Ancient Theatre History Theatre 1-2 Brittany M. Sutton Revised November 06.

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Ancient Theatre HistoryTheatre 1-2

Brittany M. Sutton

Revised November 06

Ancient Drama Time Frame 5000 BCE to 300 CE

Pre-Greek Period (5000 BCE to 600 BCE) History of drama dates back to start of mankind:

Hunters pantomimed adventures First storytellers told tales in chants First organized groups pantomimed the hunt, war,

and love dances Mask appeared- first actors became god or animal

Man’s attempt to imitate nature developed into formal, religious song and dance ceremonies:

Worship specific gods and rulers Celebrate the hunt and war

Man begins acting out his wishes for: Nature Rain Good harvests Sunshine

Earliest record of theatrical performance dates back about 4000 years to Egypt: Three-day event that included actual battles and

elaborate ceremonies about the murder, dismemberment, and resurrection of Osiris (god of the lower world).

Osiris- Egyptian God of the Underworld

Prehistoric Theatre: War Dance

Early Greek Period(600 BCE-500 BCE)

Drama as we know it developed during this period when religious hymns developed to sing praises to gods:

Dithyrambs (hymns) sung to Dionysus (god of wine and fertility): In honor of his death, a group of chanters, called the chorus,

would dance around an alter which a goat was sacrificed on. Chant was called “tragos” (goat-song)= tragedy Komos=comedy

Ceremonies in honor of Dionysus evolved into large contests:

First contest was won by Thespis: First to step away from chorus and engage in dialogue between chorus and himself- first actor (Thespian). Also credited with introducing mask in Greek plays.

Dramatic contests part of festival lasting five to six days: Most famous festival was City Dionysia:

*First day: games (similar to carnival). *Second and Third: poetry contests. *Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth: different playwright

would present four plays each day: first three were part of a trilogy (related in theme and characters) and fourth was a satyr play (comedy).

Performance of the dithyramb (550-500 BCE)

Dionysus

City Dionysia

Continued… Theatre existed only for men: both as

performers and audience: women not permitted to attend until about 400 BCE.

Audiences large: some theatres could hold over 17,000.

Chorus: Main part of early Greek theatre Purpose: to narrate, explain, comment on action, and

also engage in dialogue with actors. Originally about fifty performers in chorus. Number and responsibilities decreased as actors

took over larger roles.

Greek Period (500 BCE-100 BCE)

Tragedies clash between Gods and ambitions of man: showed man’s efforts to change fate were useless.

Continued…Important People & Concepts… Aeschylus:

Father of tragedy Added second actor Reduced chorus to twelve. Wrote only existing trilogy- man (Agamemnon)

returns from war and is killed by his wife and her lover: children take revenge by killing mother: trial of one of the children.

Sophocles: Considered greatest Greek tragedy writer Added third actor Oedipus Rex: kills father, marries mother, gouges

out eyes. Adds scenery and action. Antigone

Aeschylus

Painting of Agamemnon

Sophocles

Oedipus Rex

Antigone

Continued… Euripides:

Separates action from chorus More concerned with human relationships. Medea: woman’s husband cheats on her: to get revenge,

she sacrifices her two sons.

Aristophanes: Main author of Greek comedy.

Masks used to show emotions (where masks of comedy and tragedy come from)

Euripides

Medea

Aristophanes

Roman Period (100 BCE to 300 CE)

Theatre becomes hedonistic (vulgar): Gladiator contests Slaughter of humans (Christians and lions)

Audiences only wanted to see vulgar performances: Moral decay of Rome=rise of Christian church=fall of Rome during Dark Ages.

Slaves used as actors until first Century Plays presented along with circuses Playwrights paid by acting companies

Plautus, Terence, Seneca: Major playwrights Plautus:

Comedy Terence:

Known more for the way he presented characters Seneca:

Senecan tragedy: gory tragedy. Violence takes place off stage. Too traumatic to show on stage. Deaths are described in detail.

After the fall of Rome, only wandering minstrels (dancing and juggling) kept drama alive.

Roman Amphitheatre

Plautus

Terrence

Seneca

Questions to Ponder… Because of the moral decay which led to

the fall of the Roman Empire, where do you expect theatre to go in the future?

How has ancient theatre impacted the theatrical traditions of today?

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