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GREEK DRAMA AND THEATRE + For Western civilization, the origins of theatre were in Athens, Greece about 25 hundred years ago + Theatre for the Greeks originated from religious festivals + These festivals are in the form of musical performances and dramatic recitations were held every year to honour the god Dionysus (the god of wine and
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Greek Drama and Theatre

Feb 24, 2016

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Greek Drama and Theatre. For Western civilization, the origins of theatre were in Athens, Greece about 25 hundred years ago Theatre for the Greeks originated from religious festivals - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Greek Drama and Theatre

GREEK DRAMA AND THEATRE

+ For Western civilization, the origins of theatre were in Athens, Greece about 25 hundred years ago

+ Theatre for the Greeks originated from religious festivals

+ These festivals are in the form of musical performances and dramatic recitations were held every year to honour the god Dionysus (the god of wine and revelry) with a chorus of men chanting hymms

Page 2: Greek Drama and Theatre

RELIGIOUS FESTIVAL HONOURING THE GOD

Page 3: Greek Drama and Theatre

+ Early Greek theatres were vast outdoor arenas with seating for thousands

+ The chorus danced in the area called the orchestra, which was almost completely surrounded by the audience

+ The principal character, around whom the action revolves, was called the protagonist of the play

+ The one who opposes him is called the antagonist

+ Since theatre was considered important for all, anyone unable to pay was admitted free

Page 4: Greek Drama and Theatre

These huge theatres required an exaggerated and presentational kind of acting (actors faced audience rather than each other)

Page 5: Greek Drama and Theatre

+ Masks with exaggerated features were used and a device will be used to amplify the voice

+ An actor could change character easily by changing his mask

Page 6: Greek Drama and Theatre

+ Aristotle, a 4th century B.C. Greek philosopher and theatre critic, described the ideal tragedy as having the unity of time, place and action

+ In other words, the action of the play occurs within 24 hours, uses only one location, and is strict tragedy with no mingling of comic episodes

Page 7: Greek Drama and Theatre

3 MAJOR WRITERS OF TRAGEDY DURING THE EARLY PERIOD IN GREECE

Sophocles

Aeschylus

Euripides

Page 8: Greek Drama and Theatre

+ Early Greek tragedy used stories from mythology and featured a hero who lost face because of a tragic flaw

+ Feeling fear and pity for the protagonist, the audience was effected by the tragedy

+ Audience felt the catharsis (a release from tension) when the performance was over

+ Later in 6th century B.C. featured public competitions in drama

Page 9: Greek Drama and Theatre

+ Apparent in the drama of this period are the social customs of Athenian society

+ Only men had full citizenship; slaves had no rights; and women had only certain privileges defined by marriage

+ Women did not participate in the dramatic competitions, either as playwrights or as actors but they were allowed to watch

+ The play were written by men, and men also performed female roles onstage

Page 10: Greek Drama and Theatre

THEATRE

+ By the 5th century, the Greek theatre had acquired its basic design, and ampitheatres became the established features of Greek communities

+ At its lowest level stood the round orchestra (dancing place) and it contained the altar of Dionysus

+ Behind the orchestra is the skene, decorated with painted scenery or props. Used by actors to change the mask or costume or as permanent background for the play

Page 11: Greek Drama and Theatre

THE DIONYSOS THEATER IN ATHENS BUILT INTO THE AKROPOLIS, 3RD CENTURY BC

Page 12: Greek Drama and Theatre

GREEK DRAMATIC CONVENTION

+ Playwrights never put more than 2 actors on stage. Only a few playwrights, such as Sophocles, ever put 2 or 3 actors on the stage at once.

+ Violence was also never shown on stage. When somebody was about to die, they would take that person to the back to "kill" them and bring them back "dead."

+ The other people near the stage were the chorus which consisted of about 4-8 people who would stand in the back wearing black.

Page 13: Greek Drama and Theatre

COMEDY AND TRAGEDY MASKS

Page 14: Greek Drama and Theatre

SOPHOCLES (497 BC, 496 BC, OR 495 BC – 406 BC)

+ He was one of the three great ancient Greek tragedians, together with Aeschylus and Euripides.

+ According to the Suda (a massive 10th century Byzantine Greek historical encyclopædia of the ancient Mediterranean world) he wrote 123 plays

+ In the dramatic competitions of the Festival of Dionysus (where each submission by one playwright consisted of four plays; three tragedies and a satyr play), he won more first prizes (around 20) than any other playwright, and placed second in all others he participated in (Lloyd-Jones 1994: 8)

Page 15: Greek Drama and Theatre

+ Only seven of his tragedies have survived complete in the medieval manuscript tradition. The most famous are the three tragedies concerning Oedipus and Antigone: these are often known as the Theban plays or The Oedipus Cycle

+ One of the great innovators of the theatre, he was the first to add a third actor.

+ Many authorities also credit him with the invention of scene-painting and periaktoi or painted prisms.

Page 16: Greek Drama and Theatre

+ Of Sophocles' more than 120 plays, only seven have survived in their entirety. Of these, Oedipus the King is generally considered his greatest work.

+ A masterful work of plot and suspense, Oedipus the King is often heralded as a "perfectly structured" play.