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RESTORATION THROUGH ROMANTICISM 1660-1875 BEGINNINGS OF RESTORATION 1660 -1700 -Oliver Cromwell (leader of Puritan movement) along with Parliament beheaded Charles I in 1649 and Charles II fled to France -Charles II tried to raise an army but was defeated in 1651 by Cromwell -1658, Cromwell died and his son Richard was an ineffectual leader Charles II was brought back from exile and reinstated on the throne thus the RESTORATION Charles II BEGINNING OF RESTORATION Charles II brought back ideas from France and integrated them into English Theatre Restoration “Comedy of Manners” was characterized by witty dialogue, romantic and sexual overtones and most had to do with cuckolding a husband without getting caught. New innovations in scene design (more realistic sets) and lighting (candles) were created at this time. Women in plays Drew on theories of Aristotle, adhered to “classical unities” (formalizing time, place, and action). Strict five act division of plays, realistic characters. Moliere was influential: Considered greatest French comedy writer. Controversial writer who wrote against religious hypocrisy through a string of successful comedic satires. Works include The Miser, The Imposter, and Tartuffe. Restoration Comedy was a fusion of French theatre conventions and English Renaissance conventions 1660-1700 Comedy of Manners: -Stock Characters with clever names (Pinchwife, Squeamish, etc) -Female Playwrights were prolific (Aphra Behn, Mary Pix, Catherine Trotter, etc) -Witty dialogue with sexual innuendo -Made fun of the aristocratic audience, especially with reputations and cuckholding - 1660-1700 Audiences: - Attendees wanted to be seen - Orange Girls - Audience active during the play 1660-1700 Tech: • • • • • • Indoor theatres Afternoon performers also lit with candles Raked stage and audience (pit) Proscenium arches with large apron Contemporary costumes Reuse of perspective painted backdrops Performers and Companies • Women performers • Sharing companies disappeared, individual actors received a salary • Owners of theatres hired actors https://youtu.be/GNPxkYW36M4?list=PLHPl7ZSokiLlSeKsey2Vs9bB6xFV_vvd 1700-1800 Age of Enlightenment American Revolution: an ordinance was passed discouraging all theatrical entertainment. Some states passed laws forbidding stage performances. All states lifted ban by 1793, America was dependent on British plays and comic operas. Musicals began appearing in 1790s. French Revolution Beginning of Industrialization Baroque Style: ornate, colorful, detail oriented 1700-1800 New Dramatic Forms: • Bourgeois Tragedy: drama focusing on the middle class , melodramatic • Domestic Tragedy: drama focusing on the middle class, more realistic • Ballad Opera: Satire incorporating popular music; appealed to the middle class; A burlesque style which combined spoken dialogue and songs set to popular tunes. First one was The Beggar’s Opera by John Gay • Laughing Comedy: Compelled audience to laugh at itself and eccentricities Humorous and realistic fast paced comedies in reaction to sentimental comedy. “She Stoops to Conquer” by Oliver Goldsmith was the first of these plays. Richard Brinsley Sheridan also penned “The Rivals and The School for Scandal” which featured fashionable characters and witty dialogue. 1700-1800 Architecture • Apron shrank, area behind stage became much deeper • Larger audience capacity • Angle Point Perspective: Bibienas’ multiple vanishing points in perspective painting of backdrops using legs • Ornate/grandiose set backing including ground rows, borders, cut outs, etc • Experimentation with gas lighting (minimal control) 1700-1800 Emergence of the Director: • Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (Regisseur: dictator director) • • • • • Rules for movement, voice, and actors’ personal lives Created rules for the audience Composition and stage pictures Used period costumes Ensemble work emphasized • David Garrick: Credited as the first director • • • • • Emphasized individual character development Naturalistic acting Research and preparation for roles Concealed lighting Supervised rehearsals Acting Styles: • • • • Star performers created a fan base “Bombastic” style: addressed audience directly, showcase of the voice, not realistic Non-realistic blocking (movement) Short rehearsal times and runs 1800-1875 Industrial Revolution Darwin: questioned religious convention Marx: questioned capitalism Cities grew quickly-public demanded entertainment: • • • • Circuses (P.T. Barnum) Vaudeville Minstrel Theatre 1800-1875 Romanticism: • • • • • Epic drama Hero characters (outcasts, underdogs) Mood and atmosphere more important than plot development Emphasis on truth, justice, knowledge Faust plays 1800-1875 Well Made Play: • • • • • Climactic structure Actions revolved around and unrevealed secret Clear exposition, rising action, climax, and resolution Obligatory scene (climactic face-off) Used conventional plot contrivances and romantic plots; French playwright Eugene Scribe wrote hundreds of these plays which were imitated all over Europe. Melodrama: • • • • Heroes vs.Villans Suspense Effects/spectacle Cliff-hanging plots and emotional appeals, popular in the US in the 1800’s. Highly moralistic and celebrated virtue above all else, vice would be punished. Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe is a prime example. 1800-1875 Directing: • • • • • Built on ideas of von Goethe and Garrick Historical accuracy Extended rehearsal time Stage pictures, movement and composition important Richard Wagner: • Gesamtkunstwerk (guh-Zahmt-Koonst-verk) “unified Theatre” • Need director to unify all elements • Supposedly the first to lower house lights before a performance 1800-1875 Actors/Acting: • Edwin Booth (American) & Eleonora Duse (Italian) well respected for their realistic acting style • Actors were idolized • Plays had long run times (100 performances or more) • Move toward more realistic acting style 1800-1875 Architecture/Tech: • • • • • • • • No rake Continental seating (individual chairs) Fly system of drops Historical accuracy valued Box Set: 3 sided realistic interior instead of backdrops and legs Revolve and Elevator stages Gas light (became more controllable 1879: incandescent lamp revolutionized theatre lighting