together the puzzle of Mr.Wright's murder. When Mrs. Peters finds the bird that Mr.Wright killed, she remembers how she felt in a similar situation and understands how Mrs.Wright could have killed her husband:

MRS. PETERS: [In a whisper] When I was a girl—my kitten—there was a boy took a hatchet, and before my eyes—and before I could get there—[Covers her face an instant.] If they hadn't held me back I would have—[Catches herself, looks upstairs where steps are heard, falters weakly]—hurt him.

Audience

Audience, of course, is the third essential element of drama, for without an audience, a play cannot be fully brought to life. Of course, this does not mean one cannot find great meaning and enjoyment out of simply reading a play. While missing out on the visual effects and the energy of the theater, reading a play can often offer greater enjoyment because the reader has the option to reread lines and imagine the scenes in his or her own mind. To bring the play to life, however, one needs to pay extra attention to the stage directions to see how things are supposed to happen and how the actors are supposed to behave.

Types of Plays

The symbol of the theater is two masks, one with a great smile, the other with a frown and a tear.

For many years, drama, which originated in religious celebrations of the ancient Greeks, was either tragic or comic. Today, of course, plays can be tragedies, comedies, and everything in between. But you will better understand all those "in betweens" if you understand the extremes and the traditions from which they come.

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