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Greek Tragedy

Greek Tragedy. Everything you wanted to know about Greek tragedy but were afraid to ask. What are we going to talk about? . The Origins of Tragedy Which Cities Performed Tragedy When Tragedy was Performed The Parts of a Greek Theater The Theaters Themselves The Major Playwrights

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Greek Tragedy

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  1. Greek Tragedy Everything you wanted to know about Greek tragedy but were afraid to ask

  2. What are we going to talk about? • The Origins of Tragedy • Which Cities Performed Tragedy • When Tragedy was Performed • The Parts of a Greek Theater • The Theaters Themselves • The Major Playwrights • The Way a Greek Tragedy Was Staged - number of actors - the costumes - the masks - the audience

  3. The Origins of Tragedy • Originated from the dithyramb: a choral song in honor of Dionysos • Arion of Methymna (7th century) was the first to write a choral song, practice it with a chorus, and perform it • Lasus of Hermione was the first to do it at Athens • Connected with the worship of Dionysos in Athens

  4. The Origins of Tragedy • Thespis of Corinth • The first travelling actor • Active c. 538-28 BCE • Added prologue and speech to choral performance • Said to have invented the mask

  5. Who Performed Tragedy? • Corinth: c. 600 (Arion) • Sicyon: c. 550 - Cleisthenes (not the Athenian) - Epigenes • Athens: c. 510 - only Athenian dramas left - “school of Hellas”

  6. When Was Tragedy Performed? • City Dionysia @ Athens - aka “Greater Dionysia” - end of March • Rural Dionysia - different demes had performances - “off-Broadway” - various dates in December • The Lenaea - less prestigious - sometime in late January/early February

  7. Where Was Tragedy Performed? • almost every Greek city had a theater • Theaters could be very small or huge • Each theater had specific parts • Usually in the center of the city

  8. The Parts of a Theater • The Orchestra • The acting area • semi-circular • Had a small altar to Dionysos in the center • Where the Chorus danced and the actors spoke

  9. The Parts of a Theater • The Skene • The large backdrop • Could be decorated with scenery • Where the action actually took place (hidden) • Roof was accessible • Originally one door in the center, but eventually had three doors

  10. The Skene

  11. The Parts of a Theater • The Ekkyklēma • A wheeled platform • Used to display set pieces • Agamemnon • The Mēchanē • a large crane • Used for the entrance of gods • Deus ex machina

  12. The Theaters • Theater of Dionysos • Athens • Main theater for tragedy • 4th century remains • c. 20,000 seats • Located on side of Acropolis

  13. Theater of Dionysos

  14. Theater of Dionysos

  15. The Theaters • Theater of Epidauros • The best-preserved • Largest surviving theater • Located near Argos in the Peloponnesus • Sanctuary of Aesclepius • Still in use today

  16. Theater of Epidauros

  17. Theater of Epidauros

  18. The Theaters • Theater of Pergamon • In Asia Minor (Turkey) • Extremely steep seating • Fit to the terrain • Pergamon one of the most wealthy Asian cities

  19. Theater of Pergamon

  20. The Playwrights • Three major tragedians • Aeschylus • Sophocles • Euripides • All active in the 5th century • All won first place in multiple competitions • Only Athenian plays survive

  21. Aeschylus • b. 525 d. 456 (Sicily) • Fought at Marathon • “Aeschylus, Euphorion's son of Athens, lies under this stone dead in Gela among the white wheatlands; a man at need good in fight -- witness the hallowed field of Marathon, witness the long-haired Mede.” • First tragedy 499 • First first prize 484 (13 overall)

  22. Aeschylus • Introduced the second actor • Wrote over 70 plays (seven survive) • Always revered • Main interest is in situation and event rather than character • Oresteia, Seven Against Thebes • Pericles directed the chorus for Persians • Both sons were very successful playwrights

  23. Sophocles • b. 496 d. 406 • Served as a general with Pericles (441) • Very active in city politics (413) • First tragedy 468 • First first prize 468 • Won 18 first prizes • Never finished third

  24. Sophocles • Introduced the third actor • Wrote over 120 plays (seven survive) • The most successful of the Big Three • Challenged conventional mores • Introduced more dialogue between characters (less Chorus) • Oedipus Tyrannus, Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone, Electra

  25. Euripides • b. 485 d. 406 (in Macedonia) • Not active militarily or politically • First tragedy 455 • First first prize 441 • Won only four first prizes • The least successful of the Big Three

  26. Euripides • No innovations on the stage • Wrote ninety plays (19 survive) • Sophocles: “I present men as they ought to be, Euripides presents men as they are.” • More realistic than the other two • Alcestis, Medea, Hippolytus, Bacchae, Orestes

  27. The Staging of Tragedy • “Classical theater resembled today’s rock concerts: the audience knew every number by heart, performers wore high heels, loud costumes and heavy make-up, and they relied on background singers, known as the Chorus.” -Howard Tomb

  28. The Staging of Tragedy • “The audience knew every number by heart…” • Most tragedies dealt with mythological themes • “Performers wore high heels, loud costumes and heavy make-up…” • They wore elaborate clothes, tall boots, and masks • “They relied on background singers, known as the Chorus.” • Especially after the introduction of the third actor

  29. The Staging of Tragedy - Actors • Maximum of three actors • Aeschylus second • Sophocles third • All roles played by men • Same group of actors for each set of plays for each author

  30. The Staging of Tragedy - Actors • Playwrights did not act in their own plays after Sophocles • Chorus publicly funded • A choregos would pay for and train the chorus • Viewed as a civic duty • Could be prosecuted for failing to do it wealthy enough • Choregos got a monument if his chorus won

  31. The Staging of Tragedy - Costumes • Actor wore: • Mask • Robes • Platform boots (kothornoi) • Chorus could be in costume (comedy)

  32. The Staging of Tragedy - Masks • The most salient feature • All parts by men, so mask depicted gender • Acted as a megaphone • Voice inflection paramount • Multiple Masks = Multiple Characters • Only three actors • More than three speaking roles, need for costume and mask change • Oedipus and his eyes

  33. The Audience • Any male could attend • Women most likely able to attend • Aeschylus’ Furies • State funded attendance • Cost was the average daily wage of a laborer • Theoric Fund • Never suspended, even when Athens in dire straights • Supplied public tickets • “Must-see TV”

  34. The Audience • Catharsis • “learning through suffering” • Moderation is to be sought in all things, even good things • The mighty fall so far that we admire them for being so high • A spiritual cleansing of the audience • Performances emotional

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