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Greek Theatre Neanderthals established the earliest rituals - Bears Masks Music 50,000 y.a. • Drum – 60,000 • First instrument with tones was the flute. • Both were used for music and communication Storytelling • Origin is unknown • Existed before written language • Shaman – Telling stories to preserve history, mythology or to reflect important values • Accessible to an illiterate majority Dance Tied to both ritual and entertainment. Dance in India dates back 5000 years • Left - Bronze Statue of a Dancer Mohenjo-daro Civilization, 2nd millenium B.C • Nataraja -- the cosmic dance of Lord Shiva Ellora, Maharashtra Dance • Before recorded history. Records of dance through other arts • Greece and Egypt had dance Entertainment • “Popular Entertainment – Singing, dancing, juggling, acrobatics, sketches, storytelling – Humans like to entertain and be entertained – Sometimes called non-text based theatre – When traditional theatre dies, popular theatre often survives. – What is TV like now? Do we like popular theatre? First Poems • Indian Vedas (1700 – 1200 BCE) • Zoroaster’s Gathas (1200 – 900 BCE) • Homer’s Odyssey (800 BCE) Abydos Ritual • 2500 – 550 BC • Mystery Play • Tells the story of Osiris – – – – Married Isis, his sister His brother Seth was jealous, killed him Osiris was torn into pieces but resurrected God of afterlife. • Tale is virtually universal • Acted out episodes of the story Classical Greece • • • • 510 – 323 BCE Establishment of democracy 510 BCE War with Persia until 449 BCE Death of Alexander the Great 323 BCE Greek Religion and Rituals Greek Religion • • • • • • Polytheistic – Many Gods Each god controlled different aspects of life Many temples for the different gods Oracles – sacred sites where religious heads could pray and received answers from gods, often through signs in nature. E.g. Zeus and Dodona Rustling of oak trees Sacrifices at the temples Festivals for the gods that included singing, music, dancing, parades and later theatre. Myths – Oedipus and the Sphinx Dionysus • God of wine, fertility and revelry. • AKA Bacchus – “mad one” • Female followers Bacchae or Bacchantes – Mad women Dionysus Rituals • Aspects of Dionysian Rituals • Oreibasia (“mountain dancing”) dancing that led to trance • Sparagmos “tearing to pieces” found small animals and teared them (on vase right) • Omophagia (“eating raw flesh”) eating the animals made the worshippers one with Dionysus and nature’s forces Arion – Early 6th Century • Created or contributed to the dithyramb • Made it dramatic by including spoken elements Dithyramb • Long hymn sung and danced by a chorus of 50 men. • Competitions developed • Developed as a literary form • Laid foundation for what became Greek Chorus Thespis • Credited as being the first actor (Thespians) • Stepped away from the chorus and performed as a character • First writer of tragedy • Greek word for actor was hypokrite – “answerer” – showing give and take between actor and chorus Other theories of origin or Greek Theatre • Story telling • Story tellers added to dithyramb • Aristotle – human desire to imitate – Mimesis – imitation of nature Public, Private and Religious Event • City provided funds for the performance and organized the event as part of religious festival • Rich individuals sponsored aspects of production – Choregus • Theatre was part of the religious celebrations • Theatre was also political – ex. Antigone, Medea, etc. The Dinagyang is a religious and cultural festival in Iloilo City, Philippines http://dinagyangsailoilo.com/ Mardi Gras and Carnival Ash Wednesday and Lent Pompe – Greek Processions Goddess of religious procession, Pompe with Eros prepare for procession to celebrate Dionysus City Dionysus Festival starts with Phallika • – Still runs at Tyrnavos Phallus Festival Displayed Weapons Bull Sacrifices Komos Komos • Ritualistic drunken progression • May have worn Mask and costume • No choral leader, script or rehearsal • Music • All night - May have used torches • komos and κωμῳδία komoidia or "comedy" are etymologically related Proagon • “Preview” Next day playwrights announced their plays • Judges chosen by lottery • Praise was given to selected citizens and foreigners who had served Athens. • Orphaned children from war paraded Edinburgh Festival / Fringe City Dionysus lasted several days • Couple of days for parades and sacrifices • 5 days of Dithyrambs and plays – 2 of 5 – 10 choruses – 1 day for men, 1 for boys • 3 days of tragedy and satyr plays by one playwright = tetralogy Aeschylus-525 – 456 B.C.E • • • • • • “founder of Greek drama” “director” actor and playwright – Possibly wrote 90 plays only 7 exist Credited with developing new stage scenery, painted scenery and elaborate costumes. first to develop drama as an art form separate from singing, dancing and storytelling. Reduced the size of the chorus from 50 to 12. Before Aeschylus – one actor and chorus – Aeschylus added second actor; first true dialogue • Roman mosaic of Aeschylus directing actors Sophocles 496 – 406 BCE • Added third actor (so more characters on stage at one time) • had a chorus of 15 • Strong Plot Construction • More than 120 plays,7 survive • First prize 18 times, never less than 2nd; • Wrote single dramas instead of trilogies Euripides c. 480 – 406 BCE • 92 plays, 5 survive • Believable female characters (Medea) • Considered most modern • Portrayed gods as human; skeptical treatment Criticisms of Euripides • Mixed tragedy and comedy; model for tragicomedy and melodrama • Weak plots • Deus ex machina –”god of the machine” • Sensational subject matter • Very influential on latter playwrights Comedy added later • Possibly five plays on one day added to the five days of the festival. • Each play by a different playwright After the festival • Awards for best plays, tragic and comic and for best tragic acting • Choregus (producer) of winning play could erect a statue of himself, at his expense. • Those who misbehaved were punished. – Fighting over seats – Drunken violence