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Quiz about Comedic Playwrights Through History
Quiz about Comedic Playwrights Through History

Comedic Playwrights Through History Quiz


Try your luck at various comedic playwrights from ancient Rome to ones who are still living today.

A multiple-choice quiz by GWU_Boy. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Author
GWU_Boy
Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
102,889
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
15
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
10 / 15
Plays
1102
- -
Question 1 of 15
1. This man won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1925, yet went on writing plays almost until his death at the age of 94. He was one of the most influential music and drama critics of his time, and also wrote such plays as "Saint Joan", "Heartbreak House", "Man and Superman", and "Major Barbara". Hint


Question 2 of 15
2. He pioneered "comedy of humors" in 1598 with 'Every Man in His Humour' which showcased the follies of men in the hopes his audiences would see their own faults. Although he was a poet, he changed 17th century English comedies with "Volpone", "The Alchemist," and "Bartholomew Fair". Hint


Question 3 of 15
3. This man's real name is Jean Baptiste Poquelin, and is known for writing some of the most satirical, full-length comedies of all time. His most famous works are "Tartuffe", "The Misanthrope", "Amphitryon", and "The Miser".

Answer: (One Word)
Question 4 of 15
4. This man is known as the "father of Roman literature", yet was a non-Roman who was brought to Rome as a war captive from southern Italy. His mastery of Greek poetry and the Latin language helped him produce the first Latin comedy and the first Latin tragedy, both in 240. Hint


Question 5 of 15
5. This comedy playwright was known for "It's Only a Play", "The Lisbon Traviata", and "Love! Valour! Compassion!". His 1987 work "Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune" was even made into a Hollywood movie three years later, which was mere peanuts to this man acclaimed for his black humor and social satire. Hint


Question 6 of 15
6. He was the most highly regarded English playwright of the 18th century for his talent of unifying Restoration comedy together with that of the view of human nature. Although he was elected to Parliament, and in 1783 became secretary of the treasury, he still managed to write such masterpieces as "The Rivals" in 1755 and "The Critic" in 1779. Hint


Question 7 of 15
7. This man is considered as the last of the Restoration playwrights. Although he died in poverty, he was praised for "Recruiting Officer" and "The Beaux' Stratagem", for which he drew on his military experience to write them. Hint


Question 8 of 15
8. This man was the first to write comedies in the Russian language. "The Brigadier" satirized the mania for all things French in 18th-century Russia while "The Minor" lampooned the ignorance which typified the provincial gentry in Russia. Hint


Question 9 of 15
9. He was the greatest comic dramatist of ancient times and wrote in a style known as Old Attic Comedy. Living from 445 BC to 385 BC, he is believed to have written more than 40 plays, including "The Acharnians", "The Clouds", "The Wasps", and "Plutus", along with plays commenting on the Peloponnesian War. Hint


Question 10 of 15
10. This Spaniard is best known for his 'pasos', or one-act comedies, and was the first in Spain to have stage comedies with any professionalism according to Miguel de Cervantes. Hint


Question 11 of 15
11. This man was the greatest comic dramatist of ancient Rome. His style of Greek New Comedy influenced on romantic drama in the West for centuries with "Stichus" and "Pseudolus". Hint


Question 12 of 15
12. Born in 1877, this man's 1907 comedy "The Country Dressmaker" was a favorite of the Abbey Theater and is also known for the 1908 work "Pie-Dish" along with "The Magic Glasses". Hint


Question 13 of 15
13. This director's comedy plays were some of the most successful plays on Broadway, including "My Sister Eileen" and "Guys and Dolls". He started out as a New York Times drama critic, and even while his plays (such as "Dulcy" and "To the Ladies") were gaining fame, he kept that job for 13 years. Hint


Question 14 of 15
14. This man was a French playwright who authored more than 100 farces for the popular theaters of Paris. His 1709 work "Turcaret" was probably his only major success where the story was not drafted from a Spanish novel. Hint


Question 15 of 15
15. His work comprises of 36 plays, 154 sonnets, and 2 narrative poems. His comedies include "The Comedy of Errors", "A Midsummer Night's Dream", and "Much Ado about Nothing".

Answer: (One Word)

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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. This man won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1925, yet went on writing plays almost until his death at the age of 94. He was one of the most influential music and drama critics of his time, and also wrote such plays as "Saint Joan", "Heartbreak House", "Man and Superman", and "Major Barbara".

Answer: George Bernard Shaw

George Bernard Shaw lived from 1856 until 1950 used his 1938 work "Geneva" to put Hitler, Mussolini, and Franco onto the comic stage.
2. He pioneered "comedy of humors" in 1598 with 'Every Man in His Humour' which showcased the follies of men in the hopes his audiences would see their own faults. Although he was a poet, he changed 17th century English comedies with "Volpone", "The Alchemist," and "Bartholomew Fair".

Answer: Ben Jonson

In 1625, Jonson suffered a paralytic stroke, and was bedridden for the rest of his years, but was still visited by young admirers known as "Sons of Ben". He is buried in Westminster Abbey.
3. This man's real name is Jean Baptiste Poquelin, and is known for writing some of the most satirical, full-length comedies of all time. His most famous works are "Tartuffe", "The Misanthrope", "Amphitryon", and "The Miser".

Answer: Moliere

The French national theater, the Comédie Française, is known as the House of Molière.
4. This man is known as the "father of Roman literature", yet was a non-Roman who was brought to Rome as a war captive from southern Italy. His mastery of Greek poetry and the Latin language helped him produce the first Latin comedy and the first Latin tragedy, both in 240.

Answer: Livius Andronicus

Livius Andronicus lived from 284 BC to 204 BC.
5. This comedy playwright was known for "It's Only a Play", "The Lisbon Traviata", and "Love! Valour! Compassion!". His 1987 work "Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune" was even made into a Hollywood movie three years later, which was mere peanuts to this man acclaimed for his black humor and social satire.

Answer: Terrence McNally

His first attempt at a play, "Things That Go Bump in the Night" failed, yet his one-act play "Tour, Botticelli, and Next" was broadcasted over public television in 1968.
6. He was the most highly regarded English playwright of the 18th century for his talent of unifying Restoration comedy together with that of the view of human nature. Although he was elected to Parliament, and in 1783 became secretary of the treasury, he still managed to write such masterpieces as "The Rivals" in 1755 and "The Critic" in 1779.

Answer: Richard Sheridan

"A Trip to Scarborough" and "The School for Scandal" are also considered some of Richard Sheridan's best plays.
7. This man is considered as the last of the Restoration playwrights. Although he died in poverty, he was praised for "Recruiting Officer" and "The Beaux' Stratagem", for which he drew on his military experience to write them.

Answer: George Farquhar

He hadn't even turned 30 years old before he died in 1707.
8. This man was the first to write comedies in the Russian language. "The Brigadier" satirized the mania for all things French in 18th-century Russia while "The Minor" lampooned the ignorance which typified the provincial gentry in Russia.

Answer: Denis Fonvizin

Fonvizin's other plays addressed absolutism of Catherine II of Russia.
9. He was the greatest comic dramatist of ancient times and wrote in a style known as Old Attic Comedy. Living from 445 BC to 385 BC, he is believed to have written more than 40 plays, including "The Acharnians", "The Clouds", "The Wasps", and "Plutus", along with plays commenting on the Peloponnesian War.

Answer: Aristophanes

Other works by Aristophanes include "The Birds" where he tells of an Athenian man who persuades birds to build a utopia in the sky, and "Lysistrata", where the women of Greece go on a sex strike to create peace.
10. This Spaniard is best known for his 'pasos', or one-act comedies, and was the first in Spain to have stage comedies with any professionalism according to Miguel de Cervantes.

Answer: Lope de Rueda

His 1548 work "Las Aceitunas" ("Olives") is the best known of his 24 extant farces.
11. This man was the greatest comic dramatist of ancient Rome. His style of Greek New Comedy influenced on romantic drama in the West for centuries with "Stichus" and "Pseudolus".

Answer: Plautus

Plautus lived from around 254 BC to 184 BC.
12. Born in 1877, this man's 1907 comedy "The Country Dressmaker" was a favorite of the Abbey Theater and is also known for the 1908 work "Pie-Dish" along with "The Magic Glasses".

Answer: George Fitzmaurice

Fitzmaurice also posthumously produced his fantasies in the 1966 work, "The Enchanted Land".
13. This director's comedy plays were some of the most successful plays on Broadway, including "My Sister Eileen" and "Guys and Dolls". He started out as a New York Times drama critic, and even while his plays (such as "Dulcy" and "To the Ladies") were gaining fame, he kept that job for 13 years.

Answer: George S. Kaufman

More of Kaufman's works include "Merton of the Movies", "Beggar on Horseback", "The Butter and Egg Man", and "You Can't Take It With You". He died in 1961. (Note: Although Kaufman directed "Guys and Dolls," he did not write it. The writers were Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows.)
14. This man was a French playwright who authored more than 100 farces for the popular theaters of Paris. His 1709 work "Turcaret" was probably his only major success where the story was not drafted from a Spanish novel.

Answer: Alain LeSage

Alain René LeSage lived from 1668 until 1747.
15. His work comprises of 36 plays, 154 sonnets, and 2 narrative poems. His comedies include "The Comedy of Errors", "A Midsummer Night's Dream", and "Much Ado about Nothing".

Answer: Shakespeare

Other comedies include "Two Gentlemen of Verona" and "As You Like It".
Source: Author GWU_Boy

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor thejazzkickazz before going online.
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