“Staging of A Tragic Drama”
Much of our knowledge of Greek
theater comes from archaeological
studies and historical writings of the
time. By the 600s B.C., the Greeks were
giving choral performances of
dancing and singing at festivals. Tradegies were
performed as part of an
important yearly religious celebration. Greeks then later
staged
performances in the Theater of Dionysus.
Ancient Greek theaters were
outdoors, that seated thousands of
spectators for annual contests in acting,
choral singing, and writing comedy and
tradegy. Beyond the circle and facing
the audience was the skene, originally used
as a dressing area and later as
a background for the action. According to Webster,
pg. 326. The theater
seated about 14,000 people. It consisted of rows of
stadiumlike seats that
curved about halfway around the orchestra. The stage
house, that was facing
the audience had three doors. The action may have taken
place on a raised
platform, or perhaps entirely in the orchestra. A wide central
opening, to
which were added later two smaller side openings, a rolling platform
which
can be pushed through the central opening, a roof, and a crane.
Greek
tragedy, perhaps because it originally was associated with
religious
celebrations, was solemn, poetic, and philosophic. Nearly all the
surviving
tragedies were based on myths. The main character was an admirable,
but not
perfect, person confronted by a difficult moral choice. According to
Webster, pg. 326. Greek tragedies were performed by a few actors, never more
than three on stage at one time. The main characters struggle against forces
ended
in defeat and in most Greek tragedies, his or her death.
The
actors wore masks to indicate the nature of the characters they
played. Men
played women’s roles and the same actor appeared in several parts.
The
acting style was probably far from realistic. The poetic language and the
idealized characters suggest that Greek acting was formal. According to
Webster,
pg. 326. The dancers were men wearing a kind of jersey which held
in the
padding. Sometimes they danced with women, padded, naked or clothed.
Men
wear masks, tights, and over the tights any other clothing that suits
his part.
Greek tragedies consisted of a series of dramatic episodes
separated
by choral odes. The episodes were performed by a few actors, never
more than
three on stage at a time, during the 400s b.c. A chorus danced and
sang and
chanted the odes to musical accompaniment. According to Webster,
pg. 327. The
performances was a unique performance to please the god
Dionysos. The earliest
record of Greek drama dates from about 534 b.c. when
a contest for tragedy was
established in Athens.
Of the hundred of Greek
tragedies written, fewer than 35 survive.
All but one were written by three
dramatists, Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides.
Their plays were noted for
their lofty tone and majestic language. According to
Webster, pg. 327. Each
playwright at the City Dionysia had to present three
tragedies and then a
satry play. The actors and chorus in the tragedies appeared in
the satry
play. The satyr play used a chorus performing as satyrs, creatures that
were
half human and half animal.
In conclusion, Drama was born in ancient Greece.
Our knowledge
of Greek theaters comes from historical books but there is a
lot more that we don’t
learn. The staging of Classical Greek tragic drama
seated thousands of spectators
in acting, singing, writing both comedy and
tragedy.