| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| A secondary actor who fills in when an actor is unable to perform | understudy | 78%
|
| Passages of speech between characters | dialogue | 77%
|
| A form of acting in which performers make up their own lines and scenarios | improvisation | 75%
|
| The lowered part of the theatre where the orchestra sits | pit | 75%
|
| A door in the stage floor for actor to enter or exit | trap | 64%
|
| A speech in which an actor, usually alone, thinks aloud | soliloquy | 59%
|
| The reason a character does something | motivation | 56%
|
| A gradual dimming of the stage lights | fade | 51%
|
| The seating area of a theatre | house | 50%
|
| A flat surface or curtain used to represent a setting | backdrop | 48%
|
| Program or booklet containing information about the performance | playbill | 47%
|
| A narrow walkway from which scenery and drops are flown | catwalk | 38%
|
| The spoken part of a musical play | libretto | 36%
|
| A person who feeds actors forgotten lines during rehearsals | prompter | 33%
|
| A rhetorical device in which the audience knows something that the characters do not | dramatic irony | 32%
|
| Tape or marking on the stage to indicate placement of set pieces | spike marks | 15%
|
| Chief electrician in charge of lighting | gaffer | 14%
|
| When an actor, whose character is dead, moves onstage | corpsing | 13%
|
| A structure used to reduce the opening between the stage and the wings | proscenium | 13%
|
| A platform raised above the primary level of the stage | rostrum | 4%
|
| Appearance of truth; suspension of audience's disbelief | verisimilitude | 3%
|
| A rolling cart used to change scenery | jackknife | 1%
|