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Ancient Theatre History. Theatre 1-2 Brittany M. Sutton Revised November 06. Ancient Drama Time Frame. 5000 BCE to 300 CE. Pre-Greek Period (5000 BCE to 600 BCE). History of drama dates back to start of mankind: Hunters pantomimed adventures First storytellers told tales in chants
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Ancient Theatre History Theatre 1-2 Brittany M. Sutton Revised November 06
Ancient Drama Time Frame • 5000 BCE to 300 CE
Pre-Greek Period(5000 BCE to 600 BCE) • History of drama dates back to start of mankind: • Hunters pantomimed adventures • First storytellers told tales in chants • First organized groups pantomimed the hunt, war, and love dances • Mask appeared- first actors became god or animal • Man’s attempt to imitate nature developed into formal, religious song and dance ceremonies: • Worship specific gods and rulers • Celebrate the hunt and war
Man begins acting out his wishes for: • Nature • Rain • Good harvests • Sunshine • Earliest record of theatrical performance dates back about 4000 years to Egypt: • Three-day event that included actual battles and elaborate ceremonies about the murder, dismemberment, and resurrection of Osiris (god of the lower world).
Prehistoric Theatre: War Dance Osiris- Egyptian God of the Underworld
Early Greek Period(600 BCE-500 BCE) • Drama as we know it developed during this period when religious hymns developed to sing praises to gods: • Dithyrambs (hymns) sung to Dionysus (god of wine and fertility): • In honor of his death, a group of chanters, called the chorus, would dance around an alter which a goat was sacrificed on. • Chant was called “tragos” (goat-song)= tragedy • Komos=comedy • Ceremonies in honor of Dionysus evolved into large contests: • First contest was won by Thespis: First to step away from chorus and engage in dialogue between chorus and himself- first actor (Thespian). Also credited with introducing mask in Greek plays.
Dramatic contests part of festival lasting five to six days: • Most famous festival was City Dionysia: • *First day: games (similar to carnival). • *Second and Third: poetry contests. • *Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth: different playwright would present four plays each day: first three were part of a trilogy (related in theme and characters) and fourth was a satyr play (comedy).
City Dionysia Performance of the dithyramb (550-500 BCE) Dionysus
Continued… • Theatre existed only for men:both as performers and audience: women not permitted to attend until about 400 BCE. • Audiences large: some theatres could hold over 17,000.
Chorus: • Main part of early Greek theatre • Purpose: to narrate, explain, comment on action, and also engage in dialogue with actors. • Originally about fifty performers in chorus. • Number and responsibilities decreased as actors took over larger roles.
Greek Period (500 BCE-100 BCE) • Tragedies clash between Gods and ambitions of man: showed man’s efforts to change fate were useless.
Continued… Important People & Concepts… • Aeschylus: • Father of tragedy • Added second actor • Reduced chorus to twelve. • Wrote only existing trilogy- man (Agamemnon) returns from war and is killed by his wife and her lover: children take revenge by killing mother: trial of one of the children.
Sophocles: • Considered greatest Greek tragedy writer • Added third actor • Oedipus Rex: kills father, marries mother, gouges out eyes. • Adds scenery and action. • Antigone
Continued… • Euripides: • Separates action from chorus • More concerned with human relationships. • Medea: woman’s husband cheats on her: to get revenge, she sacrifices her two sons. • Aristophanes: • Main author of Greek comedy. • Masks used to show emotions • (where masks of comedy and tragedy come from)
Roman Period (100 BCE to 300 CE) • Theatre becomes hedonistic (vulgar): • Gladiator contests • Slaughter of humans (Christians and lions) • Audiences only wanted to see vulgar performances: • Moral decay of Rome=rise of Christian church=fall of Rome during Dark Ages. • Slaves used as actors until first Century • Plays presented along with circuses • Playwrights paid by acting companies • Plautus, Terence, Seneca: Major playwrights • Plautus: • Comedy • Terence: • Known more for the way he presented characters • Seneca: • Senecan tragedy: gory tragedy. Violence takes place off stage. Too traumatic to show on stage. Deaths are described in detail. • After the fall of Rome, only wandering minstrels (dancing and juggling) kept drama alive.
Roman Hedonism
Plautus Terrence Seneca
Questions to Ponder… • Because of the moral decay which led to the fall of the Roman Empire, where do you expect theatre to go in the future? • How has ancient theatre impacted the theatrical traditions of today?