docudrama
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Blend of documentary + drama.
Noun
docudrama (plural docudramas)
- A type of drama (a film, a television show, or a play) that combines elements of documentary and drama, to some extent showing real events and to some extent using actors performing recreations of documented events.
- Coordinate term: docufiction
- 1999, Alan Rosenthal, editor, Why Docudrama?: Fact-fiction on Film and TV, SIU Press, →ISBN, page xv:
- In other words, docudrama covers an amazing variety of dramatic forms, bound together by two things. They are all based on or inspired by reality, by the lives of real people, or by events that have happened in the recent or not too distant past. Furthermore, they would seem to have a higher responsibility to accuracy and to truth than does fiction.
- 2007 November 12, Mark Lawson, “The king of faction”, in The Guardian:
- And docudramas would be the perfect epitaph because, though Norman Kingsley Mailer dreamed of being the monarch of the American novel, he was finally the king of faction, the man whose greatest books, a nightmare for any librarian hoping neatly to classify as fiction or non-fiction, consolidated the now standard view that reporting is as important to storytelling as invention.
- 2024 April 3, Stephen Roberts, “Bradshaw's Britain: destination Harrow”, in RAIL, number 1006, page 57:
- Fenny Compton featured in the recent TV docudrama Mr Bates vs The Post Office. It was where the first meeting of postmasters took place in 2009, organised by sub-postmaster Alan Bates to begin mounting a fight for justice in the now well-publicised Post Office scandal.
Translations
drama that combines elements of documentary and drama
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See also
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /dokuˈdɾama/ [d̪o.kuˈð̞ɾa.ma]
- Rhymes: -ama
- Syllabification: do‧cu‧dra‧ma
Further reading
- “docudrama”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014
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