Ancient Greek Theatre
Ancient Greek Theatre
Ancient Greek Theatre
Entrance to
the Roman
Theater of
Dionysos
According to legend, late in the sixth century BCE a man named Thespis first had the idea to add speaking
actors to the performances of choral song and dance that occurred on many occasions throughout Greece.
(That is why actors are sometimes called 'thespians'.) Masked actors performed outdoors, in daylight,
before audiences of 12,000 or more at festivals in honor of Dionysus, the god of festivals.
The comedy and tragedy that developed in Athens and flourished in the fifth and fourth centuries BCE
(Before Common Era) have influenced nearly all subsequent Western drama, starting with that of the
Romans. When the Romans conquered Greece, they took Greek literature back to Italy and set about
making it their own. Most of the remains of the theater of Dionysus which we can see in Athens today date
to Roman times and not the fifth century BCE.
Ancient Greek theater normally means Greek Theater in Athens during the 5th Century BCE. These early
dramas did more that act a story. These were stylized dramas with meanings behind the obvious.
Understanding a Greek play is only possible if the symbolic significance of the actions, actors, and stage is
revealed.
Many words associated with theater have roots in Greek. Our word theater is derived from the Greek word
theatron, which contains the stem of the verb theasthai 'to view as spectators.’ Drama is a Greek word
meaning 'action', related to the verb dran 'to do'. Many dramas were presented in the theater in Athens, yet
only 43 plays have been found intact. There were, however, many plays, comedies, and commentaries left
in fragments. The theater of Dionysus that survives today holds the remains of an elaborate stone skene;
its paved orchestra and marble seats were built in the last part of the fourth century BC. This stone theater
had a capacity of approximately 15,000 spectators; the plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides were
held in the earlier wooden theaters and viewed by audiences of comparable numbers.
The Athenian theater focused on Dionysus, the god of fertility, wine, agriculture and sexuality.
Athenians had an annual fertility festival in March with one week of public wine drinking and orgies. Their
religious rite was performed as a dithyrambos, an ancient dance and chant to the fertility god, normally
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performed while drunk outside in bowl-like craters. This festival celebrated the birth of the wine god,
Dionysus and the great grapes that made the wine. This festival was performed yearly at four tribal
festivals, called an orgia. It was also called the "Festival of the Wine Jugs" and "Old Dionysia," as stated by
Cohen. The religious rites for these ceremonies were eventually written down in verse form and later
became plays.
Themes of the Ancient Greek Theater
The ancient Greek theater consisted of loud music, bright colors, and extensive dancing. Their plays
showed:
violence and daily life war lust
social and ethical plays murder betrayal
Parts of a play
An ancient Greek play consisted of three major parts. The play began with a prologue, a simple speech.
Then, there was the entrance (parodos) of the chorus. Finally, there were major episodes (notice “odes”)
which were scenes or acts of the play.
Types of Ancient Greek Plays
Comedy and Tragedy were two major types of Greek plays and the playwrights did not mix them in the
same play.
Comedy comes from the Greek word Komoidia, which means merrymaking.
Tragedy (tragoidia) was derived from the word tragos, which means goat.
Oidé means song (oide is also in komoidia = a merrymaking song).
Chorus members dressed in goatskins because the goat was sacred to Dionysius, and goats were prizes
awarded to the best drama. Later cash prizes were awarded to the winning playwrights and actors, but not
enough for the dramatists to make a living doing only theater.
Greek tragedy is an expression of man realizing that his human standards have become questionable.
In a Greek tragedy, a character finds himself always in situations of extraordinary tension and conflict; he
seems to be deprived of all outward help and is forced to rely entirely upon himself. Every tragic situation
results in severest suffering for the protagonist. This suffering – though not necessarily leading to
destruction – and death, always carries with it the serious danger of impending ruin.
Structure
Tragedy has a characteristic structure in which scenes of dialogue alternate with choral songs. This
arrangement allows the chorus to comment in its song in a general way on what has been said and/or done
in the preceding scene.
Most tragedies begin with an opening scene of expository dialogue or monologue called a prologue.
After the prologue the chorus marches into the orchestra chanting the parodos. Then follows a scene of
dialogue called an episode, which in turn is followed by the first stasimon. The alternation of episode and
stasimon continues until the last stasimon, after which there is a final scene of dialogue called an exodos
'exit' scene'. The exodos is in general a scene of dialogue, but, as in the case of episodes, sometimes
songs are included, especially in the form of a kommos.
Here is the structure of a typical tragedy (some tragedies have one more or one less episode and
stasimon):
Prologue Second Episode Fourth Episode
Parodos Second Stasimon Fourth Stasimon
First Episode Third Episode Exodos
First Stasimon Third Stasimon
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Ancient Greek Stage
The ancient Greek theater had a distinctive setup. No other theater had the same design. Originally, the
theater was made to hold religious ceremonies. There was an altar (thymeli) to the gods, a tithing house,
and a tiring house (dressing room). The tithing house and tiring house were both made of wood. As the
theater became more important, the setup began to change. The altar got smaller. The tithing house
became a treasury. The tiring house joined with the skene, the setting where actors performed. The tiring
house also became an entrance and exit.
The theater was constructed of three major parts: skene, orchestra, theatron.
Skene
The skene was originally a hut, tent, or booth; skene means “tent” and refers to a wooden wall having
doors and painted to represent a palace, temple or whatever setting was required. The wall, which
eventually became a full-fledged stage building, probably acquired this name because it replaced the
original tent. In the beginning, the skene was a palace or a temple. In time, the skene was a stone building
used as a changing room for the actors. Later, the play’s scenery was painted on the proskenion. In the
foreground is the orchestra.
Mechane
This is a mechanical device – a 'theatrical machine' or crane—to which a cable with a harness for an actor
was attached. This device allowed an actor portraying a god or goddess to arrive on scene in the most
realistic way possible, from the sky. The mechane deposited the actor on top of the skene so that he as a
deity could address the human characters from an appropriately higher level.
This device was not exclusively limited to use by divine characters, but was employed whenever the plot
required any character to fly.
One machine, the Aeorema, was a crane that enabled the gods to appear on the orchestra. Another
machine, the Periactoi, was placed inside pillars on the left and right side of the stage to change the
background of the skene. The last machine, the Ekeclema, was a platform on wheels to bring the bodies of
the dead out to show the audience.
This was necessary since murder and suicide never took place in front of the audience.
Deus Ex Machina
This means, “'the god from the machine.” Deus ex machina is often used to refer to the appearance of
gods by means of the mechane in tragedy. This phrase also refers to an improbable character or event
introduced by an author to resolve a difficult situation.
This secondary meaning of deus ex machina developed from the practice of inferior ancient dramatists
who introduced a god at the end of a play in order to untangle a badly snarled plot
Orchestra
The orchestra was the main part of the stage where the chorus was located. The word orchestra was
derived from the word orcheisthai. Literally translated, it means the dancing place. It was the place where
the chorus danced and sang.
During the harvesting season, it was used for threshing (beating wheat to remove the grain). The orchestra
was in front of the proskenion and at the center of the theater. It had the thymeli in it, which began as an
altar, but later became the place for the chorus leader, the Coryphaeus (Choragos), to stand.
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Stage
Some historians say that the stage was originally a rectangle, and then became a circle. Others say that the
stage has always been a circle. The stage was against the back wall. It was a narrow, raised platform (like a
dias). It was called the Logeion, and was designed so that the actors could be separated from the chorus.
Theatron
The theatron was the auditorium of the Greek theater. It was called theatron because of its shape. At first
spectators were sitting around the orchestra. Later, the Greeks started building the (wooden at the
beginning, from stone later) theatron. Its shape was semi-circular, built around the orchestra, and divided
in two Diazoma, the upper and the lower. (Description).
Entrances
The way the actors entered the stage also told much about what is going on. For example, in most theaters
there were normally two parodos, or entrances. If the hypocrits came in from the right parodi, then they
had just come from a city or port. If they came in from the left parodi, then they had just come from the
fields or abroad.
Outside of the Theater
The outside of the theater was made of stone. The seats were stone and carved into a hill. Unlike modern
theater, the seats weren’t setup so that the better seats were all together, and the worse seats were all
together. Instead, every Greek "tribe" sat in a different section.
The front rows, called Proedria, were reserved for the priests. The lay audiences were in the section for
their tribe.
The most honorable person in the audience would have been the priest of Elefthereos Dionyssos.
Indoor Theaters
There were indoor theaters also; they were called Odeia and used for musical performances and tragedies.
The following is an example of what the Choragos would say to set the scene:
(SCENE:--Before the royal palace of Oedipus at Thebes. In front of the large central doors there
is an altar; a smaller altar stands also near each of the two side-doors. Suppliants--old men,
youths, and young children--are seated on the steps of the altars. They are dressed in white
tunics and cloaks,--their hair bound with white fillets. On the altars they have laid down olive-
branches wreathed with fillets of wool. The PRIEST OF ZEUS, a venerable man, is alone
standing, facing the central doors of the palace. They are now thrown open. Followed by two
attendants, who place themselves on either side of the doors, Oedipus enters, in the robes of a
king. For a moment, he gazes silently on the groups at the altar, and then speaks.) (Sophocles
121)
This speech by the Choragos before a scene opens in Oedipus Rex by Sophocles shows where
people are placed at the beginning of the play and allows those in the theatron to know what is happening.
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