The History of Western Drama - Blue Valley School District
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Greek Theater
Dithyrambs
Thespis
Ritual festivals feature
competition of plays
Tetralogy
Singing and dancing chorus
1 – 3 actors
Use of masks to portray a
variety of characters
Aristotle’s Poetics
Dramatic Genres
Tragedy
From the Greek word “tragos,” meaning goat song.
Serious portrayal of human suffering, through
protagonist’s hamartia and decline.
Concluded with catharsis
Satyr Play
Bawdy comedy that satirized accompanying trilogy.
One complete satyr play survived: The Cyclops, by
Euripides
Comedy
Humorous handling of political issues, sexuality, and the
gods.
Often included nudity, animalistic characters
Performed separately from tetralogy
Greek Playwrights
Aeschylus – Orestia, Prometheus Bound
Sophocles – Oedipus Tyrannos, Antigone
Euripides – The Trojan Women, The Cyclops, Medea
Aristophanes – Lysistrata, The Birds
Greek Theatron
Orchestra
Thymele
Skene
Eisodoi (or parados)
Ekklyklema
Deus ex machina
Hellenistic Period
Period spans the rule of Alexander the Great to the rise of
the Roman Empire.
Greek culture extended into Europe and Asia, due to military
conquests.
Drama included Greek tragedies and new comedy
Chorus reduced in importance, and provided music and
dance, light entertainment.
Playwright
Menander - Dyskolos (The Grouch), Epitrepontes (Men at
Arbitration) Samia (Girl from Samos)
Roman Theater
Adapted from Greek drama
Mainly comedies, performed for ruling classes during festivals
and holidays
Lacked religious and cultural meaning.
Performed alongside circuses and gladiatorial competitions.
Chorus was removed from performance.
Persona
Roman Playwrights
Plautus – The Menachmi Twins, Aulularia, Pseudolus
Terence – The Eunuch, Andrian, The Brothers
Seneca – Hercules, Octavia, Phaedra
Roman Auditorium
Platae
Frons scaenae
Vomitorium
Orchestra
Roman Theater, Orange, France
The Middle Ages
Christian doctrine dominated
literature, culture
Rise of feudal system, nobles and
peasants, and rural communities
Tropes – Quem Queritis
1210 AD, Pope removed drama
from the Mass
Cycle Plays – The York Cycle
Morality plays – Everyman
York Mystery Play, 2010
The Cycle Play
First dramas written in English
Playlets relating the stories of
the Bible
Community guilds responsible
for production of each playlet
Large scale productions lasted
several days (40+) with large
casts (300+)
No notable authors
Rolling procession
Performed at high religious
events
Written in verse to elevate status
of characters, subject matter
Video Clip
The Renaissance
Creative movement that
influenced all of Europe
Emphasis on discovery, individual
potential, creativity, reasoning
Rediscovery of Greek and Roman
ideas, including humanism: “man
is the measure of all things”
Decline of feudal system,
religious dogma
England – Shakespearean Era
1559 – Queen Elizabeth I bans religious cycle plays
Drama written in verse, prose, and doggerel
Included foreign locales, complex stories, historical
reference
Travelling players
Named after sponsor: Lord Admiral’s Men, Lord
Chamberlain’s Men
Skilled actors, musicians, acrobats writers
All male troupes; boy companies
Public Theater
Enclosed yard, with 3-story gallery for viewing
Raised stage, backed by tiring house
The Rose, The Globe
England – (con’t.)
Playwrights
William Shakespeare – Romeo &
Juliet, Hamlet, The Tempest
Christopher Marlowe –
Tamburlaine the Great, The Tragedy
of Dr. Faustus
Ben Jonson – Volpone, The
Alchemist
1642 – Puritans named actors and
drama “sinful,” banning all
theatrical performances. Ended
with the return of Charles II to the
throne in 1660.
The Globe Theater, London, England
Italy
Renewed interest in Greek and Roman culture by elite
society
Developments in architecture, painting, literature: Filippo
Brunelleschi, Leonard da Vinci, Petrarch
Proscenium Arch
Travelling troupes were skilled
actors, musicians, acrobats, female
performers
Commedia dell’arte
Stock characters
Use of masks, costumes,
portable stages, slapstick
Lazzi
Video Clip
Spain – Spanish Golden Age
Spanish Inquisition (1480)
1400’s - Dramas were liturgical, religious in nature
1500’s – secular pasos performed by travelling companies
Women permitted to perform in productions
Dramas included themes of personal honor, chivalry,
blended genres
Corrales de comedia
Playwrights
Lope de Vega – Fuenteovejuna
Pedro Calderon de la Barca – Life is a Dream
Miguel de Cervantes – Don Quixote, stage adaptations
The Royal Theater
Royalty became patrons of
theater, commissioning plays
and entertainment, establishing
aesthetic standards
1600’s - Started in Spain, and
progressed to France, then
England.
Performances became social
gatherings for elite society
France
French Neoclassicism
Established strict format for playwriting, limiting creativity
Drama focused on social commentary, domestic issues;
lacked plot and action
Tennis court performances
Public theater - Parterre, proscenium arch, loges
Playwrights
Pierre Corneille – Le Cid, Medee
Moliere, (aka Jean-Baptiste Poquelin) – Tartuffe, The
Imaginary Invalid, The Bourgeois Gentleman
Jean Racine – Phaedra, Alexander the Great, Andromaque
England
English Restoration (1660)
Restoration Comedy – aka “Comedy of Manners”
English Royal Patent of 1662 – allowed female actresses at
“legitimate” theaters
The Drury Lane
Covent Garden
Raked stage, proscenium arch, bench seating in pit
Playwrights
William Wycherly – The Country Wife
William Congreve – The Way of the World
Aphra Behn – The Rover
John Dryden – A World Well Lost
Video Clip
Romanticism
Developed in reaction to elitist styles of French Neoclassicism
and Restoration Comedy
Began as sentimental comedy
Appealed to the masses
Focused on appeals to emotion rather than intellect
Reflected the virtues of private life
Featured action, exotic locales and exaggerated passion
Evident in Opera and early musicals
Playwrights
Richard Steele – Conscious Lovers
Joseph Addison – Cato
George Aiken – Uncle Tom's Cabin, based on novel by Harriet
Beecher Stowe
Alexandre Dumas – Camille, The Three Musketeers
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe – Faust
Edmond Rostand – Cyrano De Bergerac
Realism – likeness to life
Influenced all facets of theater: playwriting, direction,
acting, and design
Examined social, psychological and political complexities of
life
Complex characters and relationships
David Garrick – Actor-Producer of the Drury Lane Theatre
Fourth Wall
Playwrights
Henrik Ibsen – A Doll’s House, Hedda Gabler, Ghosts
George Bernard Shaw – Major Barbara, St. Joan
Anton Chekhov – The Cherry Orchard, The Three Sisters
Naturalism – a slice of life
Extreme form of realism where natural and social
environment override individual willpower
Character development versus plot development
Established in France by theorist, Emile Zola
Playwrights
August Strindberg – Miss Julie
Arthur Schnitzler – La Ronde
Antirealism –
Began in Paris, 1880, by artists who saw Realism as ordinary
and mundane
Plays explore the human condition; characters are symbolic,
facing universal conflicts, and withstanding adversity
No principles or formulas for aesthetics, but some with
similar characteristics
Drama included verse, novelty, fantasy, superhuman
abilities, extravagance
The Age of “Isms”
Symbolism
Explored inner human reality not directly or literally perceived
Symbolic characters represent philosophical ideals or warring
internal forces
August Strindberg – A Dream Play (1902)
French Avant Garde
Abandoned conventions of Realism to create new theatrical
style
Alfred Jarry – Ubu Roi (1896)
Expressionism
Attacked senses with bright lights and color, abrasive sound
effects, and aggressive pace
Eugene O’Neill – The Hairy Ape (1921)
The Age of “Isms”
Theater of Cruelty
Explored the source of dreams, using cruelty, savagery,
criminality
Employed language for its sounds rather than meaning
Theater of Alienation
Use of theater to influence public issues and motivate social
action
Bertolt Brecht – The Good Person of Szechuan, The Caucasian
Chalk Circle
Theater of the Absurd
Themes based on the search for meaning or purpose in life
Samuel Beckett – Waiting for Godot, Endgame
Harold Pinter – The Birthday Party, The Homecoming
American Realism
First major theatrical form in United States
Confronted impact of social issues on normal people
Enhanced by realistic acting style developed by theater
companies
Popularized by American film industry
Playwrights
Eugene O’Neill – Beyond the Horizon, Mourning Becomes
Electra, Anna Christie
Clifford Odets – Waiting for Lefty, Awake and Sing!
Arthur Miller – Death of a Salesman, The Crucible, All My Sons
Tennessee Williams – The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named
Desire
August Wilson – Fences, The Piano Lesson, Gem of the Ocean
Postmodernism
1970’s – sexuality, profanity,
violence, used to shock audience
1980’s – focused on diversity to
raise public consciousness,
global awareness
21st Century – became a platform
to debate issues of terroism,
war, religious rights, and political
control
Theatrical styles
Experimental theatre
Dadaism
Nonlinear theater
David Auburn, Proof
Harold Pinter, Betrayal
Open Theater
Joseph Chaikin, Open Theatre Company
Diversity
Feminist theatre ensembles
Negro Ensemble Company
Color blind, and cross gender casting
Fusion theatre
Macaroni theatre
Exploration of sexual preferences – Tony Kushner, Angels in
America
Theatrical styles
Spectacular Theatre
Advances in lighting, sound and computer technology
Apparent in cinema, performance art, musicals, music
concerts
Verbatim Theatre
Moises Kaufman – The Laramie Project (2002)
My Name is Rachel Corrie (2005)
Workers’ Theatre
El Teatro Campesino, California (1965)
Free Southern Theater, Mississippi (1963)
Cornerstone Theater, California (1986)
Movement art and dance theatre
Solo performance
William Luce – The Belle of Amherst (1976)
Jay Presson Allen – Tru (1989)
Asian Theater
Developed in isolation from
Western culture
Emphasis on imagery and
symbolism, rather than realism
and literary merit
Drama includes dance, song,
chant, mime, acrobatics,
puppetry
Centered around folk history,
cultural myths, ancient religion
Drama featured multiple authors,
improvisation, and adaptations
India
Sanskrit Dance-Theater
Documented in treatise Natyasatra, detailing play
structure, stage buildings, performance, etc.
Died out in 10th century due to Mongol conquests and
fragmented culture
Kathakali – “story play”
Developed in 17th century
Based on stories from the Mahabharata
China
Shadow Plays
Xiqu – “tuneful theater”
Performers must be skilled in all: singing, speech, acting,
movement, acrobatics, martial arts
Teahouse performances
Included both humorous and serious elements
Beijing Opera
100 Words Festival
Japan
No
Ceremonial drama, retelling myths and supernatural
events
Characters include shite, waki, and chorus
Comic interlude called the kyogen
Bunraku
Developed in 6th century, using life-like puppetry
All-male puppeteers, musicians, and chanters
Three puppeteers per character, cloaked in black
Kabuki
Originated in 17th Century
Multi-act play, utilizing stylized costumes, face paint,
scenery, movement
Notable Asian Playwrights
Rabindrinath Tagore (1861 – 1941) - India
Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913 for poetry
Challenged classical sanskrit, and wrote poetic, political, and
personal works
Ts’ao Yu (1910-1996) - China
Influenced by Greek and Western drama, wrote “spoken theater”
Kuan Han Ch’ing (1241 – 1320) - China
wrote in zaju style, The Injustice of Dou E
Chikamatsu Monzaemon (1653 – 1725) – Japan
Domestic dramas, usually ended with suicide of one or both lovers