ENGLISH HOME LANGUAGE PAPER 1
GRADE 12
NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE
SEPTEMBER 2018
INSTRUCTIONS AND INFORMATION
SECTION A: COMPREHENSION
QUESTION 1: READING FOR MEANING AND UNDERSTANDING
Read TEXTS A and B and answer the questions set.
TEXT A
THE GREATEST SHOWMAN: HOW THE HUGH JACKMAN MUSICAL
BECAME AN UNLIKELY HIT
It runs counter to box-office trends, it’s hokey1 and old-school, but somehow this all-singing, all-dancing spectacle keeps winning over audiences.
GLOSSARY:
1 hokey: overly sentimental 2 hagiographic: biography that puts the subject in a very flattering, saint-like light
3 ropy: not meeting an acceptable standard 4CGI: special visual effects created using computer software
AND
TEXT B
QUESTIONS: TEXT A
1.1 Refer to the lead (lines 1–3).
1.1.1 Give TWO reasons why The Greatest Showman is so popular among audiences. (2)
1.1.2 The Oxford Dictionary defines a spectacle as ‘a visually striking performance or display’. With close reference to these lines, explain why the writer of the article would call The Greatest Showman a ‘spectacle’ (line 2). (2)
1.2 Refer to paragraph 1.
1.2.1 What is the writer’s opinion of The Greatest Showman? Quote ONE word to prove your answer. (2)
1.2.2 The word ‘stealth’ (line 7) indicates that the success of this film is …
1.3 Refer to paragraph 2.
Say whether the following statement is TRUE or FALSE and quote THREE consecutive words to substantiate your answer.
The Greatest Showman has been a roaring success since the night of the premiere. (2)
1.4 Identify and discuss the style the writer uses in paragraph 3. Quote a phrase to substantiate your answer. (3)
1.5 Explain the juxtaposition of contradictory viewpoints in paragraph 4 which, it is claimed, has led to the popularity of The Greatest Showman. (3)
1.6 What does the writer mean when he says that ‘little of its making has been left down to chance’? (lines 38–39) (2)
1.7 Refer to paragraph 6. 1.7.1
What is the ‘tried and tested formula’ (line 45) which ensured that the film was a success? (2)
1.7.2 Why has Hugh Jackman been chosen for the lead role? (2)
1.8 Explain how the writer’s tone changes in paragraph 7 from his tone in paragraph 1. (2)
QUESTIONS: TEXT B
1.9 In the summary of Box Office earnings (Total Lifetime Grosses) of The Greatest Showman, study the totals next to the words ‘Domestic’ and ‘Foreign’. What is your conclusion after studying these totals? (2)
1.10 Why is this conclusion (in QUESTION 1.9) an obvious one? (1)
QUESTION: TEXTS A AND B
1.11 Would you need to read TEXT A or TEXT B if you want to determine the explanation for the run-away success of The Greatest Showman? Justify your response with close reference to both TEXT A and TEXT B. (4)
TOTAL SECTION A: 30
SECTION B: SUMMARY
QUESTION 2: SUMMARISING IN YOUR OWN WORDS
You have been asked by the editor of the school newspaper to write an article about the reasons for the popularity of musicals. You found the following article (TEXT C) during your research on the internet. Use the contents of the article in TEXT C to write the article IN YOUR OWN WORDS.
NOTE:
TEXT C
PEOPLE LOVE MUSICALS – AND HERE’S WHY
Josh Friedman, Managing Director of the Hangar Theatre, told me that musicals were more popular than non-musical plays. Plays generally ran for performances and musicals for. He suggested, ‘People’s first theatrical experiences are musicals in school or church.’
Friedman suggested that musicals have more advertising around them. ‘Broadway is usually musicals, and the Broadway advertising machine is huge.’ Those productions were profit-based and heavily marketed.
Friedman said, ‘Musicals are fun entertainment. People want to be entertained. Musicals have happy endings and often offer escapism. Fantasy is part of it.’
Bert Smock, Artistic Director of the Finger Lakes Musical Theatre Festival, sent a long and thoughtful email. ‘Musical theatre is difficult to define and compartmentalise. I think it’s fair to say that music can significantly enhance a moment onstage in a way that cannot be duplicated. It can dramatise a moment or provide complete contextual comedy to another. When put to lyrics, music has the ability to be entirely transporting – in a singular way – which a non-musical play cannot. Music is, after all, a universal language.’
‘Dance, as an art form, and a means of expression is similarly intangible but, when used to capture a feeling or a dramatic moment, stands alone in its ability to convey expression or evoke emotion. And while the spoken word of itself is theatre (drama or comedy), without the accompanying underscore and movement, a musical is not made. Each component must be recognised as having power and content. When combined with one another like parts of a recipe, the delicate blend ideally is defining and transporting.’
TOTAL SECTION B: 10
SECTION C: LANGUAGE STRUCTURES AND CONVENTIONS
QUESTION 3: ANALYSING ADVERTISING
Study the following advertisements (TEXTS D and E) below and answer the set questions.
TEXT D
3.1 Critically discuss the combination of traditional and modern in the image and the copy of this advertisement. (2)
TEXT E
The text in small font reads as follows:
3D AS YOU HAVE NEVER SEEN BEFORE: WITHOUT GLASSES. NEW LG OPTIMUS 3D. The only one with two cameras for capture 3D photos and videos and a 4.3-inch screen. The first 3D smartphone is a LG. |
QUESTIONS: TEXT E
3.2 ‘WITHOUT GLASSES.’
This is an incomplete sentence. State the advertiser’s purpose in using this grammatically incorrect sentence structure. (2)
3.3 Study the logo and slogan of this company.
Critically comment on the effectiveness of these. (3)
3.4 Explain how the image suits the theme of the advertisement. (3)
[10]
QUESTION 4: UNDERSTANDING OTHER ASPECTS OF THE MEDIA
Study TEXTS F and G and answer the set questions.
TEXT F: CARTOON
QUESTIONS: TEXT F
4.1 ‘AFTER 146 YEARS, IT’S OVER …’
Identify the tone indicated by the ellipsis after the elephant’s words. (1)
4.2 Discuss how the expressions on the faces of the elephant and the clowns and the body language of the clowns reinforce the message of the cartoon. (3)
4.3 Explain the satire in this cartoon. (3)
TEXT G
QUESTION: TEXT G
4.4 Identify the literary device used in the cartoon and explain how it creates humour. (3)
[10]
QUESTION 5: USING LANGUAGE CORRECTLY
Read TEXT H, which contains some deliberate errors, and answer the set questions.
TEXT H
THE GREATEST SHOWMAN: THE TRUE STORY OF P.T. BARNUM AND JENNY LIND
1 According to the Hugh Jackman musical, the circus proprietor almost fell for the ‘Swedish nightingale’ – but the real story is a lot more complicated.
2 On September 1 in 1850, 30 000 onlookers packed the waterfront in New York City, clamoring to catch a glimpse of the Swedish opera singer Jenny Lind as she disembarked from the steamship Atlantic to begin an American tour. Lind’s American promoter, the visionary entertainer and entrepreneur P.T. Barnum, greeted the singer with a bouquet and waved her into a private carriage.
3 The Jenny Lind tour was a barnstormer, taking in the modern equivalent of $21 million over a nine-month engagement.
4 But more than Lind’s fame or Barnum’s marketing success, the story that has persisted most through the decades is the did-they-or-didn’t-they frisson of a suspected romance between the entertainer and his star attraction. Certainly the new Hugh Jackman film The Greatest Showman, a highly fictionalised musical biopic starring Rebecca Ferguson as Lind, subscribes to the idea of an infatuation between the showman and the singer.
5 Fictionalised versions of Barnum’s life has often relied on the tension of a man torn between his steady, Puritan wife and an exotic European songstress. The love triangle is, however attractive, a fiction.
6 From unassuming origins, Jenny Lind became the darling of European opera. Born out of wedlock and into a dismal childhood, the Royal Theatre in Stockholm admitted Jenny as a voice student at the age of nine, and by her tween years she was a renowned professional singer.
QUESTIONS: TEXT H
5.1 ‘… the circus proprietor almost fell for the ‘Swedish nightingale’…’
(paragraph 1).
Account for the use of the inverted commas in ‘Swedish nightingale’. (1)
5.2 Identify and correct the spelling error in paragraph 2. (1)
5.3 In the first sentence of paragraph 2 a punctuation error occurs. Rewrite the sentence, correcting the error. (1)
5.4 ‘… that has persisted most through the decades is the did-they-or-didn’t-they frisson’ (paragraph 4).
What is the function of the hyphens in this sentence? (1)
5.5
5.5.1 Write down a neologism from paragraph 4. (1)
5.5.2 Explain the neologism you have identified in QUESTION 5.5.1. (1)
5.6 Correct the concord error in paragraph 5. (1)
5.7 Rewrite the first sentence of paragraph 6 in reported speech. Begin with: The writer said … (1)
5.8 A grammar error appears in the second sentence of paragraph 6. Rewrite the sentence correctly. (1)
5.9 ‘… and by her tween years was a renowned professional singer.’
(paragraph 6)
Explain the meaning of the underlined word. (1)
[10]
TOTAL SECTION C: 30
GRAND TOTAL: 70