26 June 2013

Ancient Greek Places of Performance, Design Elements and Actors



So much for the Greek dramatists. THEATRE history, however, includes many other matters, as I noted above. The practical side is as important as the literary – how and where the plays were presented, who played the roles, what kinds of costumes they wore, and of course much more.

We have already been introduced to the City Dionysia, the festival held in the city of Athens in early spring that celebrated/appeased Dionysos.  This was not the only festival to Dionysos, and not the only festival to feature drama, but it’s by far the most important, so we’ll focus on it in our survey.  Each spring Athens opened its doors to the whole Greek world in this civic and religious week-long festival.  While different scholars offer various theories on the order, here’s how it might have gone:

1. proagon: before the festival the writers announced the subjects of their plays

2. parade: on the first day, Dionysos's entry into Athens was celebrated with a procession of public officials, producers, actors, featuring gifts and sacrifices to the god

3. on the second day, ten choruses (one for each tribe of Attica) competed in a dithyramb contest

4. days three to five were devoted to tragedy -- each day one poet presented three tragedies and one satyr play.

5. after 487 BC a comedy contest was added -- five different playwrights presented one play each.

6. on the final day prizes and punishments were given out, and there was a celebration to close the festival.

That’s a conjectural look at the City Dionysia, approximately one week in early spring set aside to worship an important god; a week in which political, religious, cultural and social forces fused into a fundamental community experience -- through THEATRE.  How important and central this festival was to the community!  Compare, in your own minds, how central theatre is to the community, any community, today.

The festival was run by the state and financed partly by the state, partly by wealthy individuals.  Here, in a nutshell, is how it worked:  One month after the end of the festival, authors submitted scripts for the next year’s contest to the archon, the principle civil magistrate of Athens, and overall head of the festival.  The archon chose the contestants and then appointed a choregos for each writer -- a wealthy citizen who would bear the expenses of the chorus, rehearsals, costumes, etc.  The state kept up the theatre, paid the actors, and paid for the prizes.

The Parthenon is partially seen, in the upper left of my photo.
What's left of the theatre is behind the trees and spreads
up the hill toward the Acropolis

The plays were performed in a space below the Acropolis, called, appropriately enough, the Theatre of Dionysos. Some of it exists down to the present, but the stone theatre you see there today (what remains of it) was built a century after the great tragic writers lived. So what did the theatres look like? 

The best preserved ancient Greek theatre
An important question to be asked. By looking at the shapes of theatres in different eras of theatre theatre history, you can grasp a visual history of theatre, because just as actors reflect their age (holding a mirror as ‘twere up to nature), so do the theatres built in any given age offer information on the building itself, but more importantly, what the authorities, artists, audiences wanted theatre to do, to say, to represent. 

Again, what did a fifth century BC Greek theatre look like?

Well, we aren’t completely sure, though they were much less
massive and magnificent than those whose remains still exist. 
We know the major elements of these theatres:  the most important was an orkestra, or dancing place – a large circle.  The orkestra surrounded an altar, or thymele.  Surrounding ¾ of the orkestra circle, up a rounded hillside, was a theatron, or seeing place, from which the audience viewed the plays.  Behind the orkestra there sat some sort of scene house or skene, in which the actors changed masks and costumes, and perhaps on which some of the action was carried out.  The spaces between the two sides of the skene and the theatron were called paradoi, from which the chorus entered the orkestra.
After the fifth century, in the era of huge stone theatres,
a parados (two paradoi) was constructed using pillars
such as those in the upper left of this photo
Was there a stage in fifth century BC Athens?  Scholars are divided -- logeion, the Greek word for stage, did not exist in the fifth century, but there are indications in some of the plays that a raised place might be used.  Read this quote and see if you can get a clue: 

    The gods it is I ask to release me from this watch
    A year’s length now, spending my nights like a dog,
    Watching on my elbow on the roof of the sons of Atreus...
                                             Agamemnon, tr Louis MacNiece

The watchman is “on the roof” -- or is he? Did the Greek audience need to see literally, realistically, where the watchman was? Or was the text enough? The skene could have been used, or perhaps there were steps leading to it, or possibly a platform (up to 4’ high) was erected for certain plays, but we live in an age of realism. But in Elizabethan theatre for example, when in Macbeth Duncan walks onstage and says, “This castle hath a pleasant seat” he isn’t indicating a setpiece. On the bare platform stage he’s letting the audience know the location of the scene, a device often called “spoken décor.” Similarly, when Hamlet enters and say “’Tis now the very witching hour of night” he is telling the audience the time of day. I’m willing to bet that that’s how Greek theatre was played. We’ll probably never know for certain, but most of the acting, and certainly all of the choral elements in the plays were accomplished in the orkestra.

We know of two staging devices in the fifth century BC.  One was called an ekkyklema, a device for revealing tableau, probably a
platform pushed out through a doorway in the skene.  The mechane, or crane, was used to show characters flying or above the earth -- the crane was probably situated so that the actor could be attached behind the skene (out of sight) and swung out over the acting area. “Mechane” in Greek translates to “machina” in Latin and is the device that Euripides used to end some of his plays: “deus ex machina” (god from the mechane, or machina or crane).

The major questions about staging in this era can be answered only conjecturally, but as we’ll see in every era before the mid-nineteenth century, conjecture runs rampant in theatre history.  For example, Aristotle says Sophocles invented scene painting -- Vitruvius (writing in ancient Rome a good bit later) credits a man named Agatharcus working with Aeschylus, who painted scenes for him from which the philosophers Democritus and Anaxagoras based their doctrine of linear perspective; it’s easy to reconcile this, as both writers worked in the same period and Agatharcus very likely worked with both of them on scene painting, or skenographia

But what exactly was painted and where did was it put? We have evidence of painted panels called pinakes in fifth century BC theatre. These ancestors of flats could be placed on the front wall of the skene.  How literally scenes that were painted on the pinakes depicted a given place is a question to be asked, but perhaps never to be answered.   At the end of Prometheus Bound an earthquake is called for – as this painted on pinakes? or do the lines in the play (“spoken decor”) convey the image?   There’s no evidence of when or if pinakes were changed...between plays, perhaps?  In later years an advanced sort of pinakes system was used, called periaktoi. These too are still used today, and in fact are still called by that name.  Periaktoi are three sided triangles with a different scene painted on each side.  Presumably they could be turned to show a new background for each of the three tragic plays presented on a given day in the festival.  Periaktoi were used in twos, one on each side...but of what?  on the skene? in the orkestra?  In any case, there’s no evidence for periaktoi until after the fifth century BC.

As noted above, the Theatre of Dionysos was not given its permanent stone form until 325 BC, 100 years after the big three Athenian tragedians wrote, and well after the Golden Age had ended.  After this time all theatres began to be built of stone, usually on the foundations of older theatres, and were even larger than fifth century BC theatres.  The stone theatres are usually
called Hellenistic, because they were built in that era, which begins with the reign of Alexander the Great, 336 BC, and runs until approximately 150 BC.  In Hellenistic theatres less emphasis is placed on the orkestra circle, which is cut to a ¾ semi-circle, and the main acting area is transferred to a stage (logeion), which was raised from 8-13 feet high.  It was a long thin platform on two levels.  The logeion was supported by a wall called the proskenion (sound familiar?). The rear of the logeion was supported by a wall called the episkenion.  Both walls were divided into several areas called thyromata, into which could be slipped the flat-like pinakes or in front of which could be placed the triangular periaktoi.

As for performance of Greek drama, in the fifth century BC there was no official “director” (nor would there be until the nineteenth century).  The author supervised the production, and usually acted in his own plays. There was a three-actor limit, and to create evenly talented casts the actors were assigned by the archon. 
All actors wore masks (made of linen or cork and which covered the entire head), the same actor played more than one role, and all actors in the official festivals were men.  Costumes remain conjectural... were they standardized and plain, or colorful and unique?  There is little evidence to support either choice. After the fifth century more plays were played at more festivals and a group of professional actors gradually developed -- to the point where, in 277 BC, they formed a union, “the artists of Dionysos.”


The chorus, as we have already seen, was dominant in early 
NYSF = New York Shakespeare Festival
held annually in Central Park
tragedies, but was gradually supplanted by individual actors. In the first tragedies there may have been huge 50-member choruses, but by the writing of Oedipus Rex they numbered between 12-15.  In comedy the chorus numbered 24. The chorus helped set the mood of the play, acted at times as a character, often offered a social or ethical framework -- retarding the action so the audience could reflect on it -- and very importantly the chorus provided a rhythmic function through movement and danced spectacle. The chorus too wore masks.

Music and dance were integral to the action, and provided ethical qualities as well as music or visual effects.  The kind of dance the chorus performed commented on the action.  Musical instruments were the lyre and the flute -- the flutist preceded the chorus into the playing space. Occasionally percussion was used for emphasis.

During the Hellenistic period, as actors became more professional, they also began to acquire a bad reputaion.  Aristotle asked, “Why are actors so disreputable…?” Perhaps this is merely a sign of the decadence that accompanies the decline of any culture, and by this time Greek culture was definitely on the way down.  Mime troupes were said to proliferate in these late years of ancient Greek culture. 

Earlier I mentioned the mimes. This is not Marcel Marceau.  The term mime refers to groups of itinerant players (which included women, the only such form in which they were allowed to perform) and to the kinds of playlets they performed: short, often risqué (note the attached phallus on the male characters), satirical treatments of everyday situations, or burlesques of mythology. 
 These troupes had traveled the countryside since the earliest days of the Greek city-states, singing and playing for their suppers. In southern Italy they were called phlyakes, which term refers in adjectival form (phlyax) to the performers and stages as well, and these are particularly important because some of their activities were painted on vases that we still have today. Next time you’re in Manhattan go to the Metropolitan Museum of Art and take a look at the Greek and Roman rooms – you’ll see a quite a few.  On these vases we see possible costumes and the crude platform stages the mimes probably performed on. How accurate are they?
Scholars disagree, some arguing that they are offer proof of what the stages looked like, others stating that they well be artistic choices on the part of the vase painters, and had little to do with actual stages. At the Met and other museums there are also several small sculpted figures of the comic actors – major evidence for this form of drama – but controversial in regard to what dramatic genre the actors depicted in the images actually played in.  One point about which there is little controversy: it was in southern Italy that the Romans first encountered Greek culture, and then quickly consumed it!

Next stop...Rome!





3 comments:

  1. Hey Jack, great as always. I'm working in Canada this week at the National Arts Center and there is a sign backstage explaining where the term greenroom comes from and a couple other term like limelight etc. DO you want me to send you a pic?

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    Replies
    1. Brandon, love to see a pic or two, sounds fascinating! Sounds like you're having a GREAT nat'l (somewhat internat'l) tour!

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  2. the ancient Greek places for performance has been described perfectly in this blog and you can easily understand the Sacred placed in Greece with the help of this blog, this kind of blogs are very useful for the travelers who are not very much aware of the places to visit

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