Title: Greek Theatre
1Greek Theatre
2Neanderthals established the earliest rituals -
Bears
3Masks
4Music 50,000 y.a.
- Drum 60,000
- First instrument with tones was the flute.
- Both were used for music and communication
5Storytelling
- Origin is unknown
- Existed before written language
- Shaman Telling stories to preserve history,
mythology or to reflect important values - Accessible to an illiterate majority
6Dance
- Tied to both ritual and entertainment.
- Dance in India dates back 5000 years
- Left - Bronze Statue of a DancerMohenjo-daro
Civilization, 2nd millenium B.C - Nataraja -- the cosmic dance of Lord
Shiva Ellora, Maharashtra
7Dance
- Before recorded history. Records of dance through
other arts - Greece and Egypt had dance
8Entertainment
- 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?
9First Poems
- Indian Vedas (1700 1200 BCE)
- Zoroasters Gathas (1200 900 BCE)
- Homers Odyssey (800 BCE)
10Abydos 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
11Classical Greece
- 510 323 BCE
- Establishment of democracy 510 BCE
- War with Persia until 449 BCE
- Death of Alexander the Great 323 BCE
12(No Transcript)
13Greek Religion and Rituals
- Myths Oedipus and the Sphinx
- 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.
14Dionysus
- God of wine, fertility and revelry.
- AKA Bacchus mad one
- Female followers - Bacchae or Bacchantes Mad
women
15Dionysus 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
natures forces
16Arion Early 6th Century
- Created or contributed to the dithyramb
- Made it dramatic by including spoken elements
17Dithyramb
- 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
18Thespis
- 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
19Other theories of origin or Greek Theatre
- Story telling
- Story tellers added to dithyramb
- Aristotle human desire to imitate
- Mimesis imitation of nature
20Public, 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.
21The Dinagyang is a religious and cultural
festival in Iloilo City, Philippines
http//dinagyangsailoilo.com/
22Mardi Gras and Carnival
23Ash Wednesday and Lent
24Pompe Greek Processions
25Goddess of religious procession, Pompe with Eros
prepare for procession to celebrate Dionysus
26City Dionysus Festival starts with Phallika
- Still runs at Tyrnavos Phallus Festival
27Displayed Weapons
28Bull Sacrifices
29Komos
30Komos
- Ritualistic drunken progression
- May have worn Mask and costume
- No choral leader, script or rehearsal
- Music
- All night - May have used torches
- komos and ??µ?d?a - komoidia or "comedy" are
etymologically related
31Proagon
- 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
32Edinburgh Festival / Fringe
33City 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
34Aeschylus-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
35Sophocles 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
36Euripides c. 480 406 BCE
- 92 plays, 5 survive
- Believable female characters (Medea)
- Considered most modern
- Portrayed gods as human skeptical treatment
37Criticisms 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
38Comedy added later
- Possibly five plays on one day added to the five
days of the festival. - Each play by a different playwright
39After 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
40(No Transcript)