ROMAN THEATRE Brief Roman History by 345 B
ROMAN THEATRE
Brief Roman History by 345 B. C • There were over 175 festivals a year 240 B. C • The beginnings of Roman theatre recorded • The first record of drama at the ludi Romani (Roman Festival or
Brief Roman History 55 B. C • First stone theatre built in Rome by order of Julius Caesar.
Roman Theatre • Borrowed Greek ideas and improved (? ) upon them • Topics less philosophical • Entertainment tended to be grandiose, sentimental, diversionary
Roman Theatre • Included more than drama : • • acrobatics gladiators jugglers athletics chariots races naumachia (sea battles) boxing venationes (animal fights)
Roman Theatre 3 Major Influences • Greek Drama • Etruscan influences, which emphasized circus-like elements • Fabula Atellana – which introduced FARCE (Atella was near Naples).
Roman Theatre Farce • Short improvised plays, with stock characters, similar costumes and masks • based on domestic life or mythology • burlesque, parody • Most popular during the 1 st
Farce Roman Theatre • Probably was the foundation for commedia dell ‘Arte • Productions included “stock” characters: • Bucco: braggart, boisterous • Pappas: foolish old man • Dossenus: swindler, drunk, hunchback
Roman Theatre • • Serious or comic (satiric) No masks Had women Violence and sex depicted literally (Heliogabalus, ruled 218 -222 A. D. , ordered realistic sex) • Scoffed at Christianity
Roman Festivals • Held in honor of the gods, but much less religious than the Greeks • Performances at festivals probably paid for by the state. • Were often lengthy and included a series of plays or events, and probably had prizes awarded tp those who put extra money in.
Roman Festivals ludi = official religious festivals these were preceded by pompa = religious procession
Roman Festivals ludi Romani • oldest of the official festivals • held in September and honored Jupiter • regular performance of comedy and tragedy began in 364 B. C.
Roman Tragedy Characteristics of Roman Tragedy • 5 acts/episodes divided by choral odes • included elaborate speeches • interested in morality • unlike Greeks, they depicted violence on stage
Roman Tragedy Characteristics of Roman Tragedy • characters dominated by a single passion which drives them to doom (ex: obsessiveness or revenge) • developed technical devices such as: soliloquies, asides, confidants
Roman Tragedy Seneca (5 or 4 B. C. – 65 A. D. ) • only playwright of tragedy whose plays survived • Nine extant tragedies, five adapted from Euripides (Gr. ) • Though considered to be inferior, Seneca had a strong
Roman Tragedy Seneca (5 or 4 B. C. – 65 A. D. ) • Wrote. The Trojan Women, Media, Oedipus, Agamemnon, etc. , which were all based on Greek originals • His plays were probably closet dramas—never presented, or
Roman Comedy Characteristics of Roman Comedy • Chorus was abandoned • No act or scene divisions • Concerned everyday, domestic affairs • Action placed in the street
Roman Comedy Material from only 2 playwrights survived • Platus (c. 254 -184 B. C. ) • Terence (195 or 185 -159 B. C. )
Roman Comedy Platus (c. 254 -184 B. C. ) • Very popular. • Plays include: Pot of Gold, The Menaechmi, Braggart Warrior • All based on Greek New Comedies, probably, none of which has survived
Roman Comedy Platus (c. 254 -184 B. C. ) • Added Roman allusions, Latin dialog, witty jokes • varied poetic meters • Developed Slapstick & Songs
Roman Comedy Terence (195 or 185 -159 B. C. ) • Wrote only six plays, all of which survive, including: The Brothers, Mother-in-Law • More complex plots – combined stories from Greek originals.
Roman Comedy Terence (195 or 185 -159 B. C. ) • Character and double-plots were his forte • Less boisterous than Plautus, less episodic, more elegant language. • Used Greek characters. • Less popular than Plautus.
Roman Theatre Design
Roman Theatre Design • First permanent Roman theatre built 54 A. D. (100 years after the last surviving comedy)
Roman Theatre Design General Characteristics • Built on level ground with stadium-style seating (audience raised)
Roman Theatre Design General Characteristics • Stage raised to five feet • Stages were large – 20 -40 ft deep 100 -300 ft long
Roman Theatre Design General Characteristics • Theatre could seat 10 -15, 000 people • dressing rooms in side wings • stage was covered with a room
Roman Theatre Design General Characteristics • trap doors were common • cooling system – air blowing over streams of water • awning over the audience to protect them from the sun
Roman Theatre Design Scaena • “stage house” • joined with audience to form one architectura l
Roman Theatre Design Scaena frons • front/façade of the stage house • was painted and had columns, niches, porticoes, statues
Roman Theatre Design Orchestra • becomes half-circle • was probably used for gladiators and for the display and killing of wild animals • if entertainment permitted, people were sat here
Roman Theatre Design Vomitoria • corridors under the seats that lead onto the orchestra
Roman Theatre Design Pulpitum • the stage Cavea • the auditoriu m
Roman Theatre Design Other structures included: Circus Maximus Ampitheatres
Roman Theatre Design Circus Maximus • Primarily for Chariot racing • Permitted 12 chariots to race at once
Roman Theatre Design Ampitheatres • For gladiator contests, wild animal fights, and occasionally naumachia • Had space with elevators below to bring up animals, etc.
Roman Actors • Referred to as histriones, cantores (means declaimers), and mimes – later primarily histriones • Mostly male – women were in mimes
Roman Actors • Mimes were considered inferior; some believed they were slaves. • In the 1 st century B. C. , a "star" performer seems to have been emphasized
Roman Actors Style of Acting • Mostly Greek traditions – masks, doubling of roles • Tragedy – slow, stately, • Comedy—more rapid and conversational
Roman Actors Style of Acting • Movements likely enlarged • Actors probably specialized in one type of drama, but did others • Encores if favorite speeches given (no attempt at "realism")
Roman Actors Style of Acting • Mimes – no masks • Used Greek or Roman costumes • Lots of music
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