CLEP Humanities : Performing Arts

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for CLEP Humanities

varsity tutors app store varsity tutors android store

Example Questions

Example Question #91 : Performing Arts

In a theater in the round, the seats are arranged in what format?

Possible Answers:

In a circle around the stage

On the stage itself

In one line in front of the stage

On multiple levels in the gallery

In straight lines in front of the stage

Correct answer:

In a circle around the stage

Explanation:

Theater "in the round" is a format which features the audience sitting in a circle around the stage. This creates a different environment for the performers and audience, which forces a play to be performed in a different manner than usual. This approach has typically been used in more modern theater to differentiate it from film.

Example Question #92 : Performing Arts

How many acts do Shakespeare's plays typically have?

Possible Answers:

One

Five

Three

Seven

Two

Correct answer:

Five

Explanation:

William Shakespeare's plays, whether comedies or tragedies, typically are divided into five separate acts. This was based off of Roman structures, and was the popular format in Renaissance drama. This structure was formally described and analyzed by the German author Gustav Freytag in his 1863 Die Technik des Dramas.

Example Question #93 : Performing Arts

In the theater, which person is responsible for arranging the sets, props, and actors to run the show smoothly?

Possible Answers:

Playwright

Stage Manager

Director

Technical Director

Producer

Correct answer:

Stage Manager

Explanation:

In any theatrical production, the person who is responsible for all of the elements to go off smoothly and in the proper order is the stage manager. While the least creative position among the production crew's leadership, the stage manager is also the most necessary. The stage manager is the conduit between the director and all the technical functions in a play, and "calls" the show by announcing when various elements can go off.

Example Question #94 : Performing Arts

In the theater, the "proscenium" refers to __________.

Possible Answers:

the frame around the stage provided by the building's architecture

the portion of the theater that actors can walk on

the front portion of the seats for the audience

the area behind the seats for technical artists

the area of the stage lights cannot hit

Correct answer:

the frame around the stage provided by the building's architecture

Explanation:

The proscenium arch is the name for the outer framing of the performance area at a theater that demarcates the performing area for the audience. The physical arch was a necessity for centuries, creating a frame for the audience's view of the stage. Beginning in the twentieth century, many theater artists began performing in spaces without a proscenium, and new forms of theater developed that openly broke down the "fourth wall" between the performers and the audience.

Example Question #95 : Performing Arts

What part of the stage is called "upstage?"

Possible Answers:

The catwalks that hold the scenery

The area of the stage closest to the audience

The balcony

The wings where the actors wait to go on stage

The back of the stage, furthest from the audience

Correct answer:

The back of the stage, furthest from the audience

Explanation:

The term "upstage" refers to the back of the stage, furthest away from the audience. Before theaters began using auditorium-style seating, where the audience's seats are arranged in rows with each row progressively higher, the audience would stand or sit on a flat floor. Stages were often built on an angle, with the rear of the stage at a higher elevation than the front, so that audiences could see what was happening at the back of the stage. When an actor is told by the director to move "upstage," he is being told to walk towards the rear of the stage.

Example Question #96 : Performing Arts

To what does the term "blocking" refer?

Possible Answers:

When an actor deliberately stands in front of another

Determining the placement of the scenery

Chunking lines in order to memorize them

Predetermined movement by the actors

The act of putting the props on stage

Correct answer:

Predetermined movement by the actors

Explanation:

"Blocking" refers to predetermined movements by the actors. As a company begins to rehearse a play, the director will give the actors their blocking in addition to their lines. This ensures that actors are in a particular space at a certain time. This makes the actors' lives easier because a scene should be the same every time. It also ensures that the audience can see what is going on without any of the actors being covered up by another.

Example Question #97 : Performing Arts

"Stage right" refers to ________________.

Possible Answers:

the right side of the stage when sitting in the audience

the wings on the right side of the stage

the right side of the stage when facing the audience

a saying from the director meaning "everything's correct"

the seats in the audience on the right side of the stage

Correct answer:

the right side of the stage when facing the audience

Explanation:

When actors are given directions for movement, the stage is divided into regions so that everyone goes to the same place. These regions are always determined based on the viewpoint of the actor. As the actor looks at the audience, "stage right" is to the actor's right. This means that, from the audience's point of view, they are moving to the left side of the stage.

Example Question #98 : Performing Arts

Kabuki theater originated in _________________.

Possible Answers:

China

Kenya

Peru

Taiwan

Japan

Correct answer:

Japan

Explanation:

Kabuki theater began in Japan, near Kyoto, in the 17th century. It features complex stage design and elaborate makeup. Traditionally, a kabuki performance could last for an entire day. Such lengthy performances happen even today.

Example Question #99 : Performing Arts

The 1948 play A Streetcar Named Desire was a popular hit written by the playwright __________.

Possible Answers:

Tennessee Williams

Henrik Ibsen

Arthur Miller

Sam Shepard

Edward Albee

Correct answer:

Tennessee Williams

Explanation:

A Streetcar Named Desire was one of the biggest hits of the Broadway season of 1948, and helped further the careers of its director Elia Kazan, its star Marlon Brando, and especially its writer Tennessee Williams. The drama about a factory worker and his wife hosting her Southern belle sister won Williams a Pulitzer Prize for Drama and was later made into a successful film, also directed by Kazan and starring Brando.

Example Question #100 : Performing Arts

What is the name of the Samuel Beckett play where two men wait for a third man to appear throughout the whole play?

Possible Answers:

No Exit

Death of a Salesman

Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

A Streetcar Named Desire

Waiting for Godot

Correct answer:

Waiting for Godot

Explanation:

Beckett, who helped define the "Theatre of Absurd," wrote Waiting for Godot without ever actually bringing the title character onstage. Instead, the two main characters, Vladimir and Estragon, argue about Godot, each other, and the meaning of life without having the unseen Godot interfere.

Learning Tools by Varsity Tutors