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Ancient Greek Theatre Where it all started.
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Ancient Greek Theatre

Dec 31, 2015

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Ancient Greek Theatre. Where it all started. Mathematics played a large role in the construction of these theatres, as their designers had to able to create acoustics in them such that the actors' voices could be heard throughout the theatre, including the very top row of seats. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Ancient Greek Theatre

Ancient Greek Theatre

Where it all started.

Page 2: Ancient Greek Theatre

• Mathematics played a large role in the construction of these theatres, as their designers had to able to create acoustics in them such that the actors' voices could be heard throughout the theatre, including the very top row of seats.

Page 3: Ancient Greek Theatre

• First seats in Greek theatres (other than just sitting on the ground) were wooden, but around 499 BC the practice of inlaying stone blocks into the side of the hill to create permanent, stable seating became more common.

• They were called the "prohedria" and reserved for priests and a few most respected citizens.

Page 4: Ancient Greek Theatre

Classical Era

• This was the time period in which the Greeks invented theatre as we know it.

• The Greeks were the first to invent a physical place that was designed for public performance.

Page 5: Ancient Greek Theatre

Amphitheatre

• Greek theatres were actually called amphitheatres.

• Amphitheatres were built into rocky hillsides so of course, plays were performed in daylight

Page 6: Ancient Greek Theatre

The First

• They were the first country to use make up as part of their masks.

• They were the first to use two or three actors rather than the one that was used in the past.

Page 7: Ancient Greek Theatre

First

• They were the first to have drama competitions to develop playwright’s skills.

• The first ones were held during the Festival of Diaonysus.

Page 8: Ancient Greek Theatre

First

• They were the first to make it mandatory for everyone to attend the performances. The performances were government supported, and no admission was charged

• They were the first to used painted scenery which was Sophocles’s idea.

• They were the first to used comedy and tragedy as dramatic forms.

Page 9: Ancient Greek Theatre

First Continued3 Unities

• They were the first to use the three unities.

• Time• Place• Action

• They were the first to use chorus which spoke in unison as both narrator and conscience.

• Were first to use the word thespian to describe actors.

Page 10: Ancient Greek Theatre

First

• They were the first to use satire to make fun of famous people.

• They were the first to use mechanical effects. They created a deus ex machina which was a machine to lift them like gods flying.

Page 11: Ancient Greek Theatre

First• They coined the following

words:• Theatron: watching

space; where we got the word theatre

• Skene: background; where we got the word scene

• Orkestra: part of stage; where we got the word orchestra

Page 12: Ancient Greek Theatre

Greek Theater

• Their ancient theater looked much like our prosceniums.

Page 13: Ancient Greek Theatre

Theaters

• Ancient Greek theaters were very large, open-air structures that took advantage of sloping hillsides for their terraced seating. Because of drama's close connection with religion, theaters were often located in or near sanctuaries.

Page 14: Ancient Greek Theatre

• The death of a character was always heard, “ob skene”, or behind the skene, for it was considered inappropriate to show a killing in view of the audience.

Page 15: Ancient Greek Theatre

• Greek theatres also had entrances for the actors and chorus members called parodoi. The parodoi (plural of parodos) were tall arches that opened onto the orchestra, through which the performers entered.

Page 16: Ancient Greek Theatre

Orchestra

• The core of any Greek theater is the orchestra, the “dancing place” of the chorus and the chief performance space.

Page 17: Ancient Greek Theatre

Skene• On the far side of the

orchestra was the stage building, or skene (meaning “tent”).

• This was a covered structure, originally a temporary wooden building, where the actors stored their masks and costumes and performed quick changes out of the sight of the audience.

Page 18: Ancient Greek Theatre

Theatron• The audience sat in the

theatron, the “seeing place,” on semi-circular terraced rows of benches (in the earliest theaters these were wooden; they were later built of stone). The Greeks often built these in a natural hollow (a koilon), though the sides were increasingly reinforced with stone

Page 19: Ancient Greek Theatre

Drama

• The city of Athens became a significant cultural, political and military power during this period, was its centre, where it was institutionalized as part of a festival called the Dionysia, which honored the god Dionysus.

• Three forms of drama:• Comedy• Satyr• tragedy

Page 20: Ancient Greek Theatre

Special Effects

• ekkyklema, a wheeled wagon used to bring dead characters into view for the audience

• trap doors, or similar openings in the ground to lift people onto the stage

Page 21: Ancient Greek Theatre

Special Effects

• Pinakes, pictures hung into the scene to show a scene's scenery

• Thyromata, more complex pictures built into the second-level scene (3rd level from ground)

Page 22: Ancient Greek Theatre

Acropolis

• It was the first stone theatre ever built — cut into the southern cliff face of the Acropolis — and the birthplace of Greek tragedy. The remains of a restored and redesigned Roman version can still be seen at the site today.

Page 23: Ancient Greek Theatre

• The theatre could seat as many as 17,000 people, making it an ideal location for ancient Athens' biggest theatrical celebration, the Dionysia.

Page 24: Ancient Greek Theatre

Sophocles

• Was the second of the three ancient Greek tragedians whose work has survived.

• Sophocles influenced the development of the drama, by adding a third actor.

Page 25: Ancient Greek Theatre

Euripides