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Classical Greek Drama Background information

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Classical Greek Drama. Background information. Four Reasons for Theater. Religion (honor Dionysis, the Greek god of wine and fertility) Displaying loyalty to your city-state Honoring local heroes Entertainment. Origins. Song and dance was a way of worshipping the gods…. Mortals, I command - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Classical Greek Drama

Classical Greek Drama

Background information

Page 2: Classical Greek Drama

Four Reasons for Theater

• Religion (honor Dionysis, the Greek god of wine and fertility)

• Displaying loyalty to your city-state• Honoring local heroes• Entertainment

Page 3: Classical Greek Drama

Origins

• Song and dance was a way of worshipping the gods…

Mortals, I commandyou to tell me how

awesome I am!We love you!

Page 4: Classical Greek Drama

Origins

• …and celebrating the harvest.

Page 5: Classical Greek Drama

Origins

• Over the centuries, harvest dances developed into the dithyramb, a religious ritual performed by a chorus of men wearing masks.

Page 6: Classical Greek Drama

Origins

• Eventually, dithyrambs changed into literary compositions on heroic subjects, and choruses began competing for prizes (a bull or a goat).

Page 7: Classical Greek Drama

Origins

• This is Thespis.Hi everyone!

I made the dithyramb better by adding a new character, separate from the chorus.

• He created the first actor. We get the term “thespian” from his name.

Page 8: Classical Greek Drama

Origins

• Aeschylus added a second actor to the stage.

• Sophocles added a third.• The chorus remained, but the

audience became more interested in the actors and their lives and struggles.

Page 9: Classical Greek Drama

Origins

• The 5th Century B.C. was known as the golden age of Greek Drama.

• A four-day festival was held in March with competitions and prizes for the best plays.

• Four playwrights emerged as the greatest: Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, and Aristophanes.

Page 10: Classical Greek Drama

Origins

• Aeschylus: Prometheus Bound (tragedy)

• Sophocles: Oedipus Rex, Antigone (tragedies)

• Euripedes: Medea (tragedy)• Aristophanes: The Frogs, The

Clouds (comedies)

Page 11: Classical Greek Drama

The Theaters

• The first theaters were just hillsides with a few wooden benches for the important spectators (theatron).

• The orchestra was paved with stones, and was where the actors and chorus performed.

• An altar for Dionysis, called the thymele, was in the center of the orchestra

• The skene, a rectangular building made of wood, provided changing rooms for actors and prop storage.

Page 12: Classical Greek Drama

The Theaters

• Theater design continued to evolve.• Stone seats were added for everyone,

not just the most important people.• The wooden skene was replaced by a

permanent stone building with a façade called a proskenion.

• The parados (plural: paradoi) was the entrance used by the Chorus.

Page 13: Classical Greek Drama

The Theaters

• Basic elements of a theater:• Circle for the actors.• Slope for the spectators with

benches.• Open air for a roof.

Page 14: Classical Greek Drama

The Chorus

• Only men could be in the chorus or be actors in the play.

Wait a minute…

But Martin Lawrence pulled it off in “Big Momma’s House!”

You’d never make a convincing woman!

Page 15: Classical Greek Drama

Acting

I’m a BIG fan ofGreek theater!

Page 16: Classical Greek Drama

Acting

• Up to 15,000 spectators could watch a performance.

• Upper seats were more than 55 yards from the action below.

YOUTHE PLAY

Page 17: Classical Greek Drama

Acting

• The actors’ gestures had to be exaggerated and dramatic so people in the back row could see.

Page 18: Classical Greek Drama

Acting

• At first, masks were fairly realistic representations of human faces and expressed emotions such as joy and sorrow.

• Later, they grew in size and became less realistic.

Page 19: Classical Greek Drama

The Chorus

• Entered at the beginning of the play.• Remained during the performance.• Announced entrances and exits of characters.• Commented on the action of the play.

Kinda like these guys.

Page 20: Classical Greek Drama

The Chorus

• The chorus embodied the moral ideas of society and admonished characters against breaking these moral laws.

• The choragos was the leader of the chorus.

• Sometimes he participated in the dialogue and represented the responses of a typical citizen.

Page 21: Classical Greek Drama

The Stage

• The violence - murder, suicide, and battles - almost always occurred offstage.

CRASH! BLAM! KAPOW!

Aaargh! I amstabbed! The pain

is horrible!!!

A messenger would appear

after the event and describe

in gory detail what had

just happened.

Page 22: Classical Greek Drama

The Plays

• Greek drama was staged without spectacle

• Scripts were written in a simple, direct manner

• The Unities according to Aristotle: Unity of Action Unity of Time Unity of Place

Page 23: Classical Greek Drama

The Plays

• Unity of Action: should have one overpowering action that moves the play forward (no subplots)

• Unity of Time: only actions that could logically have taken place in 24 hours

• Unity of Place: Action or events being described were limited to one locale.

Page 24: Classical Greek Drama

The Stage

• Differences between Greek and modern theater:

• Continuous presence of the chorus• No intermissions• No scenery or special effects: the

skene served as whatever building the play needed (palace, temple, cave)

• Lighting was natural• Very few props

Page 25: Classical Greek Drama

The Stage

• “Deus Ex Machine”• Literally means “God the machine”• The play ends with the gods

intervening and/or resolving the plot.

@#$%&!

Page 26: Classical Greek Drama

The Plays

• Plays retold myths, rewrote history, and ridiculed politicians.

• Aristophanes wrote comic plays and got into trouble for satirizing politicians and even the gods.

Page 27: Classical Greek Drama

The Plays

• The other three masters were tragic poets.

• Tragic plays captured humankind’s timeless struggle to find the purpose of life and to achieve self-understanding.

Page 28: Classical Greek Drama

The Plays

• Central to the tragedy is the fall of the great man (or woman, but her part was played by a man).

• This person is called the tragic hero.

• His/her fate is brought about by a flaw within his or her own character.

Page 29: Classical Greek Drama

The Plays

• The tragic hero inspired audiences to:

• examine their own lives,• define their beliefs,• and cleanse their emotions of pity

and terror through compassion for the character.

Page 30: Classical Greek Drama

The Plays

• Nearly 2,500 years have passed since the golden age of Greek drama, but the stage, television, or movie production we enjoy today owes its existence to that open theater, those pioneering actors, the dedicated poets, and the passionate audiences of ancient Greece.

Page 31: Classical Greek Drama

The End!