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The Stage and the School Chapter 6 Dr. Neighbours. Varieties of Drama. 2 Recognized varieties of drama:. Tragedy Generally end in catastrophes Often have a death at the end. Comedy Usually lighthearted Clever dialogue and amusing characters. Tragicomedies:
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The Stage and the School Chapter 6 Dr. Neighbours Varieties of Drama
2 Recognized varieties of drama: • Tragedy • Generally end in catastrophes • Often have a death at the end • Comedy • Usually lighthearted • Clever dialogue and amusing characters Tragicomedies: Have qualities of both comedy and tragedy “Dramas”: Do not fit the definition of tragedy but are serious in nature
60 Words to Add to Your Cultural Vocabulary…… • Allegory • Ambiguity • Anticlimax • Anticipation • Aside • Avant-garde • Burlesque • Caricature • Catharsis • Children’s theatre • Comedy • Comedy of manners • Constructivism • Epic Theatre • Exaggeration • Existentialism • Expressionism • Fantasy • Farce • Foreshadowing • Hamartia • High comedy • Hubris • Incompletion • Incongruity • Low comedy • Melodrama • Monodrama • Naturalism • Parody
60 Words to Add to Your Cultural Vocabulary……(cont.) • Pathos • Performance art • Plant • Play of ideas • Presentational • Protagonist • Protection • Psychological drama • Puppet theatre • Realism • Recognition • Relief • Representational • Romantic comedy • Romanticism • Running gag • Satire • Schmaltz • Screen scene • Sentimental comedy • Style • Stylization • Symbolism • The “whodunit” • Theatre of Involvement • Theatre of the Absurd • Theatrical conventions • Theatricalism • Total Theatre • Tragedy
About TRAGEDY: • Considered to be humanity’s highest literary achievement • Sober, thoughtful plays based on proud human emotions and conflicts that do not change with time or place • Quality is called transcendence: “transcending time and place” • Focus is on a protagonist • Character is a significant person engaged in a struggle but ultimately fails • Overcome by opposing forces • Struggle may be internal or external • May be characteristics of the person (internal) or divine or human forces (external) • Tragic character has no control
Philosophy: “The love of Wisdom;” how and why one thinks as he/she does; understanding beyond the tangible Philosophical guide to Tragedy • Pathos: meaning pity, sorrow, suffering • The quality of the drama that arouses feelings in the audience that include pity and compassion for the tragic protagonist. • The inevitable outcome creates this feeling • Audiences’ emotions intensify the impact of the events because they can relate to the human quality • Catharsis: • A sense of release the audience feels when the tragedy ends because the pathos has been purged • Audiences obtain a sense of relief
Tragic characters can be significant rulers, such as Macbeth or King Lear, or common citizens like Willy Loman in Death of a Salesman or Blanche DuBois in Streetcar Named Desire Five Characteristics often Found in Tragic Characters • They have a flaw or make an error that has serious consequences • They make no apology for their actions • They set goals based on unyielding beliefs • They know that almost everything worth having demands some sacrifice • They are willing to make the sacrifice themselves, never asking another to make sacrifices for them
Found in his work Poetics Aristotle's Definition of Tragic Character • An average or better person who, during the course of the play, is brought from happiness to misery • Through suffering he/she acquires a sense of awareness of truth, of self, or of others • Also becomes alienated and isolated from society • His actions that cause the difficulties are brought about by Hamartia: • A character weakness or error in judgment • Also called tragic flaw • Most common form of Hamartia is hubris: • Hubris: excessive pride
Tragic comparisons What are the forces that the tragic characters are against? What is the protagonist's weakness? Does the play communicate a sense of inevitability? Hamlet: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YHMYkUrV7A Macbeth: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JaLBfH3o1TU&feature=related
About COMEDY: • Derived from Greek words komos and ode, meaning “revel song” • Usually societal and conciliatory – all the characters come together at the end of the play • Even villains • There’s a “happy ending” • Often depends on circumstance unique to a particular time and place, most enduring have transcendence • Built around character, situations, and dialogue • Some bring great laughs • Some only cause inner smiles • Comedy is not always funny, but is always amusing, delighting, or at least please an audience • Protagonist overcomes opposing forces or achieves desired goals or both • Protagonist is often less-than-average person • Protagonist may be an idealist, a romantic, an extreme pragmatist, a blunderer, a dreamer, or even a rogue
Tragedy versus Comedy • Inevitable – there is no way to change or to stop the outcome • Universal theme and appeal • Emotional • Protagonist fails to achieve goals • Protagonist alienate from society • Protagonist average or better • Protagonist falls from leadership, losing respect dreams, position • Predictably unpredictable – you can expect the unlikely • Often time and place oriented • Intellectual, mental • Protagonist achieves goals • Protagonist often becomes leader of new society, even villain is usually accepted • Protagonist less than average • Protagonist achieves success, often as a result of own mistakes or shortcomings Tragedy Comedy
What makes people laugh? What is funny today may not be tomorrow Sometimes we laugh out of embarrassment Sometimes we laugh for no reason at all What is humorous in one city may not be in another
7 common causes of laughter: • Exaggeration • Overstatements • Overstated physicality's • Personality types • Incongruity • Anything that seems out of place, out of time, or out of character • Comes in many forms – unnatural action, a test or turn of events, or the irrelevant • Anticipation • The looking forward to a potential laugh • Sight gags • Plays roll in “mistaken identity” humor • Techniques: Plants or foreshadowing, running gag, incompletion • Plants: an idea, line, or action emphasized early in play, also called foreshadowing • Running gag: a minimum of three exposures to the plant • Incompletion: a line or bit of action is started but never finish; audience completes with laughter
7 common causes of laughter: • Ambiguity • Double meaning, puns, word play • Recognition • Discovering hidden or obscure meanings • Audience is amused to recognize the meanings • Protection • Cruel, violent, grotesque, and abusive actions and events cause laughter because the audience is protected by knowing these things are not real and are not damaging as they seem • Examples are found in most cartoons • Relief • A build in pressure and then releases it • This would be like catharsis in tragedy • Relief of pressure is humorous when the pent-up emotions are allowed to explode in laughter