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Greek Drama

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Title: Greek Drama


1
Western Civilization
Greek Theater
2
The Greek Theater
  • 5th Century B. C.
  • Golden Age of Greek Drama
  • Dramatic festivals were popular
  • People witnessed tragic and comic plays

3
Overview of Greek Theatre
  • The land
  • The myths
  • The stage

4
The Land
  • Greece has thousands of inhabited islands and
    dramatic mountain ranges
  • Greece has a rich culture and history
  • Democracy was founded in Greece
  • Patriarchal (male dominated) society
  • Philosophy, as a practice, began in Greece
    (Socrates, Plato, Aristotle)

5
The Land
  • Located in Europe in the Aegean Sea

6
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The Land
8
Overview of Greek Theatre
  • The land
  • The myths
  • The stage

9
The Stage
10
The Stage
Three Main Portions of Greek Theatre Skene
Portion of stage where actors performed (included
1-3 doors in and out) Orchestra Dancing Place
where chorus sang to the audience Theatron
Seating for audience
11
The Stage
12
The Stage
  • Greek plays were performed during religious
    ceremonies held in honor of Dionysus, the Greek
    god of wine and revelry (altars generally on
    stage)
  • Banks would shut down for days, people would
    travel from all around to see the drama
    competitionseven prisoners were temporarily
    released to see the plays
  • Tragedy means goat song (relates to Dionysian
    rituals)

13
The Stage
14
Where and how were the dramas performed?
In an amphitheatre With a chorus who described
most of the action. With masks With all the
fighting and movement going on off stage..With
tragedy first, then comedy later.
15
Masks of Greek Theater
16
The masks were worn for many reason including 1.
Visibility 2. Acoustic Assistance 3. Few Actors,
Many Roles 4. Characterization
17
Some general categories of masks 1. OLD MEN
Smooth-Faced, White, Grizzled, Black-Haired,
Flaxen and More Flaxen 2. YOUNG MEN Common,
Curled, More Curled, Graceful, Horrid, Pale and
Less Pale 3. SLAVES Leathern, Peaked-Beard, Flat
Nose 4. WOMEN Freed Old Woman, Old Domestic,
Middle Aged, Leathern, Pale-Disheveled, Pale
Middle Aged, Whorish-Disheveled, Virgin, Girl 5.
SPECIALIST MASKS Some made for specific
characters, others for Mourning, Blindness,
Deceit, Drunkenness...etc. (The comic masks,
those especially of old comedy, were as like as
possible to true persons they represented, or
made to appear more ridiculous)
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Masks of Greek Theater
20
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21
Masks of Greek Theater
22
Modern-day replicas
Hero-King
Comedy (Servant or Herald )
Tragedy (Weeping Chorus)
23
Theater at Epidaurus
24
Theater at Epidaurus
25
Major Greek Dramatists
Aeschylus 524 B.C. Seven Against Thebes
Sophocles 496 B.C. Antigone Oedipus
Euripides 480 B.C. Medea
Dramatist Born Wrote
26
Sophocles Antigone
  • Set in Thebes (a city in ancient Greece)
  • Antigone is the daughter of Oedipus and Jocasta
  • Antigones brothers, Eteokles and Polyneces, took
    opposite sides in a war
  • Eteokles and Polyneces killed each other in
    battle
  • Antigones uncle, Kreon, became king of Thebes

27
Sophocles
28
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29
Greek Comedy and Aristophanes
30
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31
Euripides Medea
  • Medea is a princess from Colchis
  • Medea marries Jason, who is in Colchis on a quest
    for the Golden Fleece
  • Medea betrays her father and murders her brother
    for her love of Jason
  • Medea has magical powers
  • Jason takes Medea back to his homeland, Corinth,
    where they have children
  • Jason takes another wife, the king of Corinths
    daughter

32
Jasons Voyage on the Argo
Jason and Medea meet
Corinth Where Jason and Medea settle down
33
Overview of Greek Theatre
  • The land
  • The myths
  • The stage

34
Myths played a key rolein Greek drama
35
The Myths Why they were written
  1. Explained the unexplainable
  2. Justified religious practices
  3. Gave credibility to leaders
  4. Gave hope
  5. Polytheistic (more than one god)
  6. Centered around the twelve Olympians (primary
    Greek gods)

36
Explained the Unexplainable
  • When Echo tried to get Narcissus to love her, she
    was denied.
  • Saddened, she shriveled to nothing, her existence
    melting into a rock.
  • Only her voice remained.
  • Hence, the echo!

37
To justify religious practices
  • Dionysian cults in ancient Greece were founded to
    worship Dionysus, god of grapes, vegetation, and
    wine.

38
Roots in Worship of Dionysus
God of wine and revelry
39
Theater of Dionysus
  • Dionysia was an annual festival in honor of the
    god Dionysus
  • Theater of Dionysus was an open-air Theater with
    room for fifteen thousand spectators

40
Theater of Dionysus
  • carved out of a stone hillside
  • looked like a semicircle with steeply rising
    tiers of seats

41
Theater of Dionysus
42
Theater of Dionysus
  • At the bottom was the rounded orchestra or
    performance area where the chorus sang and danced

43
Dionysus Theater in Athens
44
Theater of Dionysus
  • Behind the orchestra was an open, almost bare,
    stage where actors spoke their lines from behind
    huge masks

45
Dionysus Theater in Athens
46
Dionysus Theater in Athens
47
Theater of Dionysus
  • Male actors performed all the roles
  • Actors switched masks to play a number of roles
    both female and male

48
Dionysus and Satyrs
49
To give credibility to leaders
  • Used myths to create family trees for their
    leaders, enforcing the made-up idea that the
    emperors were related to the gods and were, then,
    demigods.

50
To give hope
  • The ancient citizens of Greece would sacrifice
    and pray to an ORACLE.
  • An oracle was a priest or priestess who would
    send a message to the gods from mortals who
    brought their requests.

Where DID hope come from? After unleashing
suffering, famine, disease, and many other evils,
the last thing Pandora let out was HOPE.
51
Oracle of Delphi
52
Oracle of Delphi
53
Delphi
54
Delphi
55
Mount Olympus
Where the Olympians lived. Who are
the Olympians?
56
The Olympians Are the 12 Main Gods
57
The Olympians
58
Zeus
  • Zeus was the most powerful god on Mount Olympus.
    He was able to change the seasons, make the rain
    and cause a storm with one shake of his shield.
  • His weapon was a thunderbolt which he threw at
    those who angered him.
  • Zeus was known to punish those that lied or broke
    promises. But he laughed easily and fell in love
    often.

59
Poseidon
  • Poseidon was Zeuss brother and god of the sea.
    He was the second most powerful god on Mount
    Olympus.
  • He spent his time between Mount Olympus and a
    beautiful palace under the sea. Always restless,
    he caused earthquakes and tidal waves when he was
    angry.
  • His weapon is a trident, which can shake the
    earth, and shatter any object.

60
Hades
  • Hades was the brother of Zeus and ruler of the
    Underworld, the world of the dead. The Underworld
    was a gloomy kingdom of wailing ghosts,
    screeching bats, and lost and evil souls.
  • Hades only occasionally visited Mount Olympus
    or the land of the living. But when he did, no
    one saw him. He wore a magic helmet that made him
    invisible.
  • Hades owned everything precious that lay in the
    ground - every piece of gold and silver, every
    precious stone.

61
Ares
  • Ares was the god of war and thrived on violence
    and battles.
  • He was the son of Zeus and Hera, but neither of
    his parents liked him.
  • He was considered both cruel and a coward, and
    was unpopular with both gods and humans.

62
Hephaestus
  • Hephaestus was the god of fire and the forge (a
    furnace in which metal is heated). His forge was
    under any erupting volcano.
  • He was the son of Zeus and Hera and married
    Aphrodite. Although he made armor and weapons for
    the gods, he was kind and peace loving.
  • Of all the gods and goddesses on Mount Olympus,
    Hephaestus was the least good looking. In fact,
    his own mother hated him for his lack of looks.

63
Apollo
  • Apollo was the god of music and healing. He was
    also a master archer, and hunted with a silver
    bow.
  • He was the first winning athlete in the Olympic
    Games. Apollo was the son of Zeus and the Titan
    Leto, and the twin of Artemis.
  • Apollo was perhaps the most loved of all the
    gods on Mount Olympus. He was handsome, talented,
    charming and honest. He shot arrows into every
    monster that threatened anyone he loved.

64
Hermes
  • Hermes was the messenger of the gods, graceful,
    clever and quick. He wore winged sandals, a
    winged golden helmet hat, and carried a magic
    wand.
  • His golden winged sandals gave him speed and his
    magic golden wand, a gift from Apollo, guided him
    on his journeys.
  • One of his jobs was to lead the dead to the
    underworld. Another was to watch over tradesmen
    and travelers.

65
Dionysus
  • Dionysos is one of the gods most frequently found
    on Greek pottery. This is because he is the god
    of wine, and many of the pots painted with
    pictures of him are for drinking wine.
  • He has a black beard and a long robe.
  • Dionysos was the son of Zeus and a woman Semele.
    The fact that Semele was mortal caused quite an
    uproar with the gods. Hestia, to keep the peace
    surrendered her seat in order to allow Dionysos
    to join them.

66
Hera
  • Hera was the goddess of marriage and took special
    care of married women. She was the wife (and
    sister) of Zeus and Queen of the Olympians.
  • Although Zeus relied on Hera for advice and help
    in ruling the other Gods, Hera had little luck in
    managing him. She spent much of her time angry
    and jealous of him, planning either to destroy
    Zeus or to punish his lady friends.
  • Hera was worshipped throughout Greece.

67
Demeter
  • Demeter was the goddess of farming.
  • When seen in art, Demeter is often shown carrying
    a sheaf of grain.
  • Her daughter, Persephone, was forced to live with
    Hades, King of the Dead each winter at this time
    Demeter let no crops grow.
  • Persephone was allowed to leave the Underworld
    for one half of every year, the spring and summer
    seasons.

68
Hestia
  • Hestia was Zeus sister and the goddess of the
    hearth (a fireplace at the centre of the home).
  • The hearth was an important part of the house.
    When the fire dimmed, the coals were kept alive
    and glowing to honor her. Usually, ancient Greeks
    carried live coals from an old city to a newly
    built city in her name.
  • Each city had a public hearth sacred to Hestia,
    where the fire was never allowed to go out. She
    was the sweetest and most generous of the gods.

69
Athena
  • Athena was the goddess of wisdom and the daughter
    of Zeus. She has no mother she sprang full grown
    in armour from the forehead of Zeus.
  • She was also fierce and brave in battle, and
    helped heroes such as Odysseus and Hercules.
  • Athena was Zeus' favorite child and was allowed
    to use his weapons including his thunderbolt. She
    also carried a magic shield that turned her
    enemies to stone. The city of Athens was named
    after her.

70
Aphrodite
  • Aphrodite was the goddess of love and beauty, and
    the protector of sailors.
  • There are two stories about her birth. One says
    that she may have been the daughter of Zeus and
    the Titan Dione. The other says that she arose
    from the sea on a giant scallop shell and walked
    to shore in Cyprus.

71
Artemis
  • Artemis was the goddess of the hunt and animals,
    as well as of childbirth.
  • She is the daughter of Zeus and Leto, and her
    twin brother is Apollo. Like Apollo she hunts
    with silver arrows.
  • Artemis is also the protector of the young
    looking after animals and young children
  • She is connected to the moon as a symbol of
    purity.

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73
The Storyline
74
Central Character is of the Elite Class
75
Central Character suffers a Downfall
76
Central Character is Neither Wholly good nor
wholly evil
77
Downfall is the result of a Fatal Flaw
78
Misfortunes involve characters who are related or
who are friends
79
Tragic actions take place offstage
80
Central Character has a moment of recognition
81
Audience experiences pity and fear
82
Pity and Fear leads to a catharsis
83
The End
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