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Greek Theatre

Greek Theatre. Greek History. 2500 - 500 BC. Egypt. Near East. 2500 BC. Whose got the power?. Where’s the Greece?. ?. Minoan civilization. Most prevalent in the Aegean Area Lived on the Isle of Crete 1400 BC - MAJOR EARTHQUAKE destroys Crete cities

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Greek Theatre

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  1. Greek Theatre

  2. Greek History 2500 - 500 BC

  3. Egypt Near East 2500 BC Whose got the power?

  4. Where’s the Greece? ?

  5. Minoan civilization • Most prevalent in the Aegean Area • Lived on the Isle of Crete • 1400 BC - MAJOR EARTHQUAKE destroys Crete cities • Focus moves North to Mainland of Greece • Culture greatly influences cities of Mycenae and Troy

  6. 1100 BC

  7. DARKAGES 1100 - 800 BC

  8. The Dawn of Greek Civilization

  9. 800 BC - 500 BC Greek Civilization Begins to Take Shape

  10. polis “City State”

  11. ImportantGreek Cities • Attica (Athens) • Corinth • Sparta • Thebes

  12. City state facts • Originally ruled by Kings • After 800 BC Nobles began to acquire considerable power and control • These “tyrants” did much to improve social conditions and promote the arts • Peisistratus dominated Athens from 560-510 BC • Established numerous festivals including the Festival of Dionysia • By the late 6th Century BC Greeks grew weary of tyrants and prevent them from gaining power

  13. 508 BC Greece creates the world’s first…

  14. 508 BC democracy

  15. Greek Theatre The origins of Comedy & Tragedy

  16. 700 BC GREEKS LEARN TO WRITE

  17. WRITTEN records increase but those relating to the Theatre were rare until 534 BC

  18. 534 BC Athens institutes a contest for the best tragedy at the City of Dionysis (a Major Religious Festival)

  19. Thespisis credited with the first win

  20. Therefore,Most scholars consider him the inventor of drama

  21. Tragedy Taken from the Greek … Goat Song

  22. Aristotle said Tragedy evolved out of the improvisations by the leader of the dithyrambs

  23. What’s a dithyramb? It was the hymn sung and danced in honor of Dionysis, the greek god of wine and fertility

  24. Greek Theatre Comedy

  25. Origins of comedy • From the Greek word KOMOS • Based on religious ceremonies connected with fertility rites • Actors wore grotesque costumes and performed using wild gestures • Around 570 BC these actions become organized • Susaron believed to have written the first comedy

  26. Styles of Comedy Old Comedy Middle Comedy New Comedy

  27. Structure of Comedy

  28. The “HAPPY IDEA” Old Comedy (570 - 404)

  29. The Happy Idea • Usually wild and impractical • The chorus enters and debates the Happy Idea which includes a direct address to the audience of the views of the playwright • A series of farcical scenes attempting to implement the happy idea which usually concludes with some merrymaking

  30. Middle Comedy (404 - 321) • Development connected to the downfall of Athens during the Peloponnesian War • Chorus has a lesser role • Political commentary removed • Stories and characters become somewhat uniform • No scipts of this time period remain

  31. New Comedy • Appears during the last quarter of the 4th Century • Comic form most copied by the Romans • Structure closely resembles the structure of modern plays (5 Act Structure) • Characters drawn from contemporary Athens • Last form of theatre to emerge from Athens shows the cynicism prevalent after the city’s decline

  32. Satyr play • Entered into the Dionysian Festival around 500 BC • Accompanied the trilogy • Written as pure entertainment usually mocking the theme of the previous plays • The chorus was portrayed as Satyrs • Very little is known about this form of Greek Theatre

  33. Greek Theatre The Playwrights

  34. Tragedy in the 5th Century • What we know about Greek Tragedy is based solely on three playwrights • They are representative of other playwrights • However from over a 1,000 plays written during that time period, only 31 still exist

  35. The Tragic Playwrights Aeschylus Sophocles Euripides

  36. Aeschylus (523 - 456) • Oldest of surviving Greek Playwrights • Thought to have written 80 plays, only 7 survive including the Oresteia trilogy (Agamemnon, Libation Bearers, and Eumenides) • Introduced the Second actor • The most “theatrical” of the tragedians

  37. Sophocles (496 - 406) • Wrote over 120 plays, 7 survived including Antigone, Electra, and Oedipus Rex • Won 24 Dionysian festivals, never lower than 2nd • Introduced the 3rd actor, after Aeschylus used 3 • No elaborate visual effects, placed increased emphasis on the individual character • Considered the most skillful of all the Greek tragedians

  38. Euripides (480 - 406) • Wrote about 90 plays, 18 survived including Medea, The Trojan Women, and Orestes • Popular in later cultures but not during his lifetime because his plays were thought unsuitable for the stage & too undignified for tragedy • Badly written, compared to Sophocles & Aeschylus • Use of melodrama and sentimentality were signs of what was to come in the 4th Century

  39. The Comic Playwrights Aristophanes & Menander

  40. Aristophanes (448 - 380) • What we know of Old Comedy comes from his writings • Wrote 40 plays 11 survive including Frogs, Lysistrata, & Birds • Characters come from all classes of Athenians commenting on contemporary society, politics, literature, & war • With Athen’s defeat by Sparta, his style of writing becomes less popular

  41. Menander (342 - 292) • Playwright of the New Comedy Period • Wrote about 100 plays 11 exist • Grew up in Macedonian controlled Athens • Chorus no longer important - group of performers who appear between scenes (5 Act Structure) • Stock characters taken from everyday life in contemporary dress - not mythic • Not considered great playwright but works influenced Roman playwrights Plautus & Terence • Modern Theatre can trace its roots to Menander

  42. THE END

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