hellenic festival of ancient drama, held annually in the fourth-century bc theatre at epidauros

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Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth- century BC theatre at Epidauros Euripides’ Orestes most recently performed at Epidauros in 2010 by the National Theatre of

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Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros Euripides’ Orestes most recently performed at Epidauros in 2010 by the National Theatre of Greece http://www.n-t.gr/en/events/orestis/. Differences daylight performances playwright as director - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Euripides’ Orestes most recently performed at Epidauros in 2010 by the National Theatre of Greece http://www.n-t.gr/en/events/orestis/

Page 2: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

• Differences– daylight performances– playwright as director – drama as part of a religious festival and a

competition– drama considered fundamental to the polis

• Space and Staging

• Euripides’ Orestes – 408BC – use of space– working with (and against) audience expectations

Page 3: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience but where he stands in times of challenge and controversy. (Martin Luther King)

Page 4: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Orestes (dressed as a hoplite) stabs Aegisthus, while his sister (Electra) warns him of his mother’s approach with an axe.

Attic red-figure stamnos from Vulci, c.470BC.

Page 5: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Orestes grabs his mother’s hair and

prepares to strike her with his sword as she,

having fallen to her knees, bares her breast

with one hand and reaches up to him in supplication. Above a

Fury with snakes in her hair and in her hands

looks on. Paestan red-figure amphora,

c.340BC.

Page 6: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Tragedies about Orestes – 18% of those surviving

• 458BC Aeschylus’ Choephoroi (in which Orestes returns, kills

Clytemnestra and sees the Furies) and Eumenides (in which Orestes is tried in Athens and acquitted)

• c.413BC Euripides’ Electra (in which Orestes returns, kills Clytemnestra

and sees the Furies; it mentions his trial in Athens)• c.410BC Sophocles’ Electra (in which Orestes returns and kills

Clytemnestra; there are no Furies and no mention of a trial)• 408BC Euripides’ Orestes (in which Orestes has already killed

Clytemnestra and is being driven mad by Furies; he is tried in Argos and found guilty but the trial in Athens is also mentioned)

Page 7: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

The cast of characters before Euripides’ Orestes

Aeschylus Sophocles Euripides

Orestes Orestes Orestes

Pylades Pylades Pylades

Clytemnestra Clytemnestra Clytemnestra

Aegisthus Aegisthus Aegisthus

Electra Electra Electra

Orestes’ Nurse Orestes’ retainer Electra’s husband

Slave Messenger

Castor and Pollux

Priestess of Apollo

Apollo

Clytemnestra’s Ghost

The Furies

Athena

Athenian jurors

Athenian women & girls

Page 8: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Early C1st BC papyrus fragment

of Euripides’ Orestes (P. Oxy.

1178).Antiquities Museum,

Bibliotheca Alexandrina, Alexandria

Page 9: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Papyrus G 2315, from Hermopolis Magna, Egypt, c.200 BC (80 x 92 mm). Collection of Archduke Reiner, Vienna.Dochmiacs from a choral stasimon of Euripides’ Orestes (lines 338-43, the order of verses is different from that of the medieval MSS). Melodic and rhythmical notation is placed above the syllables of the text, intermittent instrumental notation in the same line as the text.

• http://www.oeaw.ac.at/kal/agm/

Page 10: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

A piper (auletēs) with a chorus of 7 ‘girl’ dancers and a didaskalos (extreme left with stick/staff)

Attic red-figure calyx krater; attributed to the Niobid Painter; c. 470-60BC; British Museum 1856.12-13.1

Page 11: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Aerial view of the Acropolis (2010)

Page 12: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros
Page 13: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros
Page 14: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

1. All the characters wear masks.2. Maximum of three speaking characters at

one time (there are only three actors).3. All characters and the chorus speak/sing

verse (iambic trimeter is closest to the cadence of normal speech, lyric metre is reserved [in the case of actors] for moments of high tension).

4. The chorus, after their first entrance (the parodos) are present throughout.

5. No murders (or violence) on stage.

Greek Tragic Conventions:

Page 15: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Actor with a mask: crater

fragment, from Taranto,

late 4th century,

Martin von Wagner

Museum der Universitat, Wurzburg

Page 16: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

The (named) tragic character Aegisthus on the comic stage in ‘Choregoi’ (‘The Producers’).

Apulian, red-figure, bell-crater, 400-380 BC, New York, Fleischman Collection F93

(Taplin, Comic Angels, 9.1)

Page 17: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Chorus and cast of a satyr play. Attic red-figure volute crater attributed to the Pronomos Painter, end of C5th BC.

Naples 81673 (H3240).

Page 18: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Electra Dearest one, how happy it made me feelWhen you fell into that sleep. Do you want meTo hold you and to prop your body up?

Orestes Yes, hold me. Give me some support. And wipe The dried up foam from my sore mouth and eyes. …Support my side with yours,And push the matted hair out of my face.My eyes aren’t seeing very well.

Electra O this filthy hair, your poor suffering head – So much time has passed since it’s been washed,you look just like a savage.

Orestes Put me back,on the bed again. Once the madness leaves,I’m exhausted… no strength in my limbs.

…Orestes Where… where have I jumped? Out of bed?

After the storm I see calm waters once again.Sister, why wrap your head in your dress and cry?

Page 19: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Orestes and Pylades stand by the tomb of Agamemnon as Electra, her hair cut short in mourning, approaches it with offerings.

This is the moment just before the brother and sister recognise each other.

Two Furies look down from above.

Paestan red-figure amphora from Nola, c.320BC.

Page 20: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Plan of the fifth

century Theatre of Dionysus

from D. Taylor, The Greek

and Roman Stage

Page 21: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Euripides tries stopping the parodos!Electra Here they are again

my friends who sing with me in my laments.They’ll soon end my brother’s peaceful sleepAnd melt my eyes with tears once I see him In his mad fit. You women, dearest friends,Move with quiet step and make no noise,No unexpected sound. Your kindness hereIs dear to me, but if you wake him up,What happens will be difficult for me.Chorus Keep quiet! Silence! Let your steps be light.

Make no sound at all.…Chorus Do you see? His body’s moving in his robes.Electra You wretch, you've forced him to wake up

With your chatter.Chorus No, I think he’s sleeping.Electra Won’t you just go away? Leave the house.

Retrace your steps, and stop the shuffling.

Page 22: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Behind the orkhêstra (‘dancing place’ – where the chorus danced and sang) was a low raised stage...

Page 23: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

... with easy access to the orkhêstra and the eisodoi (entrance ways to each side).

Page 24: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

At the rear of the stage was the skênê building...

Page 25: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

... with a wide central door...

Page 26: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

... for entrances and exits...

Page 27: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

... and painted scenery panels (skênographia).

Page 28: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Interior tableaux were displayed on the eccyclema (aka ekkyklema) (ekkuklêma), a trolley which could be rolled out...

Page 29: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

... and rolled back in again.

Page 30: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Actors could appear on the roof of the skênê building.

Page 31: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros
Page 32: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

WestPathway to Nauplion

EastChariot

Roadway toArgos

(including the agora) and Tombs of

Agamemnon and

Clytemnestra

House of Atreus(with the courtyard before it)

Rooftop

Orestes

Electra

Helen

Page 33: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

The Characters by EpisodePro. Electra Orestes Helen (and

Phrygian slaves)

Hermione

1 Electra Orestes

2 Orestes Menelaus (and men)

Tyndareus Pylades

3 Electra Orestes Messenger

(Old Man)

Pylades

4 Electra Orestes (Helen – off-stage)

Pylades

5 Electra Orestes Phrygian slave

Pylades

Ep. Electra Orestes Menelaus (and men)

Hermione Pylades Apollo Helen

Page 34: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros
Page 35: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

More surprises about Helen…

• Helen is heard begging for her life

• We expect the ekkyklema to reveal her corpse

• The Messenger (Phrygian Slave) reports in song (and pidgin Greek) that she has vanished

Page 36: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros
Page 37: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Darius (named) and a Messenger:

Southern Italian column crater (c. 400BC) by the Darius Painter (detail from name vase depicting a Persian-War themed tragedy).

Page 38: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Epilogue

Menelaus (and entourage)

Chorus of Argive women

Orestes

Hermione

Pylades

Electra

Apollo

Helen

Page 39: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

The Characters by ActorActor A Actor B Actor C Silent Extras

Prologue Electra Orestes Helen Hermione Phrygian slaves

Episode 1 Electra Orestes

Episode 2 Menelaus Orestes Tyndareus

Pylades

Menelaus’ men

Episode 3 Electra Orestes Messenger

Pylades

Orestes’ supporters

Episode 4 Electra (Helen)

Episode 5 Electra Orestes Phrygian slave

Epilogue Menelaus Orestes Apollo Hermione

Pylades

Electra

Helen

Menelaus’ men

Page 40: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros
Page 41: Hellenic Festival of Ancient Drama, held annually in the fourth-century BC theatre at Epidauros

Alex Clark & Euripides’ Orestes• Adapting the characters and content. Expect:

– The unexpected: Helen, Menelaus & Hermione + ???– The substantially developed: Pylades, the imagery of setting

fire to the house of Atreus and Orestes’ threat of arson– A trial and a guilty verdict– The criminal justice system to be upheld – A devastated and mentally unbalanced Orestes– Reference to Greek myths– A happy end for some

• Adopting Euripides’ attitude to theatrical conventions and stage space. Expect:– Doubling of characters– Original and unexpected handling of stage space– To see inside Orestes’ mind– To wonder whether murders will be committed