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Exploration, Analysis and Revision Selection of Examination Questions


SAMPLE 1 You have been asked to write a 120-word publicity advertisement for a performance of the Shakespearean play you studied.


Write the advertisement that you think would draw an audience to see the play. Romeo and Juliet fall in love, and it’s complicated.


Come to the park on Sunday evening to see the greatest love story ever told. Ripped apart by their families’ bitter feud, two star-crossed lovers risk everything to be together.


See murder, mayhem, poison potions, romance and tragedy, all in less than two hours on our fabulous moonlit stage. See the Capulets and Montagues in deadly street stabbings, the magnificent masked ball, Juliet on the balcony, the secret wedding, the Apothecary’s shop of horrors, true death and fake death, and the final, heart-breaking moments in the family tomb.


'For never was a story of more woe Than this of Juliet and her Romeo.'


SAMPLE 2


On leaving this Sunday evening performance, audience members were asked, Did you enjoy the show?


Write the reply spoken by an audience member whose response was so positive that the company posted it as an online video to publicise the show.


The stage sets, lighting, costumes and acting were fabulous. For the masked ball the laser backdrop was a stunning mix of gold, red and white flashing light. They had the same colours in the masks and costumes. The party was wild, but then suddenly the dancing stopped, the music stopped, the lights went dim in the backdrop and a spotlight shone on Romeo and Juliet for the kiss moment.


The Balcony Scene was midnight blue with silver moon and stars over the stage and golden light shining behind Juliet on the balcony. The music in this scene was very quiet and soft.


The bursts of smoke and special sound and light effects in fight scenes were spectacular. The actors with swords and daggers made it look deadly. The fights happened right above our heads on the catwalks that jutted out from the stage.


In the family argument, Capulet was so aggressive, he terrified the audience when he roared, 'Hang, beg, starve, die in the streets'.


I had never imagined the penniless apothecary’s shop so spooky and macabre and full of weird props like dead stuffed animals. He was skinny as a starving skeleton, with a costume that looked like it had been lying for years in a grave.


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JUNIOR CYCLE ENGLISH


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