Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
GREEK THEATRE The first tragic dramas • Originally the theatre was a holy place, the setting for the cult of Dionysus- the Greek god of wine, fertility and revelry. Religious rituals evolve into Greek theatre • Major celebrations, in honour of the Greek god Dionysus. • One of the elements of these celebrations was the dithyramb, a choral ode song to the gods by a chorus of fifty men. • Aristotle tell us that Greek tragedy grew out of the dithyramb. • Held at festivals in Athens Theatres Theatres Theatres • • • • 500 BC Outside- hillsides. Acoustics Sunlight Epidaurus Plots • The earliest Greek dramas, especially those by Aeschylus (525-456 BC), drew their plots and characters from Greek myths. • Greek mythology is the legends and stories behind the Greek gods. THESPSIS of Icaria • • • • First Actor First Playwright Chorus + 1 actor. Thespsis won the first Greek tragedy contest in 534 BC. Aeschylus (525-456 BC). • Won 13Tragic Contests. • Wrote 80 plays - 7 survived…including the only complete trilogy: Oresteia (458 BC). He added the second actor, creating the possibility of dramatic dialogue. Aeschylus Aeschylus Conventions • • • • • • Men only Masked Stilts Actor Audience Chorus Actors Chorus Chorus • acted as a ‘character’ in the play, usually the townspeople. • sympathetic to the protagonist. • presented the writer's point of view. • the ideal spectator, their reaction to a scene would cue the audience on how they should react. • broke the drama into five dramatic scenes, each scene was separated from the next by a choral interlude. Sophocles(496-406 BC) Sophocles • • • • Sophocles won eighteen Tragic Contests. Wrote 120 plays- only 7 have survived. Tragedies Added 3rd Actor Sophocles Euripedes • Tragedies Euripedes Euripedes Comedy/Tragedy Aristophanes • Comedies Aristophanes Aristophanes Aristotle (384 -322 BC. ) • Philosopher & critic. • He wrote about 100 years after Sophocles major tragedies were produced. Aristotle’s Poetics • Dramatic Theory • Content – – – – – One Plot One Story One Time Language, rhythm and melody Tragedy : characters who are serious, important, and virtuous – Climatic structure. – Comedy: characters who are less virtuous, unimportant, undignified, laughable. Episodic structure. Greek Theatre • Is regularly performed today, and not only in Greece. • Still relevant to contemporary society.