What are some examples of cross-dressing on stage through time and place? What were the reasons for it?

What will be an ideal response?


Since women were banned from performing in the seventeenth century, in the kabuki theatre, men perform onnagata roles, an idealized female character. In Elizabethan England, the belief that it was immodest and immoral for women to display themselves publicly led to young boys playing all the female roles. During the English Restoration, women appeared for the first time on the public stages of England. Beautiful young actresses were often called on to play breeches roles, in which they played young men dressed in short pants, or breeches. These roles allowed male audience members to ogle actresses' alluring ankles, a taboo sight outside the theatre. Today, theatre companies may use cross-dressing to highlight and question society's gender roles.

Art & Culture

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The hypothetical problem of the missing dollar helps us

a. keep an accurate account of our getting and spending. b. understand bellhops and their motives. c. put situations into a Dionysian perspective. d. remember to listen for contradictions and inconsistencies. e. see that economics is one of the disciplines of the humanities.

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Which is most likely to be used to provide sync between material recorded on a videotape and that recorded on audiotape?

a. a cable b. flash memory c. time code d. sprocket holes

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Which type of art focuses on human subjects?

a. figurative b. abstract c. outsider d. folk

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The design of the early Christian church was derived from the Roman __________ plan

A. tomb B. theater C. basilica D. house E. forum

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