drama overview

65
DRAMA OVERVIEW MORE THAN ANY OTHER LITERARY FORM, DRAMA IS A VISUAL & COL- LABORATIVE MEDIUM, DESIGNED TO BE PERFORMED BY ACTORS IN FRONT OF AN AUDIENCE.

Upload: precious-jo-ann-contado

Post on 07-Dec-2014

2.048 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Drama  Overview

DRAMA OVERVIEW

MORE THAN ANY OTHER LITERARY

FORM, DRAMA IS A VISUAL & COL-

LABORATIVE MEDIUM, DESIGNED

TO BE PERFORMED BY ACTORS IN

FRONT OF AN AUDIENCE.

Page 2: Drama  Overview

DRAMA OVERVIEW

GENERALLY SPEAKING, DRAMA IS

MORE DOMINATED BY DIALOGUE

THAN ARE FICTION & POETRY.

Page 3: Drama  Overview

DRAMA OVERVIEW

A PLAY (THE COMMON TERM FOR A

DRAMATIC COMPOSITION) ALSO HAS

A NUMBER OF DISTINGUISHING

CON-VENTIONAL ELEMENTS

(DIVISION IN-TO ACTS & SCENES,

STAGE DIREC-TIONS, A LIST OF

CHARACTERS, AND OTHERS).

Page 4: Drama  Overview

ORIGINS OF DRAMA

WESTERN DRAMA ORIGINATED

IN ANCIENT GREECE. THE

WORD DRAMA ITSELF COMES

FROM THE GREEK DRAN—

MEANING TO DO, TO ACT.

Page 5: Drama  Overview

GREEK DRAMA (cont.)

FOR SEVERAL CENTURIES BEGINNING

AROUND 530 B.C.E., PLAYWRIGHTS

COMPETED DURING RELIGIOUS FES-

TIVALS RELATING TO DIONYSUS, GOD

OF WINE & FERTILITY.

Page 6: Drama  Overview

GREEK DRAMA (cont.)

PLAYS CAME TO BE PERFORMED IN

LARGE OUTDOOR

AMPHITHEATERS. (THE WORD

THEATER COMES FROM THE GREEK

WORDS FOR “SEEING PLACE.”)

Page 7: Drama  Overview
Page 8: Drama  Overview
Page 9: Drama  Overview

GREEK DRAMA (cont.)

ACTORS WORE STYLIZED

MASKS THAT SYMBOLIZED

THEIR CHARAC-TERISTICS.

Page 10: Drama  Overview
Page 11: Drama  Overview
Page 12: Drama  Overview

GREEK DRAMA (cont.)

ANOTHER CONVENTION OF GREEK

DRAMA WAS THE CHORUS, WHICH

DANCED & SANG BETWEEN SCENES

IN THE ORCHESTRA (THE ROUND

AREA AT THE FOOT OF THE

AMPHITHEA-TER).

Page 13: Drama  Overview
Page 14: Drama  Overview

GREEK DRAMA (cont.)

THE CHORUS REPRESENTED THE

VALUES OF THE COMMUNITY, AND

ITS SCENE-ENDING ODES PROVIDED

COMMENTARY ON THE PLAY AND

CLUES TO WHAT WAS TO COME.

Page 15: Drama  Overview

GREEK DRAMA (cont.)

ANOTHER CONVENTION WAS THE

DEUS EX MACHINA (“GOD FROM

THE MACHINE”)—AN ELABORATE

MECHANISM FOR LOWERING

ACTORS PLAYING THE ROLES OF

GODS ONTO THE STAGE.

Page 16: Drama  Overview

GREEK DRAMA (cont.)

THE MOST IMPORTANT GREEK PLAY-

WRIGHT WAS SOPHOCLES, AUTHOR

OF OEDIPUS REX, CONSIDERED BY

MANY TO BE THE MOST INFLUENTIAL

DRAMA EVER WRITTEN.

Page 17: Drama  Overview
Page 18: Drama  Overview

ROMAN DRAMA

THOUGH ROMAN DRAMA BASICALLY ADAPTED THE CONVENTIONS OF GREEK DRAMA, THE PLAYWRIGHT SENECA (1ST CENTURY C.E.) HAD A BIG INFLUENCE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE 5-ACT PLAY & THE REVENGE TRAGEDIES (E.G., HAMLET) OF ELIZA-BETHAN ENGLAND.

Page 19: Drama  Overview

MEDIEVAL DRAMA

DURING THE MIDDLE AGES (500-1350)

THE CLASSICAL TRADITION WAS

LOST, AND PLAYS BECAME VEHICLES

FOR RELIGIOUS EXPRESSION. THE

TWO MOST COMMON TYPES OF PLAYS

WERE MIRACLE PLAYS & MORALI-

TY PLAYS.

Page 20: Drama  Overview

MEDIEVAL DRAMA (cont.)

MIRACLE PLAYS DRAMATIZED

BIBLE STORIES OR THE LIFE &

MARTYRDOM OF A SAINT.

Page 21: Drama  Overview

MEDIEVAL DRAMA (cont.)

MORALITY PLAYS (SUCH AS THE 15TH-

CENTURY EVERYMAN) DRAMATIZED

ALLEGORIES OF THE CHRISTIAN

SOUL IN QUEST OF SALVATION &

EMPLOYED PERSONIFIED

ABSTRACTIONS SUCH AS SHAME,

LUST, MERCY, ETC. AS CHARACTERS.

Page 22: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA

AFTER ITS BIRTH IN ANCIENT GREECE,

DRAMA’S NEXT GREAT PERIOD OF

DEVELOPMENT WAS IN ENGLAND DUR-

ING THE REIGNS OF QUEEN ELIZABETH

(1558-1603) & KING JAMES I (1603-1625).

Page 23: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

EXEMPLIFIED BY THE PLAYS OF WM.

SHAKESPEARE, DEALING LARGELY

W/ THE ACTIONS, INTRIGUES, & RO-

MANCES OF KINGS, QUEENS, &

OTHER HIGHBORN CHARACTERS.

Page 24: Drama  Overview
Page 25: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

AS IN GREEK DRAMA, NO WOMEN

WERE ALLOWED ON THE STAGE.

PLAYS OFTEN BLENDED ACTION,

HUMOR, & VIOLENCE W/ POETRY

& PHILOSOPHICAL INSIGHTS.

Page 26: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

EARLY PLAYS WERE PERFORMED

IN INNYARDS & OPEN SPACES

BETWEEN BUILDINGS.

Page 27: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

THEATERS WERE CIRCULAR & ONLY

PARTLY ROOFED, WITH THE AUDI-

ENCE ON THE SIDES AS WELL AS IN

FRONT OF THE RAISED STAGE.

Page 28: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

THEATERS HELD UP TO 2500 PEOPLE

IN AN INTIMATE SETTING,

INCLUDING 500-800 GROUNDLINGS

(COMMON-ERS WHO STOOD IN THE

“PIT” AT THE FOOT OF THE STAGE).

Page 29: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

THOUGH SCENERY & PROPS WERE

LIMITED, COSTUMES & SOUND EF-

FECTS WERE QUITE ELABORATE.

Page 30: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

STAGES INCLUDED A SECOND-

LEVEL BALCONY, DOORS AT THE

BACK FOR ENTRANCES & EXITS, A

CURTAINED ALCOVE, AND A TRAP

DOOR IN THE STAGE FLOOR FOR

THE ENTRANCES & EXITS OF

SPIRITS.

Page 31: Drama  Overview
Page 32: Drama  Overview
Page 33: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

ONE CONVENTION WAS THE ASIDE:

COMMENTS DIRECTED ONLY TO

THE AUDIENCE THAT MAKE THEM

PRIVY TO A CHARACTER’S

THOUGHTS & THAT ALLOW THEM

TO PERCEIVE IRONIES & INTRIGUES

UNKNOWN TO OTHER CHARACTERS.

Page 34: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

ANOTHER CONVENTION WAS THE

SOLILOQUY (FROM THE LATIN

FOR “TALKING TO ONESELF”).

Page 35: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

A SOLILOQUY, WHICH IS NOT PART OF

THE DIALOGUE OF THE PLAY, IS A

SPEECH DELIVERED BY A LONE ACTOR

ON THE STAGE FOR THE PURPOSE OF

REVEALING HIS OR HER THOUGHTS,

MOTIVES, & INNER NATURE.

Page 36: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

PROBABLY THE MOST FAMOUS

SOLI-LOQUY IS HAMLET’S “TO BE

OR NOT TO BE” SPEECH.

Page 37: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

IN ELIZABETHAN DRAMA, THE CHOR-US OF GREEK DRAMA EVOLVED INTO A PERSON WHO SOMETIMES SPOKE THE PROLOGUE & EPILOGUE OF A PLAY, PROVIDING AUTHORIAL COM-MENTARY AS WELL AS EXPOSITION REGARDING THE SUBJECT, TIME, SET-TING, ETC. OF THE PLAY.

Page 38: Drama  Overview

ELIZABETHAN DRAMA (cont.)

SOME PLAYS HAVE WHAT IS CALLED

A CHORAL CHARACTER (E.G., THE

FOOL IN KING LEAR) WHO STANDS

APART FROM & COMMENTS ON THE

ACTION OF THE PLAY.

Page 39: Drama  Overview

MODERN DRAMA

THE MOST POPULAR FORM OF

DRAMA IN THE 19TH CENTURY,

ESPECIALLY IN THE U.S. &

ENGLAND, WAS MELO-DRAMA.

Page 40: Drama  Overview

MODERN DRAMA (cont.)

MELODRAMAS ARE LOVE STORIES &

ACTION-PACKED, INTRIGUE-FILLED

PLOTS W/ HAPPY ENDINGS & FLAT,

STEREOTYPED CHARACTERS REPRE-

SENTING EXTREMES OF GOOD & EVIL.

Page 41: Drama  Overview

MODERN DRAMA (cont.)

THE LATE 19TH & EARLY 20TH CENTU-

RIES SAW THE RISE OF REALISM,

WHICH PRESENTS THE CRISES AND

CONFLICTS OF ORDINARY PEOPLE’S

EVERYDAY LIVES (WORK, FAMILY,

RELATIONSHIPS, ETC.).

Page 42: Drama  Overview

MODERN DRAMA (cont.)

THE PICTURE-FRAME STAGE BECAME

THE NORM, OFTEN REPRODUCING

SETTINGS IN REALISTIC DETAIL.

SCENERY & PROPS ARE IMPORTANT.

Page 43: Drama  Overview

MODERN DRAMA (cont.)

FOUR-ACT PLAYS BECAME THE

NORM, AND CONVENTIONS SUCH AS

ASIDES & SOLILOQUIES FELL INTO

DISUSE.

Page 44: Drama  Overview

MODERN DRAMA (cont.)

THE 20TH CENTURY ALSO SAW THE

RISE OF THE THEATER OF THE

AB-SURD, W/ ITS SEEMINGLY

UNINTELL-IGIBLE PLOTS &

IRRATIONAL BEHAV-IOR.

Page 45: Drama  Overview

MODERN DRAMA (cont.)

IN WAITING FOR GODOT, FOR IN-STANCE, TWO TRAMPS AMUSE THEM-SELVES W/ AIMLESS CONVERSATION & MEANINGLESS ACTIVITY WHILE WAITING IN A WASTE PLACE FOR A PERSON NAMED GODOT WHO NEVER COMES (AND WHO MAY OR MAY NOT EXIST).

Page 46: Drama  Overview

MAJOR TYPES OF DRAMA

TRAGEDY FOCUSES ON LIFE’S SOR-

ROWS & DIFFICULTIES, RECOUNTING

A SERIES OF IMPORTANT EVENTS IN

THE LIFE OF A SIGNIFICANT PERSON,

TREATED W/ SERIOUSNESS & DIGNI-

TY, AND CULMINATING IN AN

UNHAP-PY CATASTROPHE.

Page 47: Drama  Overview

TRAGEDY (cont.)

THE BASIC STRUCTURE & PURPOSE

OF TRAGEDY WERE FIRST DEFINED

IN ARISTOTLE’S POETICS.

Page 48: Drama  Overview

TRAGEDY (cont.)

ACCORDING TO ARISTOTLE, A TRAG-

IC HERO IS A GREAT MAN OR WO-

MAN WHO SUFFERS A REVERSAL OF

FORTUNE (LIKE OEDIPUS IN

OEDIPUS REX) B/C OF A WEAKNESS,

ERROR IN JUDGMENT, OR ACCIDENT.

Page 49: Drama  Overview

TRAGEDY (cont.)

ARISTOTLE CALLED THIS ERROR ETC.

HAMARTIA, WHICH DURING THE

RENAISSANCE EVOLVED INTO THE

CONCEPT OF THE TRAGIC FLAW.

Page 50: Drama  Overview

TRAGEDY (cont.)

ARISTOTLE ALSO SAID THAT WATCH-

ING THE HERO’S DOWNFALL (THE

CATASTROPHE) AND SEEING THE

DRAMA’S RESOLUTION (RESTORA-

TION OF ORDER), . . .

Page 51: Drama  Overview

TRAGEDY (cont.)

. . . THE AUDIENCE EXPERIENCES

A CATHARSIS—I.E., RELIEF FROM

THE TENSIONS OF THE PLAY (A

PURGING OF “PITY AND FEAR”)

AND A SENSE OF HAVING GAINED

INSIGHT, ENLIGHT-ENMENT.

Page 52: Drama  Overview

TRAGEDY (cont.)

TRAGIC HEROES AROUSE PITY B/C

THEY ARE NOT EVIL & B/C THEIR

MIS-FORTUNE EXCEEDS WHAT THEY

DE-SERVE; THEY AROUSE FEAR B/C

THE AUDIENCE RECOGNIZES

THEMSELVES IN THE HERO & THE

POSSIBILITY OF A SIMILAR FATE.

Page 53: Drama  Overview

TRAGEDY (cont.)

PLAYS FROM ELIZABETHAN TO MOD-

ERN TIMES HAVE DEVIATED GREATLY

FROM THE ARISTOTELIAN NORM. FOR

EXAMPLE, SOMETIMES THE HERO IS

NOT A GOOD PERSON (MACBETH).

Page 54: Drama  Overview

TRAGEDY (cont.)

ALSO, AFTER THE 18TH CENTURY,

TRAG-IC HEROES BEGAN TO BE DRAWN

FROM THE MIDDLE & LOWER CLASSES

IN WHAT ARE CALLED DOMESTIC

TRAG-EDIES, THUS LAYING THE

FOUNDA-TION FOR MODERN DRAMAS

LIKE DEATH OF A SALESMAN.

Page 55: Drama  Overview

TRAGEDY (cont.)

COMIC RELIEF WAS ALSO INTRO-

DUCED INTO TRAGEDIES, AND THE

GENRE OF TRAGICOMEDY

(ESSENTIAL-LY A TRAGEDY W/ A

HAPPY ENDING) EVOLVED.

Page 56: Drama  Overview

TRAGEDY (cont.)

SINCE MODERN TRAGEDIES DO NOT

ALWAYS FOLLOW THE CONVENTIONS

OF CLASSICAL TRAGEDY, SOME CRIT-

ICS ARGUE THAT THEY ARE NOT TRUE

TRAGEDIES & THAT THEIR PROTAGO-

NISTS NOT TRAGIC HEROES.

Page 57: Drama  Overview

COMEDY

A COMEDY IS A PLAY OF A LIGHT,

AMUSING NATURE IN WHICH

CHAR-ACTERS OVERCOME

ADVERSITY TO ACHIEVE SUCCESS

& A HAPPY END-ING, OFTEN IN

THE FORM OF MAR-RIAGE.

Page 58: Drama  Overview

COMEDY (cont.)

PROBLEMS ARE EITHER NOT VERY

SERIOUS OR ARE TREATED IN A

LIGHT-HEARTED MANNER,

CONVEY-ING THE SENSE THAT NO

GREAT DIS-ASTER WILL BEFALL

THE CHARAC-TERS.

Page 59: Drama  Overview

COMEDY (cont.)

THE DISTINCTION IS OFTEN MADE

BE-TWEEN LOW COMEDY (WHICH

IS CRUDE, PHYSICAL, EVEN

VIOLENT) & HIGH COMEDY

(WHICH IS MORE THOUGHTFUL &

INTELLECTUAL IN ITS APPEAL).

Page 60: Drama  Overview

COMEDY (cont.)

IN ROMANTIC COMEDY, LOVERS

MUST ENDURE HUMOROUS TRIALS

& TRIBULATIONS EN ROUTE TO A

LIFE OF HAPPILY EVER AFTER (A

MID-SUMMER’S MIGHT DREAM,

SLEEP-LESS IN SEATTLE).

Page 61: Drama  Overview

COMEDY (cont.)

A COMEDY OF MANNERS IS A SAT-

IRICAL PORTRAYAL OF THE CONVEN-

TIONS & MANNERS OF A SOCIETY,

USUALLY THE DOMINANT ONE AT

THE TIME A PLAY IS WRITTEN.

Page 62: Drama  Overview

COMEDY (cont.)

THE COMEDY OF MANNERS

DELIGHTS IN THE FAULTS & FOIBLES

OF HUMAN-ITY, BUT AT THE SAME

TIME IS MORE REALISTIC & CRITICAL

THAN ROMAN-TIC COMEDY.

Page 63: Drama  Overview

COMEDY (cont.)

THE COMEDY OF MANNERS WAS

HIGH-LY DEVELOPED IN THE LATE

17TH CEN-TURY IN WITTY PLAYS

THAT EXPOSED THE HYPOCRITICAL

CONVENTIONS & RIDICULOUS

ARTIFICIALITIES OF HIGH SOCIETY.

Page 64: Drama  Overview

COMEDY (cont.)

THE COMEDY OF MANNERS

EVOLVED INTO SATIRIC COMEDY,

WHICH RIDICULES THE VAIN &

FOOLISH, TREATING THEM W/

SARCASM & MAKING THEM SEEM

LUDICROUS & REPULSIVE.

Page 65: Drama  Overview

COMEDY (cont.)

ANOTHER POPULAR FORM OF COM-

EDY IS FARCE, WHICH PRESENTS

EXAGGERATED CHARACTER TYPES

IN IMPROBABLE OR LUDICROUS

SITUA-TIONS, AND EMPLOYS SEXUAL

MIX-UPS, BROAD VERBAL HUMOR, &

A LOT OF ANTIC PHYSICAL ACTIVITY.