Verisimilitude in movies involves making each setting in the film look stylized according to the director's vision.

Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)


False

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What did Robert Rauschenberg call his artworks that put everyday objects together with collage and painting?

A. site-specific works. B. Minimalism. C. combine-paintings. D. action paintings. E. Assemblage.

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You have been hired to be the lighting designer for an upcoming production. After being hired, you read the script over and begin to make a plot. Once the plot is done, you and your assistants begin hanging the lighting instruments in the theatre. You then attend your first production meeting with the director and tell him of your progress. The director will most likely tell you that your actions thus far have been

A. accurate, most of the technical work needs to be done before entering a production meeting. B. inaccurate, lighting designs need to wait till after the initial production meetings so that the designers know what to light and how. C. accurate, lighting is distinct and separate from other technical areas and does not need to meet with the director before beginning to set up. D. inaccurate, it is the technical director's primary job to hang the lighting instruments.

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In the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson's argument for freedom was inspired by

a. Thomas Hobbes. b. Thomas Paine. c. John Locke. d. Voltaire.

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Match the following:

a. Tin Pan Alley b. march c. melisma d. cakewalk e. call-and-response f. interlocutor g. interpolation h. waltz song i. trio j. minstrel show k. olio l. parlor song m. songster n. vaudeville 1. Part of a song that offers a new melody, a contrasting mood, and usually is in a different key. 2. An 1800s variety show consisting of thematically unrelated musical acts and skits. 3. A dance fad of the 1890s. 4. Musical exchanges between a leader and the group. 5. A piece of popular music with three beats in a measure. 6. Songs written with the intention of being performed in someone's living room. 7. The nickname for the "street" in New York City where music publishing was headquartered. 8. The mid-1800 entertainment form which gave rise to American musical theater. 9. A dance or outdoor type of music with two beats per measure. 10. A book containing the lyrics of a popular song. 11. A section in a minstrel show that featured a wide range of acts. 12. The insertion of a song into a musical comedy simply because it was a popular piece. 13. Several notes sung to a single syllable. 14. The straight man in a minstrel show who would ask questions of the endman and invite comical responses.

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