All CLEP Humanities Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Drama
Gilbert and Sullivan were known for writing what kind of works?
Comic operas
Novels
Histories
Epic poems
Tragedies
Comic operas
W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan were a librettist and composer, respectively, who began teaming up in the 1870s to write comic operas. Throughout the next few decades, Gilbert and Sullivan wrote some of the most well known works of theater, including The Pirates of Penzance, H.M.S. Pinafore, and The Mikado. Gilbert and Sullivan's work highly influenced the development of musical theater in the twentieth century.
Example Question #3 : Drama
Who wrote A Doll's House and Ghosts?
Nora Helmer
Helene Alving
Henry James
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Henrik Ibsen
Henrik Ibsen
Henrik Ibsen wrote both of the plays Ghosts and A Doll's House. He was a 19th century Norwegian playwright. He is sometimes called the "father of realism."
Example Question #1 : Drama
Who was the playwright who wrote The Misanthrope, Tartuffe, and The Miser?
John Dryden
John Vanbrugh
Moliere
Albert Camus
Voltaire
Moliere
Moliere helped popularize and develop theater during the seventeenth century by combining elaborate and genteel French comedy styles with the broader and more jovial Italian commedia dell'arte. Moliere's works such as The Misanthrope, Tartuffe, and The Miser all were essentially farces that mocked upper-class values, religious people, and social habits. These elements made Moliere equally controversial and influential in subsequent centuries.
Example Question #1 : Drama
"Restoration comedy" is a variety of play written in which country during the seventeenth century?
England
Germany
Scotland
France
Italy
England
The "Restoration" in "Restoration comedies" refers to the return of the monarchy to England under the Stuart King Charles II. Following the deeply Puritan Commonwealth of Oliver Cromwell, which banned all forms of theater and celebrations, theater companies and audiences found a taste for bawdy and over-the-top comedies that featured outlandish characters and bizarre situations.
Example Question #4 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Drama
Who was the playwright that wrote the plays Mourning Becomes Electra, Long Day's Journey Into Night, and The Iceman Cometh?
Henrik Ibsen
Arthur Miller
Eugene O'Neill
Tennessee Williams
August Strindberg
Eugene O'Neill
Eugene O'Neill was a landmark figure in American theater, as he introduced the realism of European writers like Strindberg, Ibsen, and Chekhov to America. His plays Mourning Becomes Electra, Long Day's Journey Into Night, and The Iceman Cometh all have become standard parts of repertoire for many American theater companies. O'Neill won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1936.
Example Question #5 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Drama
The playwright who wrote Glengarry Glen Ross, American Buffalo, and Speed-the-Plow was __________.
David Mamet
Christopher Durang
Sam Shepard
Arthur Kopit
Edward Albee
David Mamet
David Mamet came out of the Chicago theater scene in the late 1970s with a distinctive, fully-formed style with short, snappy dialogue referred to as "Mamet-speak," demonstrated in early work like 1976's American Buffalo. He was immediately considered one of the leading playwrights in America, with his Glengarry Glen Ross winning a Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1984, and Speed-the-Plow winning the same award in 1988.
Example Question #6 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Drama
The playwright who authored The Children's Hour, A Watch on the Rhine, and The Little Foxes is __________.
Larraine Hansberry
Eugene O'Neill
Clifford Odets
Sophie Treadwell
Lillian Hellman
Lillian Hellman
Lillian Hellman had an instant Broadway success in 1934 with her first play, The Children's Hour, which also caused controversy over its themes of lesbianism, false accusations, and suicide. The pattern would continue throughout her career, as 1939's The Little Foxes and 1941's Watch on the Rhine both dealt with anti-semitism in America. Both plays were so successful that they were turned into movies with Hellman screenplays.
Example Question #7 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Drama
Who was the Irish playwright who detailed his time in the Irish Republican Army in his plays?
Martin McDonagh
Patrick Kavanaugh
Dylan Thomas
Samuel Beckett
Brendan Behan
Brendan Behan
Brendan Behan joined the IRA as a teenager in the 1940s, and because of crimes he committed against the British government, was imprisoned while still young. Upon being pardoned in 1947, Behan left the IRA behind and began a full-time literary career. An icon of Irish literature, Behan's first two plays, 1954's The Quare Fellow and 1958's An Giall (The Hostage), both depicted life in an Irish prison like the ones in which Behan was held.
Example Question #8 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Drama
Which of the following is the title of Lorraine Hansberry’s play about a lower-class African-American family in Chicago?
The Night of the Iguana
Indians
Fences
A Raisin in the Sun
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
A Raisin in the Sun
A Raisin in the Sun was considered a risky proposition when it was first produced on Broadway in 1959, dealing as it did with the story of an African-American family. The play proved to be a success anyway, helping launch not only Hansberry's career, but also that of actor Sydney Poitier. The play was the first on Broadway with a cast that had an African-American majority.
Example Question #9 : Identifying Titles, Authors, Or Schools Of Drama
Who is the American playwright who wrote the “Pittsburgh Cycle,” a series of ten plays chronicling the African-American experience in the twentieth century?
Lorraine Hansberry
August Wilson
Amiri Baraka
Maya Angelou
Suzan Lori-Parks
August Wilson
Beginning with his play 1982 play Jitney, August Wilson undertook a project to write one play representing each decade of the twentieth century that took on the African-American experience. All but one, 1984's Ma Rainey Black Bottom took place in Pittsburgh, often featuring members of the same family. Two of the plays won Wilson the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, 1987's Fences and 1990's The Piano Lesson.