There are 3 acts, and i don't think there are any scenes... it separated in acts only.
--->Scenes!
A play is divided into Acts, then Scenes, then French Scenes, then Beats, then Lines, then Words, then Syllables, then Letters, then Sound(s). (But seriously, it only needs to go down to Beats.)
Zero (0) is the number of acts in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the play complies with the rules of ancient Greek drama and theater. It therefore does not have acts or scenes. Instead, it has episodes and odes. In modern terminology, the episodes may be seen as scenes. The scenes run to a total number of five (5) and are sandwiched between the prologue in the very beginning and the exodus at the very end.
Playwrights divide plays into scenes and acts to accommodate audiences. The thing to remember about plays is that they are meant to be seen and not read. Because of this, breaks are needed for scene changes.
Plays are usually divided into "acts" which are further divided into "scenes."
There are TWO acts in the play (reading it) but not sure how many scenes ! Ilove you Nixon :) :*
lots
there are no scenes, only three acts.
There are four acts in Thornton Wilder's The Matchmaker.
there are three acts in the miracle worker
shakespeare usually had plays of 5 acts each with 5 scenes
Act I has five scenes. Act II has five also. Act III has four. Act IV has only three. And the last Act is one long scene. If you can add, you will see they add up to eighteen scenes altogether.
scenes and acts. An act usually contains several scenes,
--->Scenes!
Well there are scenes and acts. There are usually two or three acts to a play, and in between the acts the audience take a break. The scenes usually change when the setting changes or new characters are on stage.
Scenes
A play is divided into Acts, then Scenes, then French Scenes, then Beats, then Lines, then Words, then Syllables, then Letters, then Sound(s). (But seriously, it only needs to go down to Beats.)