РефератыИностранный языкAnAncient Greek Roman And Elizabethan Theatres Essay

Ancient Greek Roman And Elizabethan Theatres Essay

, Research Paper


Of the many types of entertainment and past times we have today, theatre is still one


of the most loved. For this we have to thank the very earliest forms of ancient Greek


and Roman theatre. These ancient time plays were staged often in honor of a god and


have paved the way for theatre as we know today. A particular aspect that has had a


remarkable effect on the way theatre has evolved is the architecture of ancient


theatres. The architecture of ancient Greek and Roman theatres have had a


remarkable effect on future theatre designs including the architecture of the great


Elizabethan theatres.


The Elizabethan time period in England was ever so popular and well accepted that


specialised theatres were having to be built to cope with the large audiences. Before


this plays were being held in grape cellars and old farm houses, and so were not able


to provide a large enough venue or provide the larger than life atmosphere play


houses needed. By the time Elizabethan theatre was in the British mainstream the


plays were being held in two types of theatre, the public and private.


The public Elizabethan theatres were much larger than the private ones and were the


preferred theatre of Shakespeare and other great playwrites to stage a production.


The first such theatre was built by James Burbage in 1576 and was called simply the


theatre. Soon after other public theatres were built, including Shakespeare?s own The


Globe which was built in 1599. They could appear round, square or many sided and


where built surrounding a central courtyard. Performances were only during daylight


because there was no artificial lighting, even though many plays had night scenes. In


most theatres it consisted of three levels of viewing galleries and stood about 10


metres high. As well as being viewer platforms the part of the upper two galleries


that went behind the stage were used as a balcony to give the play vertical action as


well as horizontal. The courtyard, called the pit, measured about 17 metres in


diameter. Those wishing to watch the show from the pit could do so for a minimal


amount of money. People viewing a play in the pit surrounded the stage from three


sides, thus giving the audience a sense of being right in the action. For those that


were willing to pay a bit more there were the galleries with seats. But although these


galleries provided a seat to sit on they also stank of urine and sweat since there were


no toilets and people those days didn?t bath much. These rather large theatres could


hold as much as 5600 people and were generally the choice of theatre for poorer


people, but built around an attractive courtyard with an open roof these theatres were


far from something shabby intended for lower class citizens. Proof that the public


theatre was not a cheap alternative for poorer people is the fact that Shakespeare and


other well known play writers wrote almost all their plays specifically for the public


theatres and often despised performing a play in the smaller rich persons private


theatre.


The Private Elizabethan theatres charged higher admission prices and were designed


to attract upper class citizens. Although these theatres were often owned by royalty


and attracted rather rich people to view plays they quickly went out of fashion and


eventually ceased to excist because Shakespeare wrote all his plays for public


theatres. Because of the unpopularity of these theatres not much is known about their


architecture except that they were small, had little equipment or basic machinery to


assist behind the scenes work and had artificial lighting in the form of petrol lanterns.


In typical Ancient Greek tradition, where grander and bigger was better the


architecture of ancient Greek theatres truly were traditional, in that they were huge


and grand. During the time that drama competitions were beginning to take place in


ancient Greece

large ampitheatres were needed to be built in order to keep up with


the massive popularity of such drama competitions. Three major theatres were


constructed, notably the theatre at Delphi, the Attic Theatre and the Theatre of


Dionysus in Athens. The Theatre of Dionysus, built at the foot of the Acropolis in


Athens, could seat 17,000 people and during their heyday, the competitions drew as


many as 30,000 spectators. It was common for these large audiences to be noisy,


lively, emotional and unrestrained. They hissed, applauded, cheered and sometimes


broke out into a riot if they were unhappy with a play. These huge open air theatres


were always built where a steep hill met flat ground so that the tiers of seating could


be on the hill and the stage on the flat. The stage and stage wall were elaborate


structures made of wood and sandstone that provided a large set for actors to move


and dance in. Although scenic sets weren?t created and no props were used to


indicate a particular setting there was one permanent structure on the stage that


represented a temple and served as the door through which actors entered the stage.


There was no curtain and the play was presented as a whole with no act or scene


divisions.


Dionysus the wine god of which Greek tragedy originated to worship was at the


centre of every play around the time of the great tragedy era and so was included in


the architecture of ancient Greek theatres. At every theatre in ancient Greece there


was a statue of Dionysus the god of wine and tragedy at the centre of the stage. It was


common for a temple of Dionysus to be adjoined to the theatre and a procession


would occur from the temple to the stage of the theatre in honor of the god. This god


of Greek tragedy and wine was paid homage to during plays by actors acting out a


human sacrifice at the altar on stage.


The architecture of ancient Roman theatres were typically Italian in that they were


large, elaborately decorated and extremely tasteful to an artistic eye. The theatres of


the Roman world were quite different from those in Greece. They were built on flat


ground, not a hillside, with a large round surrounding wall of masonry that was well


decorated with pictures of gods and battle scenes. The focal point of the Roman


theatre was the high stage, with an elaborately decorated stage wall two stories high.


Seating started at the front of the stage and went back to a standing area were people


could stand and watch for free. It can be concluded from the many paintings on walls


and stage curtains that many plays of the time were based on the adventures of Zeus


and Hercules.


As the popularity of Roman theatre began to rise so did the number of Roman


theatres being built around Italy and the World. Roman theatres had been built all


over Italy, in Spain, France and North Africa. The overly garnished theatres included


a curtain which disappeared into a trough at the front of the stage, vividly painted


inner walls and a amazingly decorated stage wall. Spectators could indulge under the


shade of an awning while eating fruit that was sold at the theatre and if hot enough go


for a shower in perfumed water. The plays witnessed in these truly majestic


playhouses could not be compared with those seen in the simpler less visually


appealing theatres of the ancient Greek kind.


Technology has become one of mans best friends and for all the reasons in the world.


It has affected us in ways that make our life easier, more enjoyable and more


bareable. There isn?t anything on this earth that has remained unaffected by it. And


no exception is the modern theatre as we know it today which has undergone changes


through various technology advances since ancient Greek and Roman times. In


particular the architecture of ancient Greek, Roman and Elizabethan theatres have


paved the way for the modern theatre buildings we have become to enjoy today.

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