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Middle Ages: Medieval Drama 476 A.D.-13 th century. History of Drama. Middle Ages/Dark Ages/Medieval?? Which one?. Same time period Medieval—used as an adjective Dark ages—no cultural activity Most people were illiterate Little travel=no exchange of ideas. Medieval Drama.
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Middle Ages:Medieval Drama476 A.D.-13th century History of Drama
Middle Ages/Dark Ages/Medieval?? Which one? Same time period Medieval—used as an adjective Dark ages—no cultural activity Most people were illiterate Little travel=no exchange of ideas
Medieval Drama • Fall of Rome—Renaissance • Black Plague • For 400 years, no drama except • Several folk festivals • Wandering jugglers and minstrels
Troupe • Church introduced short dramas during masses, called troupes. • Ironic because the church banned drama • Troupes began in France, then soon spread throughout the continent. • Helped people understand the Bible stories • Began to educate the illiterate, 1st acted in Latin then the common vernacular so everyone could understand. • Acted out by priests and choirboys
Mansions Scenes were so popular that whole stories emerged Small platforms, mansions, were erected in the church Crowds moved from mansion to mansion until they saw the entire story A nun, Hrosvitha, wrote a religious comedy that was performed on mansions in the 10th century.
The 5 M’s • Mummings • Earliest style of Medieval Drama • Pagan roots • Not politically correct • Public processions • Include summer/winter solstices and autumn equinoxes
The 5 M’s • Mystery Play • Community effort • Used the tops of wagons for a stage • Women could act • Scripture stories
The 5 M’s • Morality Play • Allegorical • Taught right from wrong • Entertaining • Focus on death (Everyone goes with death eventually) • Post plague • Characters personified abstract qualities • Ex: Everyman
The 5 M’s • Miracle Play • Dramatized the lives of saints • Not always realistic
The 5 M’s • Manners • Late Medieval • Focus on social and secular instead of religious • Depicted people acting socially inappropriate
Medieval Comedy • 13th or 14th century – productions focused on comedy so they moved from church to marketplace • Theater once again secular • Bible stories became comical
Staging Devices • Hell’s Mouth – dragon jaw that would open with smoke and flames; sometimes showed tortured souls
Presentation Style • Some towns, mansions would provide a backdrop for heaven at one end and hell would be portrayed at another location with parts of the story in between • Crowds would move to see the action. • Marketplace stages, situated around the square • England, France, and Netherlands developed the Pageant Wagon
Medieval Pageant Wagon • Double-decker • Lower story for costume changes • Action on upper stage and around the street. • Similar to parade floats.
Passion Play • Late middle ages, the passion play developed. • Depicted Christ’s life through resurrection • Passion play in Oberammergau, Germany • Residents of Bavarian village vowed that to be spared from the Black Plague, they would put on a passion play every 10 years • Village was spared, began performances in 1633 • Still performing today, every 10 years. • Only year not performed: 1940
Secular Plays • Several non-religious plays were developed in Medieval times • Most notable are the Robin Hood Plays and Master Pierre Patelin
Impact of Medieval Drama • Main Impact: Because the actors got much closer to their audience, acting became more important than dialogue. • Also…Mixed comedy and seriousness, which transitioned into Italian and Elizabethan drama.
Italian Renaissance 1400-1600 • Ancient writers were rediscovered • Rebirth of learning led to in-depth look at arts and sciences • Movement toward literacy: Invention of printing press • Began in Italy • Leonardo da Vinci • Petrarch • Michelangelo • Machiavelli
Commedia dell’Arte: Comedy of Professional Players • Very popular by 1550 • Professional, improv. comedy performed in streets • Usually 7 men and 3 women company • Ad-lib action, dialogue, songs, and dance • Plot revolved around love and intrigue • Actors wore half masks • Popularity spread through France, influenced Moliere • Different from IMPROV: followed a storyline, performers made bits from storyline
New Stock Characters • Harlequin: wore diamond patches, foolish servant • Pierrot: Lovelorn and moody • Columbine: flirtatious and beautiful • Pantalone: the old man, a fool • Dottore-the doctor, a drunk or glutton
Pseudo-Classicism • Combination of commedia of the common man and drama of Italian nobility. • Copy of ancient Roman drama • Dramatic noblemen built private indoor theaters with beautiful arches • First permanent theater built in 1618 (Theater Farnese)
Opera • Opera substituted popular plays • Huge theaters created • Audience sat in tiers of narrow horseshoe-shaped galleries • Beautiful auditorium for socializing • Detailed scenery used • Stage floors were built on a rake • Upstage sloping towards audience
Spanish Renaissance • Focused on drama • 1550-1680 flourish of theater • Influenced by Commedia dell’Arte and Italian court staging
Spanish Playwrights • Cervantes 1574-1616 • 30 plays including Don Quixote • Tragedies, comedies, “cape & sword” • Lope de Vega 1562-1635 • 2000 poetic and romantic plays! • Calderon 1600-1681 • 200 plays of spiritual emphasis and poetry
Spanish Playwrights cont. • Established original art form • Free from classical rules of Italian and French writers • Ignored time and place unities • Used beautiful, flowing dialogue • Action around “Cape and sword” • Adventure • Romance • chivalry
Spanish Playhouses • Similar to Medieval stages (mansions) • Stages erected at end of open courtyard • Later, permanent buildings were built, with the audience sitting in front of the raised stage • Balcony with side boxes reserved for the nobility
More Spanish Theatre • Elaborate scenery • Rich costuming • Women could act • 40 theaters existed in Madrid during Golden Age of Spanish Theater