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RESTORATION AND 18TH CENTURY ENGLISH THEATRE RESTORATION AND 18TH CENTURY ENGLISH THEATRE • King Charles II – Restored to throne 1660 – Fashioned theatre after that in France • Elizabethan playhouses had been torn down by Puritans so new ones were needed • New indoor theatres were built • John Dryden – All for Love • Women were allowed to perform • William Congreve – The Way of the World • Audience – sophisticated aristocracy • Restoration ended in 1737 • Play = comedies / satires SATIRE • Satire is a play in which sarcasm, irony, and ridicule are used to expose or attack folly or pretension is society • Stories represented real people and real events • Strengths and weaknesses in characters are exposed and all characters are held up to moral standards either civically or divinely • Parliament limited public playhouses to 3 • The term “Legitimate Theatre” was born – Then, it meant plays were censored. Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774) Considered best comedy writer since Shakespeare Romanticism Romanticism • Relied on emotions and feelings • Melodrama- most popular type of Romanticism where the hero always succeeded • Playwrights made clear distinctions between good and evil • Forces of good always won MELODRAMA • Comes from "music drama" – music was used to increase emotions or to signify characters (signature music). • A simplified moral universe; good and evil are embodied in stock characters. • Episodic form – the villain poses a threat, the hero or heroine escapes, etc.—with a happy ending. • Usually 2-5 acts – (five acts reserved for "serious" drama). • Many special effects – fires, explosions, drownings, earthquakes. Realism 1820-1920 • Began as reaction against Romanticism • Mid century dramatic style = Realism – Seeks the truth / depicts a selected view • Presented things as in real life (often dealt with social problems) • Major author: Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906) – “Father of Realism” – Revolutionary themes • Ghosts • A Doll’s House – Realistically showed the day’s problems Henrik Ibsen Drama depicting real people, real events • Ibsen's early plays are wild and epic, concentrating on romantic visions of the rebel figure in search of an ultimate truth which is always just out of reach • "modern" phase suppresses his Romanticism and focuses instead on the problems of modern society • These plays are characterized by their "realism," which he hoped would help audiences to more easily digest his radical views England’s George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) Pygmalion – Wanted to reform the world through his work Oscar Wilde (1856-1900) – The Importance of Being Earnest • Comedy of Manners • 20th century playwrights include Arthur Miller (The Crucible and Death of a Salesman) • Tennessee Williams (The Glass Menagerie) • Lillian Hellman – most influential female playwright MUSICAL THEATRE • A play in which the story is told through a combination of spoken dialogue and musical numbers • Andrew Lloyd Webber – composer of a variety of musicals – Cats – Jesus Christ Superstar – Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat – Phantom of the Opera – Evita