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Ancient Greek Drama

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Title: Ancient Greek Drama


1
Ancient Greek Drama
2
  • Originated in Athens, Greece and reached its
    peak in the fifth century B.C.
  • Grew from ancient religious rituals.

3
Greek Mythology
  • Zeus
  • Apollo
  • Dionysus

4
Dionysus
  • Son of Zeus a mortal woman

5
  • Mother was killed while pregnant by Zeuss
    lightning bolt
  • Underwent resurrection 2nd birth from Zeuss
    thigh

6
Dionysus
  • God of wine and fertility in nature
  • God of common people
  • Thought to liberate worshippers from personal
    trouble

7
Dionysus was a suffering god
  • Ceremonies were not compatible w/ Greek tradition
  • Rapid movements of hands body
  • Hysterical screaming
  • Cycle of lamenting and rejoicing

8
  • Dionysuss teachings went against Apollos
    teachings of restraint.
  • Apollos follows believed in Nothing too much
    and
  • Know thyself

9
  • Often the worship of Dionysus was forbidden
  • More women worshippers than men

10
A Suffering God
  • Dionysus was believed to have undergone death and
    resurrection
  • Religious ceremony mirrored this
  • Lamenting mirrored gods death
  • Rejoicing with wild dancing and singing mirrored
    gods resurrection
  • Often involved animal sacrifices

11
  • Service served as a social safety valve
  • After service worshippers left with peace of mind
  • Was a type of catharsis

12
Dithyrambs
  • Choral lyric poems in honor of Dionysus
  • Sung while dancing around altar
  • Performed by 50 men dressed in goat skins (sacred
    animals of the gods)

13
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14
Dithyrambs
  • Later evolved into what we see as chorus
  • Goats later awarded as prizes in tragedy
    festivals

15
Dithyrambs
  • Tragedy goat song (tragoidia)
  • Men represented satyrs (Dionysuss companions

16
Dithyrambs evolved
  • Became poetic in form
  • Included stories of gods and heroes

17
  • Arion (writer) was the 1st to write dithyramb as
    literature in poetic form

18
Choragos
  • The leader of the chorus filled in the intervals
    between portions of lyric poems with stories of
    Dionysus

19
Peisistratus
  • Ruler of Athens
  • 6th Century B.C.
  • Gave official recognition to tragedy
  • Festival instituted

20
Thespis
Middle of 6th century BC
  • Introduced first actor
  • Hypokrites - answerer
  • Performed between dances of the chorus
  • Would take several roles change costumes many
    times - wore mask
  • Conversed w/ leader of chorus

21
Thespis
  • The Father of Drama was born in Attica, and was
    the first prize winner at the Great Dionysia in
    534 BC.
  • He was an important innovator for the theatre,
    since he introduced such things as the
    independent actor, as opposed to the choir, as
    well as masks, make up and costumes.

22
Aeschylus added the second actor
  • With this addition, drama was born
  • Possibility of conflict
  • Chorus was reduced to 12

23
Sophocles
  • Added 3rd actor
  • Stabilized chorus at 15
  • Introduced painted sets

24
Sophocles
  • Prominent citizen of Athens
  • Generally considered the greatest of ancient
    Greek playwrights
  • Known for musical, poetic, and dramatic talents
  • General, political leader,
  • priest

25
Socrates taught
  • That man possessed a certain freedom of will and
    action and a person could live out his life with
    dignity, bringing upon himself no more than his
    allotted share of grief.

26
  • Every persons fate held in store a personal
    allotment of unavoidable misery.
  • Misery in itself was not tragic but was to be
    expected.

27
Career spanned 62 years
  • At age of 17, was leader of the chorus
  • At age of 28, won prize and defeated leading
    playwright of the day
  • Wrote 120 plays
  • Won 1st place 24 times for 72 plays
  • Never won less that 2nd prize (7 times)
  • Names of nearly 100 plays known today
  • Seven complete plays survive today

28
Contributions
  • Added the third actor
  • Fixed the number of chorus members to 15
  • Introduced painted scenery
  • Made each play of trilogy separate in nature
  • Wrote Oedipus (430 B.C.), Oedipus at Colonus
    (405 B.C.) and Antigone (440 B.C.)
  • Plays always contain a moral lesson usually a
    caution against pride

29
Production of the plays
30
Tragedy as an art form
  • Reached its height in 5th century B.C.
  • Tragedies presented at Tragedy Festivals
  • Originally presented in honor of god Dionysus

31
Dionysia - Festival
  • Most important of 3 annual festivals
  • Plays produced by state
  • 5 days in March/April

32
Festival Structure
  • DAY 1
  • Grand procession w/ statue of Dionysus carried to
    the theatre sacred parade
  • A herald would announce the competing plays
  • DAYS 2 3 - 5 Dithyrambs Men
  • 5 Dithyrambs Boys

33
Festival Schedule
  • DAYS 4 - 6 Drama contest
  • Each playwright presented three tragedies - 1
    satyr play (ridicule gods or heroes)
  • Later a comedy also presented
  • Only 3 playwrights participated

34
  • Actors were chosen by state earlier in the year
  • Public businesses suspended
  • Prisoners released on bail
  • 14,000 spectators
  • Attendance mandatory religious obligation
  • Citizens often required to participate in
    productions

35
Spectators
  • Men and women were segregated
  • Originally free
  • When trouble over seats fee charged
  • State provided fund for those who couldnt pay.

36
Playwrights Responsibilities
  • Wrote plays
  • Composed music
  • Directed
  • Supervised rehearsals
  • Acted
  • Assigned actors, chorus, musicians, etc.

37
  • Costs paid by wealthy citizens (honor)
  • Was considered a public service
  • Required as a special tax on wealthy
  • Shared praise

Sponsor
38
Prizes
  • Wreaths,
  • Crowns of ivy
  • Bull,
  • Goat
  • Name carved in marble

39
judges
  • 10 20 judges were chosen by government
  • Elaborate precautions to prevent corruption

40
Thespis
  • Winner of the first contest

41
Other winners
  • Aeschylus
  • Sophocles
  • Euripides

42
Theater
43
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44
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45
Actors and Acting
  • Hypocrites (answerer)
  • Never more than three actors in a
    performance
  • All male performers

46
Costumes and Masks
  • Long flowing robes
  • Colored symbolically
  • Often padded to add stature
  • High boots with raised soles
  • Props carried to identify roles

47
Larger Than Life Masks
  • Made of linen, wood, cork
  • Made with human or animal hair
  • Exaggerated features large eyes and open mouth

48
Masks continued
  • Used to inspire audience (larger than mortals)
  • Hid actors face from gods as they impersonated
    them
  • Acted as megaphone to amplify voices
  • Identified age, gender and rank of character
  • Called a persona
  • Choir masks much simpler

49
Chorus
Points out significance of events
Gives advice
Identifies themes
Ideal Spectator
Introduces questions new characters
Passage of time or transition between scenes
Gives background information
Entertains
50
Conventions of Tragedy
  • Unities of time, place, action
  • Techniques of stichomythia, strophe, antistrophe,
    epode, and in media res
  • Messenger who tells happenings offstage and
    reports acts of violence (never allowed on stage

51
Conventions continued
  • No violence on stage
  • The action always takes place outdoors
  • There were limitations of the theater
  • No intermission
  • No lighting, no curtain
  • Myths were already known to audience playwright
    had to rely on dramatic irony

52
Structure of tragedy
  • Prologue
  • Parados
  • Episodes
  • Stasimon
  • Paean
  • Exodus

53
Prologue
  • Opening scene
  • Background of story is established
  • Single actor

54
Episodes
  • Counterparts of Acts
  • 4 8 in a tragedy
  • (known as scenes in our translation)

55
Stasimon
  • Choral ode at the end of each episode
  • Originally a poem written to be sung
  • Serves to separate the scenes since no curtains
    were present provides the chorus response to
    the preceding scene

56
Paean
  • A choral hymn in praise of a god
  • In Antigone praise to Dionysus, in whose honor
    the Greeks presented their plays

57
Exodus
  • Exit of Chorus and Actors

58
Definition of Tragedy
  • Defined by Aristotle in 335 BC in Poetics
  • Told to arouse emotions of pity and fear in
    audience
  • Pity because the tragic hero is not an evil man
    punishment is too great
  • Fear because of the possibility of error in
    ourselves
  • Produces catharsis in audience (new understanding
    of gods and man)
  • Produces catharsis in audience come away with
    new understanding of gods and man
  • Tells story of downfall (catastrophe) of tragic
    hero
  • Order is restored in the end of the play

59
Tragic Hero
  • Noble
  • Powerful respected
  • Tempts fate
  • Has a tragic flaw in personality (usually pride)
  • Brings extraordinary amounts of sorrow and
    suffering on himself
  • Undergoes a reversal of fortune
  • Has a moment of self awareness
  • Dies or wishes to be dead in the end of the play

60
Basic Concepts of Greek Culture
  • Believed every persons life ruled by
    predetermined fate a natural force set in
    motion by the gods and one that could not be
    altered
  • Believed every persons fate held in store a
    personal allotment of unavoidable misery
  • Believed man possessed a certain freedom of will
    and action and could live out his life with
    dignity, bringing upon himself no more than his
    allotted share of grief

61
Basic concepts of Greek Culture continued
  • Believed man was inferior to the gods because he
    was mortal and fallible
  • Believed man was to be punished if he defied the
    gods
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