theater: Ancient Greece
Ancient Greece
Theater in ancient Greece developed from the ceremonial worship of the god Dionysus (in which the death and rebirth of the god were celebrated) and was communal in nature. The focal point of the structure in which the ceremony took place was a level, circular space at the foot of a hill. Around this space, called the
The original religious nature of Greek drama made audiences particularly receptive to the cosmic themes presented in classical tragedy. Greek actors performed in masks and stylized costumes (see mask). The chorus remained in the
The years from the decline of classical Greece through the Hellenistic period to the Roman era saw the erosion of serious drama and a corresponding increase in the architectural grandeur of theaters. As the religious and thus the choral element diminished, the
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Related Articles
- Twentieth-Century Theaters
- Theaters in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
- Renaissance Theaters
- Medieval Theaters
- Ancient Rome and the Early Christian Era
- Ancient Greece
- Bibliography
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