Theatre History - Johnson County Schools
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Transcript Theatre History - Johnson County Schools
Theatre History
A Study Guide
Greek Drama
Thespis was first actor
Created to honor
Dionysus
Dithyrambs: choral
chants and songs
Greek (cont.)
Aeschylus: The Seven
Against Thebes
Sophocles: Antigone,
Oedipus the King
Euripides: Medea
Greek (cont.)
Elaborate masks that
amplified voices
Cothurnii: tall boots that
made actors larger than
life
Greek (cont.)
Drama was a form of
worship
Used to represent
large moral concepts
and ideals
English Medieval
Originated in the Church
Was a way to present the
Bible to the non-Latin
speaking public
English Medieval
Saint plays—lives of saints
Mystery plays—Bible
stories
Morality plays—depicted
broad Moral concepts
Medieval (cont.)
Performed on platform stages
adjacent to the church or on
the town square.
Used movable stages called
pageant wagons
Medieval (cont.)
Costuming was simple
Only surviving Morality
play--Everyman
Italian Renaissance
Opera arose from a desire to return to
the choral styles of the Greek
Main focus was the commedia
dell’arte
first comedic drama
Used stock characters
Most famous stock character:
Renaissance (cont)
Mime was popular
Masks were painted directly
onto the face
Italian Renaissance became the
foundation for Western Drama
to the present
Elizabethan
Theaters were round, with tiers of
seats.
The poorest people stood on the
ground in front of the stage (called
groundlings)
Most famous theatre: Globe
Considered “Golden Era” of Theatre
Elizabethan (cont.)
Moliere—French playwright; wrote
farces
Christopher Marlowe—contemporary of
Shakespeare; wrote Doctor Faustus and
Tambourlaine the Great
William Shakespeare—considered
greatest playwright of all time; wrote
Hamlet, Julius Ceasar, A Midsummer
Night’s Dream, Romeo and Juliet
th
19
Century
Plays enjoyed long runs
New lighting technology allows
night performances
Elaborate and accurate sets,
costumes, and props
Trapdoors and hydraulic lifts
create special effects
th
19
Cent. (cont.)
Many plays were melodramas—
heavy on plot; light on character
development
Oscar Wilde—The Importance of
Being Earnest
Henrik Ibsen—A Doll’s House
Gilbert and Sullivan—wrote comic
operettas; The Pirates of Penzance
th
20
Century
Many new innovations
Theatre of the Absurd: drama that
explored the human psyche in strange,
abstract ways
Musical Theatre: most popular form of
theatre in this century
Rodgers and Hammerstein innovated
the modern musical with Oklahoma!
th
20
Cent. (cont.)
Film, a new form of drama, arose.
Film is now the most commonly
watched dramatic art.
First film with sound—The Jazz
Singer
Walt Disney—pioneer in
animation; Snow White and the