| |
Theatre/Theater
Theatre or theater (from French "théâtre",
from Greek "theatron", ??at???, meaning "place of
seeing") is the branch of the performing arts concerned with
acting out stories in front of an audience using combinations of
speech, gesture, mime, puppets, music, dance, sound and spectacle
— indeed any one or more elements of the other performing
arts. Bernard Beckerman, head of Hofstra University's department
of drama, in his book, Dynamics of Drama, defines theatre as what
"occurs when one or more human beings, isolated in time and/or
space, present themselves to another or others." In addition
to the standard narrative dialogue style, theatre takes such forms
as opera, ballet, mime, kabuki, puppetry, classical Indian dance,
Chinese opera, mummers' plays, and pantomime.
Overview of theatre
"Drama" (literally translated, Action, from a verbal root
meaning "I do") is that branch of theatre in which speech,
either from written text (plays), or improvised is paramount. The
first theatre, the Theatre of ancient Greece, created the definition
of a theatre: an audience in a half-circle watching an elevated
stage where actors use props staging plays. "Musical theatre"
is a form of theatre combining music, songs, dance routines, and
spoken dialogue. However, theatre is more than just what one sees
on stage. Theatre involves an entire world behind the scenes that
creates the costumes, sets and lighting to make the overall effect
interesting. There is a particularly long tradition of political
theatre, intended to educate audiences on contemporary issues and
encourage social change. Various creeds, Catholicism for instance,
have built upon the entertainment value of theatre and created (for
example) passion plays, mystery plays and morality plays.
There is variety of philosophy, artistic process, and theatrical
approach to creating plays and drama. Some are connected to political
or spiritual ideologies, and some based on purely "artistic"
concerns. Some processes focus on a story, some on theatre as event,
some on theatre as catalyst for social change. According to Aristotle's
seminal theatrical critique Poetics, there are six elements necessary
for theatre: Plot, Character, Idea, Language, Song, and Spectacle.
The 17th-century Spanish writer Lope de Vega wrote that for theatre
one needs "three boards, two actors, and one passion".
Others notable for their contribution to theatrical philosophy are
Konstantin Stanislavski, Antonin Artaud, Bertolt Brecht, Orson Welles,
Peter Brook, Jerzy Grotowski.
The most recognizable figures in theatre are the directors, playwrights
and actors, but theatre is a highly collaborative endeavour. Plays
are usually produced by a production team that commonly includes
a scenic or set designer, lighting designer, costume designer, sound
designer, dramaturg, stage manager, and production manager. The
artistic staff are assisted by technical theatre personnel who handle
creation and execution of the production.
Some believe it is important for actors to study all commonly taught
acting methods to perfect their craft. Methods include: Meisner,
Stanislavsky, Strasberg, and Hagen.
Genres of theatre
Konstantin Somov's illustration for The Theatre by Alexander Blok
(1909).There are a variety of genres that writers, producers and
directors can employ in theatre to suit a variety of tastes:
Musical theatre: A theatrical genre in which a story is told through
the performance of singing (with instrumental music), spoken dialogue
and often dance.
Natya Sacred classical Indian musical theatre that includes natya
proper (mime) and nritta (pure dance).
Theatre for social change: Theatre that addresses a social issue
and uses performance as a way of illustrating injustice to the audience.
Comedy: Comes from the Greek word komos which means celebration,
revel or merrymaking. It does not necessarily mean funny, but more
focuses on a problem that leads to some form of catastrophe which
in the end has a happy and joyful outcome.
Farce: A comic dramatic piece that uses highly improbable situations,
stereotyped characters, extravagant exaggeration, fast pacing and
violent horseplay.
Pantomime: A form of musical drama in which elements of dance, mime,
puppetry, slapstick, and melodrama are combined to produce an entertaining
and comic theatrical experience, often designed for children. These
are often presented around the holidays.
Romantic comedy: A medley of clever scheming, calculated coincidence,
and wondrous discovery, all of which contribute ultimately to making
the events answer precisely to the hero's or heroine's wishes, with
the focus on love.
Comedy of situation: A comedy that grows out of a character's attempt
to solve a problem created by a situation. The attempt is often
bumbling but ends up happily.
Comedy of manners: Witty, cerebral form of dramatic comedy that
depicts and often satirises the manners and affectations of a contemporary
society. A comedy of manners is concerned with social usage and
the question of whether or not characters meet certain social standards.
Commedia dell'arte: Very physical form of comedy which was created
and originally performed in Italy. Commedia uses a series of stock
characters and a list of events to improvise an entire play.
Black comedy: Comedy that tests the boundaries of good taste and
moral acceptability by juxtaposing morbid or ghastly elements with
comical ones.
Melodrama: Originally, a sentimental drama with musical underscoring.
Often with an unlikely plot that concerns the suffering of the good
at the hands of the villains but ends happily with good triumphant.
Featuring stock characters such as the noble hero, the long-suffering
heroine, and the cold-blooded villain.
Tragedy: A drama that treats in a serious and dignified style the
sorrowful or terrible events encountered or caused by a heroic individual.
The word "Tragedy" comes from the Greek word "Tragos"
which is translated to "Goat".
Tragicomedy: A drama that has a bitter/sweet quality, containing
elements of tragedy and comedy.
Domestic drama: Drama in which the focus is on the everyday domestic
lives of people and their relationships in the community that they
live in.
Fantasy: The creation of a unique landscape on which a hero goes
on a quest to find something that will defeat the powers of evil.
Along the way, this hero meets a variety of weird and fantastic
characters.
Morality play: A morality play is an allegory in which the characters
are abstractions of moral ideas.
Opera: A theatrical genre in which a story is told and emotion is
conveyed primarily through singing (with instrumental music).
Rock opera: Concept albums and stage works performed in a dramatic
context reminiscent of opera, except that the musical form is rock
music.
Physical theatre: Theatrical performance in which the primary means
of communication is the body, through dance, mime, puppetry and
movement, rather than the spoken word.
Theatre of the Absurd: Term coined by Martin Esslin, theatre in
which characters are engaged in an absurd, that is meaningless,
activity or life. Related to existentialism.
Meta-Theatre: A genre of theatre made popular with mostly modern
audiences, although it did start back in the Elizabethan Era. Meta-Theatre
is when a play often completely demolishes the so called "fourth
wall" and completely engages the audience. Oftentimes about
a group of actors, a director, writer and so on. It usually blurs
the line between what is scripted and what goes on by accident.
Grand Guignol: Now broadly used to refer to any play with on-stage
violence, the term originally referred to the bloody and gruesome
melodramas produced at the Theatre du Grand Guignol in Paris, France.
Total Theatre: The creation of Steven Berkoff, a style where the
actors become both characters and set, often using just one prop
throughout the entire play. The style uses features of greek theatre
(eg. a chorus or didactic message), exageration and surrealism.
Poor Theatre: Grotowski was the one who invented Poor Theatre. Grotowski's
style of poor theatre consisted of many important fine points. For
one, there was not a separate stage and place for the audience,
instead the actors and the audience shared the same space. There
were no sets, props, lighting, music, or any other technical features.
The actors were paramount, although their costumes were simple.
Grotowski had his actors go through physical training, and even
would spend many months rehearsing a play. Some of these poor theatre
plays would only be preformed once, to a small audience. This Poor
Theatre style was very popular during the 1960’s and 70’s,
and later on, was used by many acting troupes around the world.
This list is somewhat incomplete and some regard it as eurocentric.
None of the genres listed are actually mutually exclusive. The richness
of live theatre today is such that its practitioners can borrow
from all of these elements and more, and present something that
is a multi-disciplinary melange of pretty much everything.
Theatre venues and styles
Art Deco style theatre
Broadway and the West End
Community theatre
Dinner theatre
Fringe festival
Improvisational theatre
In-yer-face theatre
National Tours
Off-Broadway and the London fringe
Off-Off-Broadway
Opera houses
Physical theatre
Post style theatre
Postmodern theatre
Proletcult Theatre
Reader's Theatre
Regional theatre
Repertory theatre
Street theatre
Summer stock theatre
Temple dance
UK Theatre Network
Vanguard style theatre
School and church theatres and town halls community theatre
Notable theatre festivals
Edinburgh International Festival.
Golden Mask Festival (Russia).
Galway Arts Festival (Galway Ireland).
Project06 (Galway Ireland).
Natyanjali Classical Indian musical theater festival in the Hindu
temples of South India.
Bogotá's Iberoamerican International Festival.
Pacific Playwrights Festival at South Coast Repertory (Costa Mesa,
California).
Festival Internacional de Artistas de Rua da Bahia - Brazil. (Street
artists).
Curitiba Theater Festival - Brazil.
Theatre conventions
Technical theatre
Professional Stagehands (IATSE)
LDI (USA)
United States Institute for Theatre Technology
Awards in theatre
Manchester Evening News Annual Drama Awards (United Kingdom)
Elliot Norton Awards (Boston, MA USA)
European Theatre Award
Evening Standard Awards (United Kingdom)
Laurence Olivier Awards (United Kingdom)
London Critics' Circle Theatre Awards (United Kingdom)
Tony Award (USA)
Golden Mask Award (Russia)
Molière Award (France)
Hans-Reinhart-Ring (Switzerland)
Lucille Lortel Award (USA)
Drama Desk Award (USA)
Mahindra Excellence in Theatre Awards (India)
Joseph Jefferson Award (USA)
Sangeet Natak Academy Award (India)
Theater Newsfeed
|
|