Medieval Theatre
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Transcript Medieval Theatre
Medieval Theatre
The “dark ages”
The Middle Ages were the period between
500a.d.-1000a.d.
The fall of the Roman Empire marked the
beginning of this era
Cities were abandoned and life became more
agriculturally focused
The Roman Catholic Church controlled
religion, education, and politics
Rebirth of Theatre in the
Middle Ages
The church shut down all theatrical activities
for 200-300 years, but jugglers, minstrels,
and mimes still traveled from town to town.
Theatre was (ironically) reborn in the church
in the form of liturgical dramas
In a liturgical drama, priests or members of
the choir would enact small segments of the
bible to eventually become short drama
performances
In the beginning, the liturgical dramas
were performed in Latin
Rebirth of Theatre
Later on, the liturgical dramas
expanded into longer plays based on
biblical stories and were performed in
town squares, not in churches
These later performances were called
vernacular drama because the were
performed in the everyday speech of
the people
Medieval Drama
3 types of religious plays were popular in the
Medieval Period
Mystery (cycle) Plays: dramatized biblical
events from Adam and Eve in the Old
Testament through the stories of Christ in the
New Testament
Miracle (cycle) Plays: dramatized the lives
of Saints
Morality Plays: used religious characters
and themes to teach a moral lesson
The Plays
Virtually all of the plays were short; equivalent to one
act plays today
Mystery and Miracle plays were often strung together
to form a series known as a cycle
Often times, the story was taken out of the Biblical
era and placed in present day. Also, the character
were given conventional new names.
The plays mixed comedy and drama
Pageant Wagon
Master of Secrets: In
charge of the machines
(secrets) special effects
Special effects
included: Hellmouth
(fire breathing monster
representing hell, Trap
doors, flying
Many scenes had
Heaven on the right,
Hell on the left and
Earth in the middle
Medieval Theatre Production
The plays took place across Europe including
Spain, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, and
England
Large stages were set up in the town square.
These set ups were called mansions
Another convention was the use of pageant
wagons which were rolling wagons that
contained scenery and costuming including a
backstage area and stage space.
Medieval Theatre Production
The stage accommodated any change
in scenery by standing as a universal
set or unidentified space.
This freedom of movement based on
imagination was later developed and
perfected by Renaissance Theatre in
Spain and England
The Performers
The performers were usually local trade
workers called Craft guilds.
These lay people (silversmiths, leather
workers, carpenters, etc) rehearsed
extensively and provided their own
costumes & props
The productions could be quite lengthy,
some lasted as long as 25 days.
The decline of the Middle Ages
Decline of religious theatre occurred due to
the weakening of the church as a source of
political power
The Protestant Reformation was largely
responsible for the decline of religious
material and for the movement toward
secular, or non-religious, theatre
Social structure was changing, Feudalism was
in decline
Increased interest in classical learning
The Renaissance is born!
Results of Decline
Professional actors still needed, not
amateurs
Professional theatre rose, became a
commercial venture (no longer a
community endeavor)
No longer religious plays-return to
classics (greek and roman) for new
ideas and stories