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        | The term used to cover all parts of training or instruction in the field of theatre. |  | 
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        | a written copy of the dialogue that the actors will speak. |  | 
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        | the personality an actor portrays in a scene or play that is different from his or her own personality. |  | 
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        | males or females playing character roles. |  | 
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        | an actor's assumed behavior for the purpose of projecting a character to an audience. |  | 
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        | story in dialogue form to be acted out by actors before a live audience. |  | 
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        | the special literary style in which plays are written. |  | 
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        | the conversation between actors onstage. |  | 
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        | preserved as a moving photograph. |  | 
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        | the writing or performing of plays, as well as the formal study of the art form.  Also, a building in which plays are performed. |  | 
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        | belief in your worth and abilities as a person. |  | 
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        | the way we see ourselves. |  | 
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        | consideration for and acceptance of ourselves and others, including other people's property, backgrounds and opinions. |  | 
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        | mental comments and opinions we repeat to ourselves constantly. |  | 
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        | two or more people taking a step by step course of action that takes place over a period of time and is aimed at achieving goals. |  | 
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        | actions that are different from the norm. |  | 
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        | the ability to risk expressing yourself in front of your classmates without the fear of being ridiculed. |  | 
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        | Interpersonal Relationships |  | Definition 
 
        | the contacts a person has with many different people. |  | 
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        | the act of working together, getting along, and sharing responsibility. |  | 
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        | Maintaining a balance between group cooperation and individual integrity. |  | 
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        | information provided by the playwright to give actors instructions on how to feel or what to do when certain lines are spoken; these directions are usually in italics and parentheses. |  | 
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        | A group of people working together cooperatively. |  | 
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        | repeated action that becomes a custom or ceremony. |  | 
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        | player-audience relationship |  | Definition 
 
        | the special interactive and "live" relationship that exists between the performers and the audience, connecting and bonding them as a team. |  | 
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        | techniques and skills that we use to express ourselves emotionally, intellectually, socially, and physically. |  | 
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        | insight into our world of images, sound, color, patterns, forms, and movements. |  | 
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        | children's creation of scenes when they play "pretend." |  | 
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        | the power to create ideas and pictures in our minds. |  | 
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        | the ability to focus and pay close attention. |  | 
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        | the power of seeing and taking notice. |  | 
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        | the ability to use sight, sound, touch, smell, and taste to become conscious of the environment. |  | 
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        | the act of imagining and seeing pictures in the mind. |  | 
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        | the ability to transform ideas into action. |  | 
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        | the ability to move to a beat or pattern of beats |  | 
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        | the art of planning and composing a dance |  | 
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        | the ability to express feelings through physical action. |  | 
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        | an inner drive that causes a person to act a certain way |  | 
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        | strong feelings, such as joy, fear, hate, and happiness. |  | 
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