Title: Theatre History
1Theatre History
2Rituals - 38,000-5000 BC
- Oldest form of expression - storytelling
- Begins with primitive man as dance and rhythmic
movement - These rituals explained tradition, religion, why
thing happen in nature - Rituals evolved into pantomime - stories shown
not told
3Egypt - 4000 - 500 B.C.
- Pyramid plays - religious plays about the
deceased kings soul being resurrected - Coronation Festival plays - celebration of the
new pharaoh - Passion plays - murder of a king battle,
voyages, and a scary resurrection scene - Ra plays - Ra (sun god) fought Apophis (snake
god) of the underworld. Ra always won.
4Greeks 1200-500 B.C.
- Performances grew out of religious festivals in
honor of Greek God Dionysis - Festivals (5-6 days) were held once a year in the
THEATRON (watching space) which is where we get
our word THEATRE - All citizens were expected to attend
- Largest seated 1400 (1/2 population of Athens)
- Theaters were semi-circles built of stone into
the hillside
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6Greek Theatre (continued)
- Greek Theatre focused on TRAGEDY (issues of
life, death, the gods) - Actors all male/wore masks
- Chorus (12-50) acted out the
- story/life of the Gods together
- First producer/director/actor was
- THESPIS - invented acting when
- he steps out of the chorus to
- answer them ---
- this created stage dialogue
7Greek Theatre (continued) - Playwrights
- Aeschylus - (525?-456 B.C.) Father of Tragedy
considered to be the first playwright - Idea of the play is the most important thing -
not the character - Adds a 2nd actor
- Sophocles (496-406 B.C.)
- Writes about right vs wrong, the idea that man
can not solve all the problems in the world - Focuses on character -- drives the plot
- Euripides (480?-406 B.C.)
- First Modern playwright
- Writes plays of characters in relation to society
and mocks them - Characters are realistic
- No chorus
8Roman Theatre - 6th century B.C.
- Borrowed from the Greeks and improved on them
- Less philosophical than the Greeks
- Actors/performers were called histriones
- Encompassed more than drama acrobatics,
gladiators, jugglers, athletics, chariots races,
naumachia (sea battles), boxing, venationes
(animal fights)
9Roman Theatre (continued)
- Pantomime/Mime - solo dance, with music (lutes,
pipes, cymbals) and a chorus. - Used masks, story-telling, mythology or
historical stories, usually serious but sometimes
comic - Spoken
- Usually short
- Sometimes elaborate casts and spectacle
- Serious or comic (satiric)
- No masks
- Had women
- Violence and sex depicted literally
- Scoffed at Christianity
- Needless to say, the Church did not
look kindly at Mime.
10Roman Theatre (continued)
- Theaters are free-standing buildings with stadium
seating - Large stages (20-40 deep and 100-300 feet long)
- Could seat 10-15,000 people
- Stage covered with a roof (often
- Audience covered with a awning to
protect them from the
sun - Trap doors common
- Around 78 B.C. a cooling system
put in place
--- air blown over
streams of
water - Sand on the stage floor
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12Roman Playwrights
- Titus Maccius Plautus (254-184 B.C.)
- 130 plays total
- Wrote comedy
- Extremely popular in his own time
- Lots of slapstick and dialog with short lines
- Publius Terenius Afer (Terence) (195 or 185 to
159 B.C.) - Came to Rome as a boy slace, educated and freed
- 6 plays (all survived)
- More complex stories --- all from Greek originals
- Less popular than Plautus
- Lucius Annaeus seneca (4 or 5 B.C. to 65 A.D.)
- Wrote 9 plays - 5 adapted from Euripides
- Popularity declined and committed suicide in 65
A.D. - Characters in plays dominated by a single passion
- Violence and horror onstage (unlike Greeks)
13Medieval Theatre (950-1550)
- Theatre is dead in Europe but active in Asia
- Traveling Troupes performed on wagons which
opened to create a fixed stage - used props and
costumes but in Europe no women performers - 3 Types of plays performed
- Miracle Plays - enacted the lives of saints
- Mystery Plays - Bible stories sometimes also
called passion plays - Morality Plays - taught moral lessons - right vs
wrong and the struggle between good and evil for
the soul of Man
14Italian Renaissance (1470-1550)
- Built indoor theaters
- Church no longer calling the shots
- Commedia DellArte - 1st form of improvisation
still traveling troupes that performed for from
the crowd that gathered plot summary learned by
actors beforehand - Considered to be the 1st professional theatre
- First in Europe to put Women on stage
15English Renaissance (1470-1550)
- Focused on the plays of Shakespeare, Marlowe, and
Jonson - Theatre saw an incredible burst of energy and
talent -- 1 in 8 people regularly went to the
theatre - Purpose to entertain the rich. They got the good
seats in the balcony and the poor stood below - Roles were played by men (including women roles
- First time costumes fit the character
16Shakespeare April 24,1564-April 24,1616
- Noted to be the greatest playwright in history,
although authenticity is questioned by many. - He was an poet, actor, playwright, and producer
- Wrote 38 plays histories, comedies, tragedies,
and fantasies - Balanced plot and character
17The Globe Theater
- Built in 1599 - considered indoor
- Thrust Stage
- 3 Stories high
- Audience Sits
around the stage - Little furniture
- Burned down in
1613 during a
performance of
Henry 8th
18The Globe today
19The Globe Today
20The Globe Today
21French Renaissance (1550-1700)
- Best playwright - Jean-Baptiste Moliere
(1622-1672) wrote comedies that focued on social
rules also called Comedy of Manners - French Theatre had several rules
- Unities - time, place, and action had to be 24
hours or less - Purity of Form - no mixing of Comedy and Tragedy
- Verisimilitude - the appearance of truth with
the following categories - Reality (could happen
in real life), Morality (teach a lesson),
Generality (normal attirbutes), and Decorum
(stereotypes)
2219th Century Theatre (1800-1900)
- Naturalism (1850-1922)
- The relationship between character and enviroment
- 2 important creators - Anton Chekhov (Russian
playwright) and Konstantin Stanislavsky
(1963-1938). Both men demanded natural reponses
from their actors. Psychological reactions of the
characters could be more important than the
situation itself. - Stanislavsky created The System or Method
acting - actor uses an emotional memory to
create character/motivation.
2319th Century Theatre (1800-1900)
- Realism (1850-1950)
- A style showing life as it really is reflects
real life - The FOURTH WALL is established as a result - the
idea that the actors can see through an invisible
wall into the lives of the characters. - Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906)
- Playwright who saw theatre as a means to
challenge mistakes he saw in the society he
lived in. Most famous play A Dolls House helped
pave the way for women to be seen as equals.