English and Irish Playwrights (Part Two) Quiz
- Question: Which English playwright was imprisoned in the Tower of London until 1654?
- Answer: The English poet, playwright, and theatre manager Sir William Davenant was made poet laureate in 1638. A supporter of King Charles I during the English Civil Wars in 1642, he was knighted by the king in 1643 for running supplies across the English Channel. After the execution of Charles I, his queen sent Davenant to aid the Royalist cause in America as lieutenant governor of Maryland. Davenant’s ship was captured in the English Channel, however, and he was imprisoned in the Tower of London until 1654.
- Question: Who is considered the first of the “Angry Young Men” of the British stage?
- Answer: John Osborne’s play Look Back in Anger (performed 1956) ushered in a new movement in British drama and made him known as the first of the “Angry Young Men.”
- Question: Whose writings about British history acted as the main reference resource for many of the Elizabethan playwrights?
- Answer: Raphael Holinshed is remembered chiefly because his Chronicles enjoyed great popularity and was mined for information and inspiration by many Elizabethan dramatists. Shakespeare found material for Macbeth, King Lear, Cymbeline, and many of his historical plays in Holinshed’s work.
- Question: Which theatre company in England had William Shakespeare as its leading dramatist?
- Answer: William Shakespeare was the principal dramatist for the Lord Chamberlain’s Men during most of his career as a dramatist. He also acted for the company.
- Question: Who wrote the play She Stoops to Conquer, first produced in 1773?
- Answer: She Stoops to Conquer was written by the Anglo-Irish essayist, poet, novelist, and dramatist Oliver Goldsmith. It was produced and published in 1773 and has outlived almost all other English comedies of its era.
- Question: Which playwright is most closely associated with the comedy of humours?
- Answer: The comedy of humours is a dramatic genre most closely associated with Ben Jonson. The term derives from the Latin humor (or umor), meaning “liquid,” and its use in the medieval and Renaissance medical theory that the human body held a balance of four liquids, or humours: blood, phlegm, yellow bile (choler), and black bile (melancholy). When properly balanced, these humours were thought to give the individual a healthy mind in a healthy body. In his play Every Man Out of His Humour (1599), Jonson explains that the system of humours governing the body may by metaphor be applied to the general disposition, so that a peculiar quality may so possess a man as to make him act in one way.
- Question: Which of George Bernard Shaw’s protagonists best personifies the tragic heroine?
- Answer: In George Bernard Shaw’s Saint Joan (performed 1923), Joan of Arc is the personification of the tragic heroine: she is “crushed between those mighty forces, the Church and the Law,” and her death embodies the paradox that humankind tends to fear (and often kills) its saints and heroes.
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© powerofforever—DigitalVision Vectors/Getty Images