Title: The Theban Plays of Ancient Greece
1The Theban Plays of Ancient Greece
2History of Greek Theater
- Greek drama began as part of seasonal festivals
honoring Dionysus, the god of wine and fertility. - Plays were usually produced in the spring, during
the harvest, which was symbolic of renewal and
rejuvenation. - Stories were well known to the audience (think
Cinderella). Audiences wanted to see a fresh
take on a familiar story.
3- Three tragedies were performed as well as one
satyr play, a comedy about the gods. - The plays were watched in open air amphitheaters
(15,000- 40,000 people). - The plays were judged by a committee and a winner
would be announced. Winners were highly honored.
4A birds eye view of the theater
5Theater above the Temple of Apollo at Delphi
6(No Transcript)
7Your view as an audience member would look like
8- Because the audience was so huge, and people were
often seated far away from the stage (or
orchestra), the actors needed to make themselves
larger than life. - So the actors wore masks. Some scholars believe
that the actors also wore high-heeled shoes
called kothornoi.
9Special Effects in Greek Theater
- The ekkyklema, or rolled out thing, was a
mechanical device to roll out characters (dead)
or other things behind the scenes actions. - This helped to prevent gory or murderous scenes
from taking place on stage.
10Special Effects in Greek Theater
- The mechane was a pulley device used to raise
actors in the air, which helped to represent
actors flying in air.
11The Greek Chorus
- The Greek tragic chorus was a group of 15 men who
would sing and dance, but their role was also to - respond to the play in a manner the playwright
hoped the audience would (or to represent the
ideal spectator). - reflect on what has happened and what might
happen next (also known as foreshadowing). - speak to and advise central characters regarding
what they (the main characters) should do.
12Images of the Greek chorus
13Images of the Greek chorus
14Images of the Greek chorus
15- Interesting fact
- The first actor came from the ancient Greek
chorus. - According to legend, Thespis of Athens became the
first actor in the Western world when he stepped
outside the Greek chorus and entered into a
dialogue with it. - This is why actors are called thesbians.
16Sophocles
- He was born around 496 B.C. during Greeces
golden age, and died around 406 B.C. - He wrote around 123 plays, but only seven remain
in existence. - At the age of 28 he won first prize at the Athens
drama festival and after that never finished
lower than 2nd place.
17Sophocles, continued
- He was very interested in showing how a persons
life is shaped by his choices and whims of chance
(the fate free will debate). - The dangers of excessive pride (hubris) became a
theme that Sophocles often touched upon.
18The Theban Cycle
- Sophocles wrote three plays, a trilogy, that
centered around the royal house of Thebes
(Oedipus the King, Oedipus at Colonus, and
Antigone). - Antigone , the third play in the series was
actually written first, then Oedipus the King
(the first play), and finally Oedipus at Colonus
(second play). - The three plays are linked together by specific
characters but the themes and issues are
drastically different in each.
19Elements of Greek Tragedy
- Aristotle, an ancient Greek philosopher, studied
the plays of his time and noticed a trend in the
main characters. - Aristotle coined the phrase tragic hero and found
that many of the heroic figures contained similar
characteristics.
20The Characteristics of a Tragic Hero
- A tragic hero is larger than life and shows no
one is immune to tragedy. - A tragic hero must rise to good fortune and then
fall to death or defeat. - A tragic hero usually falls because of a flaw in
his/her character known as a tragic flaw
(hamartia). - A tragic hero inspires pity and fear in his/her
audience.
21The Tragic Process
- The experience of the tragic hero can be outlined
as seven different steps in a sequence of
actions. - 1. Initial Incident this is the action that gets
the play moving, often some kind of conflict or
problem. - 2. Rising Action this event pushes the tragic
hero toward his peak of fortune. - 3. Climax this is the turning point when the
tragic heros fortunes begin to turn for the
worse.
22The Tragic Process, continued
- 4. Falling Action this is when the world of the
tragic hero begins to collapse. - 5. Anagnorisis this moment of recognition
allows the tragic hero to become aware of what
has happened, what went wrong, and what the truth
is. The tragic hero has suffered from mental
blindness, mistaking appearance for reality and
clinging to an unreliable truth.
23The Tragic Process, continued
- 6. Catastrophe despite the tragic heros
anagnorisis, he or she cannot prevent the
inevitable death or defeat which results from the
mistakes made. - 7. Order Restored this is the time when, after
the tragedy plays itself out, the world manages
to keep going it is the time when the strength
of the human species is demonstrated because the
tragedy teaches all of us but destroys only a
few. The audience then walks away with a feeling
of catharsis.