Term
|
Definition
- great popular theatre of the time
- scenarios: improvised presentations, with an outline
- women onstage & head of troupes
|
|
|
Term
Four Theatrical innovations of the Italian Renaissance |
|
Definition
-Acting (Commedia Dell'Arte)
-Dramatic Criticism
-theatre architecture
-scene design |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- women: oral culture
- improvements with improvisation
- managers of troupes/actors/writers
- educated women
- switch from courtesan to theatre performance
- improv difficult to censor
|
|
|
Term
Italian Renaissance Innovations |
|
Definition
- Politics: Kings, no church domination, Machiavelli
- Economics: trade,merchant, leisure time,Patronage system
- Visual Art:realistic,religous people now shown secular
- Literature:Humanism,Dante, Gutenberg's Press
- Exploration:world exploration, New World
- Science:Galileo, Copernicus,Keplar,telescope
|
|
|
Term
Patoral Comedies
(Itallian Renaissance) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Opera
(Itallian Renaissance) |
|
Definition
- beginning of Opera
- only performance art that survived in its form today
|
|
|
Term
Dottore
(Stock Character, Itallian Renaissance) |
|
Definition
doctor, educated character |
|
|
Term
Capitano
(Stock Character, Itallian Renaissance) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Zanni
(Stock Character, Itaillan Renaissance) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
lazzi's make up this form of comedy |
|
|
Term
Influences of Comedia Dell'Arte |
|
Definition
- stock characters further defined by future playwrights
- Moliere
- San Francisco Mime Troupe
- Bill Irwin and David Shiner: Full Moon
- 20th century Classic Hollywood
- marx brothers
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- oldest surviving
- Andre Palladio
- mini indoor theatre
- 3,000
- benches connected to skene
- raised stage
- achieved depth
|
|
|
Term
Theatre at Sabbioneta
[image] |
|
Definition
- 250 seats
- smaller more intimate
- single unit
- step towards the procenium stage
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- architect Giovan Battista Aleotti
- court and academic theatre
- semicircular orchestra for seats or scenes
- Proscenium arch that was permanent
- move towards realism
|
|
|
Term
Audience seating in Italian and English Renaissance |
|
Definition
- Revolutionized in Opera houses in Venice
- Pit
- Box
- built into walls,private seats, upper class
- Gallery
- upper boxes,tiers,least expensive, benches
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- architect, painter, designer
- visual realism
- tragic, comic and Patoral designs
- angled wings
- Raked Stage
- create thunder and lightning
- color lights
- create moble heavenly bodies
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- elaborate designs for the stage
- Pole and Chariot system
- cut out flats
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Dramatic Criticism
- Lodovico and Julius
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- behavoir of characters must be appropriate
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- must be true to life
- supernatural forbidden
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Unity of Time
Unity of Place
Unity of Action |
|
|
Term
Conventions of Chinese Opera |
|
Definition
- Absence of Time period
- Absence of Place
- Absence of Season
- same character, different troupes
|
|
|
Term
four role types in Chinese Opera |
|
Definition
- male, female, painted face, clown
|
|
|
Term
3 male role types in Chinese Opera |
|
Definition
- mature man
- young man
- Military man
|
|
|
Term
4 women roles in Chinese Opera |
|
Definition
- mature women
- young women
- flower women
- women warriors
|
|
|
Term
Costume for Chinese Opera |
|
Definition
- court robe
- formal robe
- Amor
- informal robe
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- strengthened Anglican Church
- United English People
- 1588 defeat of the Spanish Armada
- language and literature flourished
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Interludes
- brief dramas, stage proffesionals, at court and homes of nobility
- School Dramas:
- at universities, at first private
- greek and roman influence;medieval dramaturgy
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Cambridge produced play every year
- Queen allowed public performances
- Boy's companies
- Public theatre mean proffessional playwrights
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Influences on Elizabethan Drama |
|
Definition
- Humanists: London Inns
- Roman:Seneca, Plautus,and Terrance
- Italian:borrowed plotlines from literature,pastorals
- Medieval: neutral platform stage, Episodic structure
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- bridged gap between educated and popular
- blend medieval and classical
- Provided foundation for Shakespeare and his contemporaries
- university educated, proffesional dramatists
- provided plays to companies
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Dr. Faustus
- focus on protagonist
- Episodic Structure
- wrote for production, not publication
- influenced Shakspeare
- Secret Agent?
- difficulites with the law
- unorthodox religious views
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- troupes had patrons, actors had to be in a troupe
- Elizabeth I banned all religious and politcal plays
- public performances had to be liscensed
- troupes needed Royal Patent
- Master of Revels
- Leicester's Men 1574
|
|
|
Term
Lord Chamberlain's Men (Kings Men) |
|
Definition
- most famous, Shakespeare's company
- Richard Burbage
- Will Kemp
- The Rose and the Globe
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Phillip Henslow and Edward Alleyn
- The Rose and the Fortune
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- no more than 25 members
- all men
- Shareholders
- hired me or hirelings
- Apprentices
|
|
|
Term
Elizabethan Acting Practices |
|
Definition
- Realism vs. non-realism?
- Most sources point to non-realism
- young boys played females
- large casts, doubling or tripling of roles
- rigourous performance schedule
- long plays
- acting was probably stylized and non realistic
|
|
|
Term
Outdoor theatres/public theatres |
|
Definition
- had to be built outside city limits
- Four feet high thrust stage
-
•Wide stage, sometimes 40 feet, never less than 26
•Playing area was neutral (from medieval tradition)
•Capacity 1500-3000
•Circular, polygonal
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- more expensive
- pit had backless benches,faced stage in one direction
- audience sat onstage during Jacobean and Carolean periods
- had more of a skene than tiring house
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- took place in outdoor theatres
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Elizabethan Scenery and costumes |
|
Definition
- scenery
- no painted perspective
- neutral platform stage
- spoken decorum
- Costumes
- wore
- Elizabethan clothing: different for ghosts, supernatural, radical groups, or follk heros
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Volpone 1606
- neoclassical rules
- "Comedy of Humors"
- Poet and critic as well
- imprisoned a couple times
- War of Theatres
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- more sensational, more violent
- Dutchess of Malfi, most renowned tragedy of this period
- educated "wit"
- his tragedies are finest of the period next to Shakespeare
- melodramatic, Spectacular
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- excelled at "tragiocomedy"
- coauthors
- aristocratic audiences wanted more romance and witty satire
- orante, superficial, artificial style
- influenced restoration
|
|
|
Term
Playwriting during the English Renaissance |
|
Definition
- playwrights were paid
- companies needed large numbers of plays
- kept under contract
- plays not long runs
- shows were every day
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- elaborate entertainments meant for royalty
- performed at court, not for public
- flourished during James and Charles
- Italian innovations came to England
- Music, Dance, Spectacle
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- designer and architect for James and Charles
- brought innovations to English stage
- studied design and painting in Italy
- Vain and dictorial
- during war designed field armor
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- designed to ward off evil spirits
- to wish for a peaceful world and good fortune
- 5 people to perform this dance
- colors ofcostumes represent different directions
- displays gentleness and strength at the same time like yin and yang
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- part of the Choson dynasty
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- influenced by Japenese theatre
|
|
|
Term
Contemporary Korean Theatre |
|
Definition
- influenced by Western Theatre
- now taking traditional plays and stories and making them more modern
- bringing in Foreign directors to direct traditional Korean plays
- public performances now normal
- experimental theatre groups
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
actor, director, playwright, shareholder, part-owner of the Globe
Lord Chamberlain's Men
broke neoclassical rules, made his own dramas
frequent shifts
complex and interesting individual characters
use of language
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- most powerful nation in the western world
- church
- Moorish Culture: honor, seperation of public spheres of men and women
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- much like religious dramas of other regions: human and supernatural figures; allegorical figures
- centered around the festival of Corpus Christi
- organized by trade guilds, used wagons
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- used for educational purposes as printing arrived in Spain and education flourished
- aimed at aristocratic audiences in the beginning
- actors welcomed
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- theatre built between two buildings
|
|
|
Term
Pedro Calderon de la Barca |
|
Definition
- Life is a Dream
- university educated
- Entered the Court if Felipe IV
- was named court dramatist
- took holy orders to become a priest
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-
· Medieval concept
· Hierarchy for organizing society
· God, angels, humans- Monarch/King, Animals- mammals, birds, fish Vegetables- Oak Tree, Minerals- diamond, gold, marble
· Influenced everything up till now- pretty much
· Literary influences- Shakespeare
· Moral influences: know where you are on the chain, don’t try to go up or down is a sin.
· Political influences: monarchy was ordained by God, rebelling not a sin just against state but to God. Rule with love, wisdom and justice
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-
o Has to do more with reputation, public appearances rather than notices of merit or value; honor belongs to men, may lose it through actions of women.
All participants begin with a perfect score after which honor may be diminished or reduced through error.
Honor can also be damaged by an accusation of cowardice, suspicion of impure blood or tainted ancestry
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
–All things change, except Brahman (Supreme World Soul, is one translation)
–All things come from and seek to return to Brahman
–All gods (and there are hundreds in Hinduism) are simply aspects of Brahman
–Three main gods who personify different aspects of Brahman:
•Brahma: the creator
•Siva: the destroyer
•Visnu: the preserver
–Representations of living things seen as manifestations of spirit
–The Vedas (Vedic) are sacred Hindu texts; first orally transmitted; later written down (“Vedic Sanskrit” is the spoken version of literary “Sanskrit”) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-
India’s caste system also seems to have come out of the intermingling of Aryans and Dravidians, as well as issues of a growing population
–Brahmins: specialized in all things religious
–Kshatriya: high-ranking military, political families
–Vaishya: farmers
–Shudra: working class
–Dalits (“untouchables”): butchers, refuse workers, thought to have originally been comprised solely of Dravidian peoples
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-
•8 times longer than the Iliad and Odyssey combined
•Goals and purpose of life
•War chronicle
•Stories of two families
•Contains the BhagavadGita, a conversation between a prince and Lord Krishna (an incarnation of Visnu)
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-
•Stories of relationship ideals
•Explores dharma (the “law” that maintains the universe, “truth”)
•Follows the story of Rama, another incarnation of Visnu
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-
Encyclopedia of drama
•36 chapters detailing every aspect of production
•Theater construction
•How to worship before a performance
•Types of plays and a guide to playwriting
•Costume and make-up instruction
•Movements and gestures based on characters’ moods and states of being
•Techniques are honored but were not slavishly followed
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-
Stock Characters
•4 types of heroes
•8 types of heroines
•Protagonist’s confidant is always a comic character
–Characters and actors cannot be separated neatly from dramatic structure
•The Sutradhara: company leader (male); usually played main characters
•Plays always began with a prayer (nandī), followed by a prologue, which was always a conversation between the Sutradhara and another character in the play that foreshadowed what was to come
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-
There are 8 rasa (“tastes”) an audience can experience:
•Erotic, comic, pathetic, furious, heroic, terrible, odious, and marvelous
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
rasa's are connected to the 8 bhavas (emotions) which can be portrayed on stage:
•Pleasure, mirth, sorrow, wrath, vigor, fear, disgust, and wonder |
|
|