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Theatre of ancient Greece

The ancient Greek drama was a theatrical culture that flourished in ancient Greece from c. 700 BC. The city-state of Athens, which became a significant cultural, political, and military power during this period, was its center, where it was institutionalised as part of a festival called the Dionysia, which honored the god Dionysus. Tragedy (late 500 BC), comedy (490 BC), and the satyr play were the three dramatic genres to emerge there. Athens exported the festival to its numerous colonies and allies.

The history of ancient Greek theater covers a period of nearly a thousand years. Already the preforms were cultic nature and consisted in choral songs ( Dithyramben ) and dances, which were increasingly connected with action elements. In particular, the Dionysian cult was essential for the development of the drama . The theater of Greek antiquity reached its climax in the 5th century with the pieces of the three great tragedians Aeschylus , Sophocles and Euripides and the pieces of the Old Comedy , in particular of Kratinos and Aristophanes . While the cultic purpose increasingly took a back seat, the theater played an important role in the development of Attic democracy : it stood for self-assurance, representation, and demonstration of power of the Polis society. The ancient Greek theater was a theater of the free citizens of both sexes: the attendance of the performances was at the same time democratic right and religious-moral duty at the same time. Due to decreasing viewer numbers, the Athenian state led in the 4th century BC. A replacement payment for the loss of earnings during the visit of the performances.

After the demise of Attic democracy, the Roman state integrated the forms of Greek theater into its feast, and transformed the theater into a mass instrument of entertainment and political power representation.

The development of the entire Western theater culture goes back to the theater of Greek antiquity and is determined by the traditional dramas as well as by theater aesthetic elements (such as the choir and the use of masks) and above all by the reflection of the social role of theater been embossed.

Origins
The classical Greeks valued the power of spoken word, and it was their main method of communication and storytelling. Bahn and Bahn write, “To Greeks the spoken word was a living thing and infinitely preferable to the dead symbols of a written language.” Socrates himself believed that once something was written down, it lost its ability for change and growth. For these reasons, among many others, oral storytelling flourished in Greece.[3]

Greek tragedy as we know it was created in Athens around the time of 532 BC, when Thespis was the earliest recorded actor. Being a winner of the first theatrical contest held in Athens, he was the exarchon, or leader,[4] of the dithyrambs performed in and around Attica, especially at the rural Dionysia. By Thespis’ time, the dithyramb had evolved far away from its cult roots. Under the influence of heroic epic, Doric choral lyric and the innovations of the poet Arion, it had become a narrative, ballad-like genre. Because of these, Thespis is often called the “Father of Tragedy”; however, his importance is disputed, and Thespis is sometimes listed as late as 16th in the chronological order of Greek tragedians; the statesman Solon, for example, is credited with creating poems in which characters speak with their own voice, and spoken performances of Homer’s epics by rhapsodes were popular in festivals prior to 534 BC.[5] Thus, Thespis’s true contribution to drama is unclear at best, but his name has been given a longer life, in English, as a common term for performer — i.e., a “thespian.”

The dramatic performances were important to the Athenians – this is made clear by the creation of a tragedy competition and festival in the City Dionysia. This was organized possibly to foster loyalty among the tribes of Attica (recently created by Cleisthenes). The festival was created roughly around 508 BC. While no drama texts exist from the sixth century BC, we do know the names of three competitors besides Thespis: Choerilus, Pratinas, and Phrynichus. Each is credited with different innovations in the field.

More is known about Phrynichus. He won his first competition between 511 BC and 508 BC. He produced tragedies on themes and subjects later exploited in the golden age such as the Danaids, Phoenician Women and Alcestis. He was the first poet we know of to use a historical subject – his Fall of Miletus, produced in 493-2, chronicled the fate of the town of Miletus after it was conquered by the Persians. Herodotus reports that “the Athenians made clear their deep grief for the taking of Miletus in many ways, but especially in this: when Phrynichus wrote a play entitled “The Fall of Miletus” and produced it, the whole theatre fell to weeping; they fined Phrynichus a thousand drachmas for bringing to mind a calamity that affected them so personally and forbade the performance of that play forever.”[6] He is also thought to be the first to use female characters (though not female performers).[7]

Until the Hellenistic period, all tragedies were unique pieces written in honour of Dionysus and played only once, so that today we primarily have the pieces that were still remembered well enough to have been repeated when the repetition of old tragedies became fashionable (the accidents of survival, as well as the subjective tastes of the Hellenistic librarians later in Greek history, also played a role in what survived from this period).

New inventions during the classical period
After the Great Destruction of Athens by the Persian Empire in 480 BCE, the town and acropolis were rebuilt, and theatre became formalized and an even greater part of Athenian culture and civic pride. This century is normally regarded as the Golden Age of Greek drama. The centre-piece of the annual Dionysia, which took place once in winter and once in spring, was a competition between three tragic playwrights at the Theatre of Dionysus. Each submitted three tragedies, plus a satyr play (a comic, burlesque version of a mythological subject). Beginning in a first competition in 486 BC each playwright submitted a comedy.[8] Aristotle claimed that Aeschylus added the second actor (deuteragonist), and that Sophocles introduced the third (tritagonist). Apparently the Greek playwrights never used more than three actors based on what is known about Greek theatre.[9]

Tragedy and comedy were viewed as completely separate genres, and no plays ever merged aspects of the two. Satyr plays dealt with the mythological subject matter of the tragedies, but in a purely comedic manner.

Hellenistic period
The power of Athens declined following its defeat in the Peloponnesian War against the Spartans. From that time on, the theatre started performing old tragedies again. Although its theatrical traditions seem to have lost their vitality, Greek theatre continued into the Hellenistic period (the period following Alexander the Great’s conquests in the fourth century BCE). However, the primary Hellenistic theatrical form was not tragedy but ‘New Comedy’, comic episodes about the lives of ordinary citizens. The only extant playwright from the period is Menander. One of New Comedy’s most important contributions was its influence on Roman comedy, an influence that can be seen in the surviving works of Plautus and Terence.

Characteristics of the buildings
The plays had a chorus from 12 to 15[10] people, who performed the plays in verse accompanied by music, beginning in the morning and lasting until the evening. The performance space was a simple circular space, the orchestra, where the chorus danced and sang. The orchestra, which had an average diameter of 78 feet, was situated on a flattened terrace at the foot of a hill, the slope of which produced a natural theatron, literally “seeing place”. Later, the term “theatre” came to be applied to the whole area of theatron, orchestra, and skené. The coryphaeus was the head chorus member who could enter the story as a character able to interact with the characters of a play.

The theatres were originally built on a very large scale to accommodate the large number of people on stage, as well as the large number of people in the audience, up to fourteen thousand. Mathematics played a large role in the construction of these theatres, as their designers had to be able to create acoustics in them such that the actors’ voices could be heard throughout the theatre, including the very top row of seats. The Greek’s understanding of acoustics compares very favourably with the current state of the art. The first seats in Greek theatres (other than just sitting on the ground) were wooden, but around 499 BCE the practice of inlaying stone blocks into the side of the hill to create permanent, stable seating became more common. They were called the “prohedria” and reserved for priests and a few most respected citizens.

In 465 BCE, the playwrights began using a backdrop or scenic wall, which hung or stood behind the orchestra, which also served as an area where actors could change their costumes. It was known as the skênê (from which the word “scene” derives). The death of a character was always heard behind the skênê, for it was considered inappropriate to show a killing in view of the audience.[citation needed] Conversely, there are scholarly arguments that death in Greek tragedy was portrayed off stage primarily because of dramatic considerations, and not prudishness or sensitivity of the audience.[11] In 425 BC a stone scene wall, called a paraskenia, became a common supplement to skênê in the theatres. A paraskenia was a long wall with projecting sides, which may have had doorways for entrances and exits. Just behind the paraskenia was the proskenion. The proskenion (“in front of the scene”) was beautiful, and was similar to the modern day proscenium.

Greek theatres also had tall arched entrances called parodoi or eisodoi, through which actors and chorus members entered and exited the orchestra. By the end of the 5th century BC, around the time of the Peloponnesian War, the skênê, the back wall, was two stories high. The upper story was called the episkenion. Some theatres also had a raised speaking place on the orchestra called the logeion.

Genesis
The Dionysia and the most important part of today’s theater, the tragedies , were already under Peisistratos a state-religiously important festival, but by the Phylenreform of Kleisthenes was all involved Attica in the Dionysian festivals. Initially, there was only one actor, one of whom was a choir, who presumably did not sing, but occasionally responded to the actor. After the destruction by the Persians a skené developed to the theatron , and soon further additions were invented. The three tragedies were followed by the satyr play , a cheerful, liberating sequel.

The classical flowering of Greek theater ended with the decline of the classical polis of Athens and the foundation of the Hellenistic kingdoms .

The essential features of Greek stage art have been preserved, mainly because of the poetics of Aristotle ( 384 to 322 BC ). On the one hand, the influence on the European theater is shown by the fact that many of the materials used by the classical Greeks later aroused interest and continued to be used, such as the old Roman comedy poets Plautus and Terence . On the other hand, there were also numerous attempts to stimulate a “rebirth” of the classical period, always taking into account the prevailing time streams.

Construction
The Greek theaters were open-air theaters built into a hillside, mostly north-south. The research on Greek theater practice is confronted with the fact that there are very few documents to the theater of the fifth century BC. Chr., The so-called classical age of the tragic poets Aeschylus , Sophocles and Euripides . To this day, it has not been conclusively clarified whether the orchestra and the auditorium, the so-called Theatron, in the Athenian Dionysian theater of the fifth century already had a round shape with a stage house located in front of the orchestra (as in the accompanying sketch) or if the orchestra and theatron were rectangular. The preserved Greek theaters of the fifth century all have a rectangular shape and this is likely to make the Athens Theater likely. The following components are considered to be largely secured for the fifth century:

Theatron (first made of wood, later of stone),
Skené (wooden stage house, hence “scene”),
Orchestra , the playing area for choir and actors,
Parodoi , the two side entrances to the Orchestra,
Ekkyklema , a platform that was rolled out of the house to visualize scenes of scenes within the house in a tableau,
Mechane , a crane with which the deus ex machina seemed to float down onto the stage and intervene in the tragic event.
The documentary situation for the actual acting practice is also poor.

The origin of the Greek tragedy is the dithyrambs , solemn choral songs in honor of Dionysus , whose master is Arion of Lesbos . The first tragedy poet was Thespis , to whom the name of the theater is still remembered as a Thespiskarren , he confronted the choir a single solo actor, the protagonist , in the mask of Dionysus. Aeschylus introduced the second actor, the antagonist , and finally Sophocles the third, the tritagonist .

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The number of actors remained limited to three. If more people appear, never more than three at the same time, and at least one actor had to change the mask.

The choir consisted of 12 or 15 choirs, moved to the prologue through the parodoi in the theater and usually remained throughout the performance in the Orchestra.

As actors and choirs (members of the choir) only men were allowed to perform. It was played with masks.

The movement sequences of the choreographers and actors, the way of speaking or the singing and the music are scarcely handed down. There is a great deal of controversy in the research on how the drama texts obtained can be used to draw conclusions about stage practice. Despite a great deal of research interest, very little is known about ancient Greek theater.

Social function
The Greek theater was not just for men. Although only free citizens could participate (no slaves), for the women the back rows of seats were reserved.

The equipment of the choir and its maintenance were the task of the choreographer . The choir was an important Leiturgie , ie performance of a private person for the polis community .

The theater served for the entertainment of the population and since the emergence of the comedy also for amusement. Although the visit was socially obligatory due to its religious character, the honoring of the actors and authors testifies to a wider appreciation; because famous participants were awarded and catered for by the state.

Scenic elements
There were several scenic elements commonly used in Greek theatre:

mechane, a crane that gave the impression of a flying actor (thus, deus ex machina)
ekkyklêma, a wheeled platform often used to bring dead characters into view for the audience
pinakes, pictures hung to create scenery
thyromata, more complex pictures built into the second-level scene (3rd level from ground)
phallic props were used for satyr plays, symbolizing fertility in honour of Dionysus.

Masks

Masks
The Ancient Greek term for a mask is prosopon (lit., “face”),[12] and was a significant element in the worship of Dionysus at Athens, likely used in ceremonial rites and celebrations. Most of the evidence comes from only a few vase paintings of the 5th century BC, such as one showing a mask of the god suspended from a tree with decorated robe hanging below it and dancing and the Pronomos vase,[13] which depicts actors preparing for a Satyr play.[14] No physical evidence remains available to us, as the masks were made of organic materials and not considered permanent objects, ultimately being dedicated at the altar of Dionysus after performances. Nevertheless, the mask is known to have been used since the time of Aeschylus and considered to be one of the iconic conventions of classical Greek theatre.[15]

Masks were also made for members of the chorus, who play some part in the action and provide a commentary on the events in which they are caught up. Although there are twelve or fifteen members of the tragic chorus they all wear the same mask because they are considered to be representing one character.

Mask details
Illustrations of theatrical masks from 5th century display helmet-like masks, covering the entire face and head, with holes for the eyes and a small aperture for the mouth, as well as an integrated wig. These paintings never show actual masks on the actors in performance; they are most often shown being handled by the actors before or after a performance, that liminal space between the audience and the stage, between myth and reality.[16] Effectively, the mask transformed the actor as much as memorization of the text. Therefore, performance in ancient Greece did not distinguish the masked actor from the theatrical character.

The mask-makers were called skeuopoios or “maker of the properties,” thus suggesting that their role encompassed multiple duties and tasks. The masks were most likely made out of light weight, organic materials like stiffened linen, leather, wood, or cork, with the wig consisting of human or animal hair.[17] Due to the visual restrictions imposed by these masks, it was imperative that the actors hear in order to orient and balance themselves. Thus, it is believed that the ears were covered by substantial amounts of hair and not the helmet-mask itself. The mouth opening was relatively small, preventing the mouth to be seen during performances. Vervain and Wiles posit that this small size discourages the idea that the mask functioned as a megaphone, as originally presented in the 1960s.[14] Greek mask-maker, Thanos Vovolis, suggests that the mask serves as a resonator for the head, thus enhancing vocal acoustics and altering its quality. This leads to increased energy and presence, allowing for the more complete metamorphosis of the actor into his character.[18]

Mask functions
In a large open-air theatre, like the Theatre of Dionysus in Athens, the classical masks were able to create a sense of dread in the audience creating large scale panic, especially since they had intensely exaggerated facial features and expressions.[18] They enabled an actor to appear and reappear in several different roles, thus preventing the audience from identifying the actor to one specific character. Their variations help the audience to distinguish sex, age, and social status, in addition to revealing a change in a particular character’s appearance, e.g. Oedipus after blinding himself.[19] Unique masks were also created for specific characters and events in a play, such as The Furies in Aeschylus’ Eumenides and Pentheus and Cadmus in Euripides’ The Bacchae. Worn by the chorus, the masks created a sense of unity and uniformity, while representing a multi-voiced persona or single organism and simultaneously encouraged interdependency and a heightened sensitivity between each individual of the group. Only 2-3 actors were allowed on the stage at one time, and masks permitted quick transitions from one character to another. There were only male actors, but masks allowed them to play female characters.

Other costume details
The actors in these plays that had tragic roles wore boots called cothurni that elevated them above the other actors. The actors with comedic roles only wore a thin soled shoe called a sock. For this reason, dramatic art is sometimes alluded to as “Sock and Buskin.”

Melpomene is the muse of tragedy and is often depicted holding the tragic mask and wearing cothurni. Thalia is the muse of comedy and is similarly associated with the mask of comedy and the comedic “socks”.

Male actors playing female roles would wear a wooden structure on their chests (posterneda) to imitate the look of breasts and another structure on their stomachs (progastreda) to make them appear softer and more lady like. They would also wear white body stockings under their costumes to make their skin appear fairer.

Most costuming detail comes from pottery paintings from that time as costumes and masks were fabricated out of disposable material, so there are little to no remains of any costume from that time. The biggest source of information is the Pronomos Vase where actors are painted at a show’s after party.

Costuming would give off a sense of character, as in gender, age, social status, and class. For example, characters of higher class would be dressed in nicer clothing, although everyone was dressed fairly nicely. Contrary to popular belief, they did not dress in only rags and sandals, as they wanted to impress. Some examples of Greek theatre costuming include long robes called the chiton that reached the floor for actors playing gods, heroes, and old men. Actors playing Goddesses and women characters that held a lot of power wore purples and golds. Actors playing Queens and Princesses wore long cloaks that dragged on the ground and were decorated with gold stars and other jewels, and warriors were dressed in a variety of armor and wore helmets adorned with plumes. Costumes were supposed to be colourful and obvious to be easily seen by every seat in the audience.

Source from Wikipedia

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