Thursday, April 23, 2020
Theater And Drama In Ancient Greece Took Form In About 5th Essays
  Theater and drama in Ancient Greece took form in about 5th  century BCE, with the Sopocles, the great writer of tragedy. In his  plays and those of the same genre, heroes and the ideals of life were  depicted and glorified. It was believed that man should live for  honor and fame, his action was courageous and glorious and his life  would climax in a great and noble death.    Originally, the heros recognition was created by selfish  behaviors and little thought of service to others. As the Greeks grew  toward city-states and colonization, it became the destiny and  ambition of the hero to gain honor by serving his city. The second  major characteristic of the early Greek world was the supernatural.    The two worlds were not separate, as the gods lived in the same world  as the men, and they interfered in the mens lives as they chose to.    It was the gods who sent suffering and evil to men. In the plays of    Sophocles, the gods brought about the heros downfall because of a  tragic flaw in the character of the hero.    In Greek tragedy, suffering brought knowledge of worldly  matters and of the individual. Aristotle attempted to explain how an  audience could observe tragic events and still have a pleasurable  experience. Aristotle, by searching the works of writers of Greek  tragedy, Aeschulus, Euripides and Sophocles (whose Oedipus Rex he  considered the finest of all Greek tragedies), arrived at his  definition of tragedy. This explanation has a profound influence for  more than twenty centuries on those writing tragedies, most  significantly Shakespeare. Aristotles analysis of tragedy began with  a description of the effect such a work had on the audience as a  catharsis or purging of the emotions. He decided that catharsis was  the purging of two specific emotions, pity and fear. The hero has  made a mistake due to ignorance, not because of wickedness or  corruption. Aristotle used the word hamartia, which is the tragic  flaw or offense committed in ignorance. For example, Oedipus is  ignorant of his true parentage when he commits his fatal deed.    Oedipus Rex is one of the stories in a three-part myth called  the Thebian cycle. The structure of most all Greek tragedies is  similar to Oedipus Rex. Such plays are divided in to five parts, the  prologue or introduction, the prados or entrance of the chorus, four  episode or acts separates from one another by stasimons or choral  odes, and exodos, the action after the last stasimon. These odes are  lyric poetry, lines chanted or sung as the chorus moved rhythmically  across the orchestra. The lines that accompanied the movement of the  chorus in one direction were called strophe, the return movement was  accompanied by lines called antistrophe. The choral ode might  contain more than one strophe or antistrophe.    Greek tragedy originated in honor of the god of wine,    Dionysus, the patron god of tragedy. The performance took place in an  open-air theater. The word tragedy is derived from the term  tragedia or goat-song, named for the goat skins the chorus wore in  the performance. The plots came from legends of the Heroic Age.    Tragedy grew from a choral lyric, as Aristotle said, tragedy is  largely based on lifes pity and splendor.    Plays were performed at dramatic festivals, the two main ones  being the Feast of the Winepress in January and the City Dionysia at  the end of March. The Proceeding began with the procession of choruses  and actors of the three competing poets. A herald then announced the  poets names and the titles of their plays. On this day it was likely  that the image of Dionysus was taken in a procession from his temple  beside the theater to a point near the road he had once taken to reach    Athens from the north, then it was brought back by torch light, amid a  carnival celebration, to the theater itself, where his priest occupied  the central seat of honor during the performances. On the first day of  the festival there were contests between the choruses, five of men and  five of boys. Each chorus consisted of fifty men or boys. On the next  three days, a tragic tetralogy (group made up of four pieces, a  trilogy followed by a satyric drama) was performed each morning. This  is compared to the Elizabethan habit of following a tragedy with a  jig. During the Peloponnesian Wars, this was followed by a comedy each  afternoon.    The Father of the drama was Thesis of Athens, 535 BC, who  created the first actor. The actor performed in intervals between the  dancing of the chorus and conversing at times with    
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