History of Western Theatre
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Transcript History of Western Theatre
Egyptian Roots
c.2500 bce
Ritual Enactment
Abydos Passion Play re-enacted the story
of the death and resurrection of Osiris
Greek Festivals
Festivals honored Olympian gods
Ritual Competitions
Olympics: Apollo
Athletics
Lyric Poetry
Drama: Dionysos
Dithyrambic Choruses
Tragedy
Comedy
Greek Theatre
6th - 4th century bce
Originated in festivals honoring Dionysos
Thespis (6th c. bce)
Tragedy:
Aeschylus (524-456 bce)
Sophocles (496-406 bce)
Euripides (480-406 bce)
Comedy:
Aristophanes (c. 485- c.385 bce)
Old Comedy: bawdy and satiric
New Comedy: social situations
Roman Theatre
2nd c. bce - 4th c. ce
Origins in Greek drama and Roman
festivals
Tragedy: Seneca
5 act structure
Revenge motif -- sensationalistic
Ghosts and supernatural
Comedy:Terence and Plautus
Boy meets girl, complications, boy
gets girl: marriage
Bawdy
Stock characters
Roman Spectacle
Gladiatorial combats
Naval battles in a flooded Coliseum
“Real-life” theatricals
Decadent, violent and immoral
All theatrical events banned by Church
when Rome became Christianized
Medieval Drama: 13th-15th C.
Arose from need to educate converted, illiterate
Christians about Christianity
Hrotsvita (10th c.), German nun, wrote plays
about Christian matyrs using structure based on
Terence’s Roman comedies
Liturgical drama
Mystery plays: Biblical tales
Miracle plays: Saints’ lives
Morality plays: Allegories
Italian Commedia dell’ Arte
La Commedia dell'Arte, "Artistic
Comedy,” began in the second half of
the 16th century
Based on set pieces, lazzi, that are
improvised with stock characters
A distinct group of actors gave birth to
the first nucleus of companies, and
started doing their acts on simple
stages set outdoors
The mix of popular themes, complex
stories, acrobatic jumps and mellow
love scenes made it highly influential
throughout Europe
Harlequino
Elizabethan Theatre: 16th-17th C.
Protestant Reformation closed down
religious drama
Tudor love of spectacle and patronage of
drama
Elizabethan poetry -- love of language
Influenced by Roman theatre, Renaissance
ideas, medieval stagecraft and pagan
remnants
Important theatrical period even if
Shakespeare had never lived
French Neoclassical Theatre,
17th-18th C.
Modelled theatre on Greek and Roman examples
Disdained English Elizabethan theatre’s
“messiness” and eclecticism
Neoclassical Conventions
Decorum
Verisimilitude
Universal truths
Poetic: Alexandrines
5 act structure
3 unities: time, place action
Tragedy and Comedy
Rulers/nobility
Affairs of state
Unhappy ending
Lofty poetic style
Revealed the horrible
results of mistakes and
misdeeds committed
from passion
Racine
Middle class/bourgeosie
Domestic/private affairs
Happy ending – often
deus ex machina
Ordinary speech
Ridicules behavior that
should be avoided
Moliere
German
Romantic
Theater: 18th19th C.
“Stürm und Drang”
Looked to Shakespeare for
models
Sweeping historical and
tragic dramas
Johann Goethe and
Friedrich Schiller
Began to emphasize
historical accuracy in
costumes and settings
Improved theatrical effects - footlights, revolving stages,
theatrical machinery
Theatre of
sentimentality -emotional appeal
Heroes and villains -and lily-white heroines
Wide popular appeal
Sensationalistic
Most widely performed
play of the 19th C:
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
based on Harriet
Beecher Stowe’s novel
Melodrama:
19th Century
Realism and Naturalism
19th-20th C.
Intellectual reaction against popular theatre
Theatre of social problems
Influenced by emerging disciplines of
psychology and sociology
Emerging importance of director
Realistic stage conventions:
Proscenium stage
Audience as “fourth wall”
Change in acting conventions
Continued developments in stagecraft
Realism and Naturalism
• Middle class
• Psychological
• How can the individual
live within and influence
society?
• “Well-made play”
• Henrik Ibsen,
George Bernard Shaw
• Middle and Lower classes
• Sociological
• How does society/the
environment impact
individuals?
• “Slice of life”
• August Strindberg, Anton
Chekhov, John Synge,
Sean O’Casey
20th Century Theatre:
a hundred years of isms
Symbolism
Expressionism
Futurism
Surrealism
Social Realism
Epic Theatre
Existentialism
Absurdism
Magic Realism
Hyper-Realism
Not to mention musicals,
films, street theatre, etc., etc.
And so… into the 21st Century
Anna in the Tropics by Nilo Cruz
Winner of 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Drama