Title: Information on Greek theatre, Oedipus,
 1Information on Greek theatre, Oedipus,  an 
Interview with Mr. Towers
- Oedipus Rex  written around 441 B.C. by Sophocles
2Sophocles the Playwright
- Athens, Greece. Produced 100 plays, seven of 
 which survive today (all of which are deeply
 troubling).
- Greek culture believed that anything was possible 
 through human effort and reason  Sophocles
 presented the opposite in Oedipus Rex.
- This play involves characters that are caught up 
 in unsolvable dilemmas causing them to challenge
 their faith in the gods as well as humanity.
- Oedipus Rex is one of the worlds greatest 
 tragedies.
3Another Interesting Guy
- Thespis  was an actor/ director/ producer. Very 
 arrogant and wanted to stand out. He evolved the
 protagonist. Three actors were on stage at a
 time. Used chorus to connect the plot between
 scenes with actors.
- (This is where the term thespian comes from 
 meaning actor)
4Given the form of this play, what is it telling 
us about the culture and point in history when it 
was performed?
- The play was performed as a celebration to 
 Dionysus (the god of fertility, sex and theater).
 The event was a three-day celebration where three
 playwrights presented tragedies...
-  Sophocles, Euripides and Aeschylus were three 
 of the most celebrated and successful
 playwrightseveryone went. It was one event that
 they all celebrated.
-  M. Towers
5- Also keep in mind the importance of myth in the 
 Greek culture. Gods, heroes, and storytelling
 dominated their world and most of it was oral.
-  - M. Towers
6The Stage
- Skene (skay-nay) scene hut located on stage 
- Periaktoi  (pear-ee-ack-toy) triangular prisms 
 or scenery  country/city/other
7Can you speak to the acting that was involved and 
how actors tackle a work like Oedipus today?
- This Greek text is extremely demanding on modern 
 actors. Actors were very skilled and trained
 2,500 years ago. Theyd have to be! Some
 audiences were 20,000 -60,000 strong! They would
 need to have well trained voices and bodies in
 order to effectively communicate.  M. Towers
8That is like performing to a sold out crowd at 
the TD Banknorth Garden AND UP TO a sold out 
crowd at Yankee Stadium. WITHOUT A MICROPHONE! 
 9The Orkestra
- Dithyramb (dith eh-ramb) synchronized chanting 
 think iambic pentameter
- Chorus  singers and dancers. Few women. Dancing 
 circle would perform on stage before actors came
 along. Then they got bumped to the pit. Also
 reduced in scope with the addition of actors. 60
 ? 40 ? 20.
10what is difficult about directing this play? 
- They lack a lot of what we call dramatic action! 
 The Greeks didnt show you much. They TALK about
 what has just happened but show you very little.
 For example You dont see Oedipus claw his eyes
 out, you hear about the aftermath be we are
 spared the sight of it. We want to see it! This
 is classic Greek theater.  M. Towers
11Terms to Recap
- Tragedy a serious drama with a protagonist who 
 struggles to achieve one thing and is ultimately
 unable to attain it, failing deeply.
- Tragic Flaw a weakness that the protagonist has, 
 leading to his or her downfall.
- In Greek tragedy this is referred to as Hamartia 
 (ha-mar-tia) meaning to miss the mark the
 tragic flaw causing the down fall.
12The Challenge
- Oedipus Rex was a story that everyone in the 
 audience would have known. How do you retell and
 make it interesting? Think Romeo  Juliet for
 today. Consider how the audiences previous
 knowledge of the story would increase the level
 of tragedy.
13Switch toPre-Oedipus PowerPoint 
 14The Play Begins
- Sophocles opens his play with a relatable issue 
 to the people of Athens a plague!
- Setting Ancient Athens (5th century B.C.) 
- The city of Thebes is ravaged by a seemingly 
 never-ending plague and the people beg their King
 Oedipus to save them. King Oedipus sends his
 brother-in-law, Creon, to the Oracle of Apollo at
 Delphi for answers.
15Continued
- The Oracle tells Creon that the plague of Thebes 
 will end when the murderer of the previous king,
 King Lauis, has been punished. King Oedipus tells
 the people he will apprehend the murderer and
 save Thebes.
- This will set him on his course of Perepeteia  
 (pear-eh-peh-tay-uh) to achieve the exact
 opposite of what one sets out to achieve.
 Eventually, leading to Anagnorisis
 (ahnag-nor-isis) the realization.
16Main Characters
- Oedipus  protagonist, name means swollen foot, 
 suffers from Hubris  (hew-bris) overbearing
 pride. He is a good King and cares for his people
 but again, is full of himself.
- Jocasta  the wife and mother of Oedipus, tries 
 to protect Oedipus from the truth. Seems to
 change her opinion on whether to trust or ignore
 the Oracle.
17Main Characters
- Teiresias  a blind prophet who tells Oedipus he 
 will become blind and poor. One of the most
 powerful characters.
- Theban Elders  They honor King Oedipus and the 
 gods. When they speak they reinforce their
 support for the king and the importance of
 respecting the gods.
18Main Characters
- Creon  brother in law of Oedipus. Oedipus fears 
 Creon wants the crown but Creon denies this.
- Messenger 1 Tells King Oedipus that King Polybos 
 of Corinth is dead and that he was not his real
 father. Baby Oedipus had been given to the
 messenger by someone from Lauis household.
19Main Characters
- Sheperd of Lauis After Oedipus threatens his 
 life, he admits giving Baby Oedipus to Messenger
 1 after Lauis and Jocasta told him to put the
 baby in the woods.
- Messenger 2 Describes Jocastas suicide, 
 predicts the people of Thebes will suffer because
 of King Oedipus sins.
20And the Chorus
- Two groups called Strophe and Antistrophe. Their 
 chants recap what has happened and ask questions
 to the characters that have not been answered.
 Often it sounds like they are speaking their
 thoughts aloud.
21Can you explain the Strophe and Antistrophe a 
little bit more?
- Literally, the strophe and anti-strophe are 
 (poetic) stanzas. With regards to dramatic
 movement within them, the chorus would have moved
 to CONTRAST form one another. The antistrophe was
 an answer or a response to the strophe and
 therefore the movement would have mirrored and
 supported that concept.
-  M. Towers
22Concepts that will turn into Themes
- Power of the gods 
- Quest for identity and truth 
- Nature of innocence and guilt 
- Nature of moral responsibility 
- The ability to control ones fate
23Imagery
- References to light and darkness to predict the 
 future
- References to being able to see and blindness
24Image Links
- http//bananamagic.files.wordpress.com/2010/04/oed
 ipus.jpg
- http//ibrahims2.tripod.com/background.jpg 
- http//www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/LX/Images/TheaterTer
 ms.jpg
- http//www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/Technology/Tech0018.
 jpg
- http//farm4.static.flickr.com/3070/2818328540_c65
 d9f0fa3_o.jpg
- http//static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Arts/Arts_/Pic
 tures/2006/07/06/bacchaitk372