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Greek Theater

Date post: 09-Feb-2016
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Greek Theater. Sophocles. 495 BC – 405 BC (approx.) Became a prominent resident of Athens, Greece Dionysia was a large religious festival in honor of Dionysus, the god of agriculture, theatre, wine, & ecstasy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Greek Theater
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Page 1: Greek Theater

Greek Theater

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Sophocles495 BC – 405 BC (approx.)Became a prominent resident of Athens, GreeceDionysia was a large religious festival in honor of Dionysus, the god of agriculture, theatre, wine, & ecstasyIn 468 BC, he took first prize at Dionysia, defeating the reigning champion, AeschylusWrote over 120 plays, only 7 of which have withstood the test of time

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Sophocles wrote:

Oedipus RexOedipus at Colonus

Antigone

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Roots in Worship of Dionysus

God of wine and revelry

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Greek Theatre large, open areas

took advantage of hillsides to create stadium style seating

could usually seat thousands of people (Dionysia could seat approx. 17,000)

performance space was called the “orchestra”

this is where the chorus sang and danced

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Theater at Epidaurus

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Dionysus Theater in Athens

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Changed Theatre ForeverIntroduced a third actorGave dialogue a fuller sense of developmentLessened the role of the chorusDeveloped “skēnē” where the background was painted and arranged in order to create a spectacular effect

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Chorus

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Chorus

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Masks of Greek Theater

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Masks of Greek Theater

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Masks of Greek Theater

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Theatrical TermsTragedy

Developed out of ancient GreeceA drama or literary work in which the main character, or protagonist, is brought to ruin or suffers extreme sadness, especially as a consequence of a tragic flaw, moral weakness, or inability to cope with unfavorable circumstances.Deals with affairs of the state (wars, government, etc.)

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More Terms

Tragic Hero

the main character in a tragedy who makes an error in their actions that leads to their own downfall

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Characteristics of a Tragic Hero

The hero is faced with a serious decision.

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Central Character suffers a Downfall

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He Is often a king or leader

so that his people

experience his fall with him.

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HIS downfall arouses pity and

fear

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THE HERO THE HERO LEARNS LEARNS

SOMETHING SOMETHING FROM FROM

HIS/HER HIS/HER MISTAKEMISTAKE..

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Central Character is Neither Wholly good

nor wholly evil

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Downfall is the result of a Fatal

Flaw

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Misfortunes affect characters who are related or who are

friends

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Tragic actions take place offstage

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Central Character has a moment of

recognition

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He is physically or spiritually wounded by his experiences,

often resulting in His death.

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More TermsChorus

a group of 12-15 men that provided background information and commentary to help the audience understand the performanceThey modeled how the audience “should” reactThey expressed what the main characters (of which there were only 2 before Sophocles) could not say… their thoughts, feelings, etc.Usually sang, but would also speak in unison (very overdramatically to enhance volume)

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Theatrical TermsFour Types of Irony

Dramatic- audience knows something the characters don’t

Situational- when the last thing you expect to happen happens

Verbal- what is said vs. what is meant (sarcasm)

Cosmic- what the characters aspire to vs. what the cosmic forces allow https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nm-1xvWibt0

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Delphi

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Delphi

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Oracle of Delphi

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Oedipus and Sphinx

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Oedipus and Sphinx

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Riddle of the Sphinx

"Which animal has one voice, but two, three or four feet being slowest on

three?"


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