Greek Drama
Greek Drama
Greek Drama
Submitted by:
Zainab Javaid
Submitted to:
Subject:
Department:-
B.S.English (Bridging)
29-10-2022
Greek Drama
Word Drama:-
The word drama comes form the Greek language means “To act or To
perform”
Main Theme:-
There were three main themes of Greek drama which were love, loss,
pride, the abuse of power and the fraught relationships between men
and gods.
History:-
Classical drama starts from the Athen City Greece. At that time there
was three types of drama that were:
Tragedy.
Comedy.
Satire play.
The comedies and tragedies were the most important and have had the
most influence on later theatre.
Comedy:-
Comedy is a progression of a action from adversity to prosperity.The
first Greek comedies, written in the 4th Century BCE, often made satirical
fun of political leaders and other well-known people, as well as Greek
organizations and institutions. As Greek theatre developed, comedic plays
came to focus on the lives of more average people, their behavior and the
awkward or silly situations they found themselves in.
The influence of Greek comedy and tragedy are such that we still
use those words to describe contemporary plays. When there is a
disastrous event that results in a loss of life, we often call it tragic.
Unfortunately, the texts of only a few of the many hundreds of plays
produced ancient Greece have survived.
Orchestra
In Ancient Greece, plays were performed in open-air theaters during the
day. At the start of the play a chorus of between 15 and 25 people came
onto the stage, called the orchestra, to introduce the story, explaining
who the characters in the story were and what had happened to them
before the time the play was about. The appearance of the chorus often
included music, dance, and song.
Different Roles:-
After the chorus’s introduction, individual actors would appear and
interact with one another and also often engaged in a dialogue with the
chorus. Besides the chorus, no more than three actors were allowed on
stage at any time. This meant that Greek actors often had to play more
than one part.
Dress:-
The actors were used to wear padded dresses. They usually wear
bodkins or they used to stand on sticks.
Mask:-
To suggest different characters actors wore masks and costumes that
they changed over the course of the play.Greek theatre masks had very
exaggerated features to convey the emotions of a character. Greek
comedy masks were often cartoon-like.The reason that Greek theatre
masks were exaggerated is that the audience sat so far from the stage that
it would be very hard for audience members to see the actors’ bare faces.
Masks allowed actors to communicate emotions to the whole audience.
Thespis:-
Greek poet Thespis, who lived in Athens in the sixth century BC, is
rumoured to have been born in the Icaria deme. Thespis is credited as
being the first actor in Greek drama, according to legend. He was known
as the father of tragedy and is credited with staging the first tragedy in
the Great (or City) Dionysia (534 BC). There is disagreement among
scholars over the meagre evidence regarding Thespis and his contribution
to the growth of Greek play. Aristotle said that tragedy was wholly choral
until Thespis introduced the prologue and the interior discourses in the
fourth century AD, according to the Greek rhetorician Themistius.
References:-
https://www.ice.cam.ac.uk/course/introduction-aeschylus-father-greek-
tragedy
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_tragedy