[[Image:Romeo and juliet brown.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[Romeo and Juliet]]'' by [[Ford Madox Brown]]]]
Play is a big scary paper clip that will pee on you if you eat to much brocceli. That is a pefectly good reson why not eat your brocceli
A '''play''' is a [[form]] of [[literature]], usually consisting chiefly of dialog between characters, and usually intended for [[performance]] rather than [[Reading (activity)|reading]]. However, many scholars study plays in this more academic manner, particularly [[classicism|classical]] plays such as those of [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]] (rare authors, notably [[George Bernard Shaw]], have had little preference whether their plays were performed or read). The term ''play'' refers both to the written works of [[playwright]]s or dramatists and to the complete theatrical performances of such.
Plays are generally performed in a [[theater]] by [[actor]]s. To better communicate a unified interpretation of the text in question, productions are usually overseen by [[theatre direction|directors]], who often put their own unique interpretation on the production. (''See [[theatre]] and related topics for more detailed information on the process of producing plays for performance''.)
The interpretive nature of drama is what makes it so appealing to so many performers and audience members alike — because a playwright is incapable of presenting the play in its intended format (a performance) without the aid of the actors and a director (though he may choose to take any of these roles himself — [[Molière]], for example, often acted in his own plays), a play is by definition undergoing constant rebirth and renewal as new experiences and interpretations are brought by new contributors.
[[Image:Proposals.JPG|frame|thumb|150px|left|A [[1999]] production of ''[[Proposals (play)|Proposals]]'' by [[Neil Simon]]. From left to right are the characters Ray, Sammii, Ken, and Josie]]
One kind of play, the [[closet drama]], is written in a dramatic form but is not intended for performance. It consists of dialogue between characters, but it is meant to be read, either silently to oneself or aloud to a group in a "closet" (a private domestic room). Some closet dramas have gone on to be performed.
Plays are written in a variety of genres. There are six basic genres of plays:
#[[Tragedy]] — A play in which a hero comes to a sad end due to fate, a tragic flaw or the work of the gods
#[[Comedy]] — A play in which, despite hindrances and problems along the way, everything works out happily at the end. This usually includes funny material, even jokes.
#[[Domestic]] [[drama]] — A play that reflects the world of the domestic, the family and the relationships that emerge out of the ordinary happenings of life.
#[[Tragicomedy]] — A play that contains elements of both tragedy and comedy.
#[[Melodrama]] — A play of heightened emotion in which a hero and often a heroine overcome a villain to right wrong. Usually has a happy ending.
#[[Symbolic]] — A play in which the characters and the actions have symbolic function and the main concern is the development of ideas
==Pricing==
Many [[Film director|movie directors]] and [[production house]]s pay varying prices for different scripts varying on the suspected success of the script as well as the previous success of its writer, making any question about the standard pricing of a script erroneous. In the case of a stage play, theatres usually license a playwright's written work or commission a play to be written for their theatre company.
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