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Page 87
... answer : Will Romeo find happiness with Juliet ? The answer to each of these questions is , then , what Aristotle calls the end of the plot - and this is clearly the most important part of the action of the play , for it is what ...
... answer : Will Romeo find happiness with Juliet ? The answer to each of these questions is , then , what Aristotle calls the end of the plot - and this is clearly the most important part of the action of the play , for it is what ...
Page 89
... answer the question raised by the cause of the action , the question which is the chief business of the plot . For ... answer , and can answer , only in terms of action . first significant event of the play , significant because it Plot ...
... answer the question raised by the cause of the action , the question which is the chief business of the plot . For ... answer , and can answer , only in terms of action . first significant event of the play , significant because it Plot ...
Page 116
... answer is Marion's agreeing to have dinner with Kinnicott , allowing him to imagine that he can convince her not to publish her autobiography . This acceptance of an invitation to have din- ner with Kinnicott at his lodgings ...
... answer is Marion's agreeing to have dinner with Kinnicott , allowing him to imagine that he can convince her not to publish her autobiography . This acceptance of an invitation to have din- ner with Kinnicott at his lodgings ...
Contents
The Theater vs Life | 1 |
Sources for Ideas for Plays | 17 |
Plot 1 | 35 |
Copyright | |
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acter Aeschylus ALGERNON audience become beginning Behrman's bench Biography cause Cecily central character Chalk Garden char CHARLIE CHASUBLE Cherry Orchard Claudius comedy curtain Cyrano Cyrano de Bergerac deed Desdemona DESDEMONA OTHELLO dialogue drama dramatist Driscoll Earnest end of Act example fact farce father feel full-length play Ghost Gregers Gwendolen Hamlet Hedda Gabler Hialmar Hippolytus Hobart Ibsen important incident interest Jack JERRY kill kind King KURT Lady Bracknell Lael Lear living look Lovborg MARION marriage marry material matter Mercutio Miss Prism murder never NOLAN NORA novel one-act play Othello PETER Phaedra playwriting plot Polonius possible present Proposition and climax Purvis question relationship resulting action Romeo and Juliet Rosalind scene second character Shakespeare situation Smitty Sophocles speak speech stage story subplot succeed Symbolism talk tell Tesman theater theme Theseus thing tion tragedy tragic hero Tybalt wife woman write young