1 / 21

#1 Primitive Theater 8500-7000 B.C.

#1 Primitive Theater 8500-7000 B.C. Primitive Tribal Dance Religious Rituals Cave Drawings Ensuring the Tribe’s Safety and Prosperity Elements: Shaman (priest), Symbolic Clothing, Acting Space, Symbolic Items, Audience Space. #2 Greek Festivals 600-360 B.C.

pswenson
Télécharger la présentation

#1 Primitive Theater 8500-7000 B.C.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. #1 Primitive Theater8500-7000 B.C. • Primitive Tribal Dance • Religious Rituals • Cave Drawings • Ensuring the Tribe’s Safety and Prosperity • Elements: Shaman (priest), Symbolic Clothing, Acting Space, Symbolic Items, Audience Space

  2. #2 Greek Festivals600-360 B.C. • Festivals honored Olympian gods • Ritual Competitions • Lyric Poetry • Dionysus • Chorus • Tragedy • Comedy • Masks

  3. Greek Theatre • Thespis • Theaters Built in Hillsides • Tragedy: • Aeschylus • Sophocles • Euripides • Comedy: • Aristophanes

  4. #3 Roman Theatre240 B.C.-200 A.D. • Origins in Greek Drama (copied) • Tragedy: Seneca • Comedy:Terence and Plautus • Bawdy • Stock characters • Added Music • Setting City Street/ Palace • Violence on Stage

  5. Roman Spectacle • Gladiatorial combats • Stopped Around 568 A.D. • Naval battles in a flooded Coliseum • “Real-life” theatricals • Decadent, violent and immoral • All theatrical events banned by Church when Rome became Christianized

  6. #4 Eastern Theater (Indian) • Written in Sanskrit (Shakuntala) • Estimated 100 A.D. • Myth, History and Legend • Good vs. Evil • Like our Sign Language • Very Little Scenery

  7. #5 Medieval Drama 500-1500 A.D. • Arose from need to educate converted, illiterate Christians about Christianity • Hrotsvita (10th c.), German nun, wrote plays about Christian matyrs using structure based on Terence’s Roman comedies • Mystery plays: Biblical tales • Miracle plays: Saints’ lives • Morality plays: Allegories • Mansions (Stages)

  8. #6 Eastern Theater (Japanese)1400 A.D. • Noh Theater • Kabuki Theater • Stylized and Graceful • Silk Costumes • Trained Since Children • Elaborate Stage Makeup • Masks

  9. #7 Italian RenaissanceLate 1300’s to 1600’s • La Commedia dell'Arte, "Artistic Comedy,” Improv • Based on set pieces, lazzi, that are improvised with stock characters • A distinct group of actors gave birth to the first nucleus of companies, and started doing their acts on simple stages set outdoors • Copied Greek and Roman Plays • Advances in Stages, Set Design and Theaters Harlequino

  10. #8 Elizabethan Theatre1558- 1603 A.D. • Protestant Reformation closed down religious drama • Tudor love of spectacle and patronage of drama • Elizabethan poetry -- love of language • Influenced by Roman theatre, Renaissance ideas, medieval stagecraft and pagan remnants • Important theatrical period even if Shakespeare had never lived

  11. Elizabethan Age • Globe Theater (out side city limits) • Professional Actors • Sparse Scenery • William Shakespeare • Christopher Marlow • Iambic Pentameter

  12. #9 Restoration1658-1700’s • Cromwell/Puritans • Royalty Returned to England • Women Hit the Stage • Poked Fun at the Rich • Theaters Enclosed “Raked Stages” • “Comedies of Manners”

  13. #10 19th Century1800’s • Industrial Revolution (Lights/Machines) • Steam Engine (Tours) • Gas Lights (Night Performances) • Directors (New) • Entertainment in Cities

  14. Melodrama: 19th Century • Theatre of sentimentality -- emotional appeal • Heroes and villains -- and lily-white heroines • Wide popular appeal • Sensationalistic • Most widely performed play of the 19th C: Uncle Tom’s Cabin based on Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel

  15. #11 Modern Theater (Realism)19th-20th C. • Real Life Characters • Theatre of social problems • Influenced by emerging disciplines of psychology and sociology • Emerging importance of director • Realistic stage conventions: • Proscenium stage • Audience as “fourth wall” • Change in acting conventions • Continued developments in stagecraft

  16. Middle class Psychological How can the individual live within and influence society? “Well-made play” Henrik Ibsen, George Bernard Shaw Middle and Lower classes Sociological How does society/the environment impact individuals? “Slice of life” August Strindberg, Anton Chekhov, John Synge, Sean O’Casey Realism and Naturalism

  17. 20th Century Theatre:a hundred years of isms • Symbolism • Expressionism • Futurism • Surrealism • Social Realism • Epic Theatre • Existentialism • Absurdism • Magic Realism • Hyper-Realism • Not to mention musicals, films, street theatre, etc., etc.

  18. #12 Musicals • From the United States! • Blended Story, Song and Dance • Songs Enhance the Story and Characters Feelings • Around 1945

More Related