The Greek's made amphitheaters with stages that are now known as thrust stages.
Everywhere they settled, but they chose the sites with a good view. For instance, there is one of their theaters in southern Italy and it has a view of the coast. They thought of the whole environment and atmosphere that they presented.In a hillside on the outskirts of their city centre.In Ancient Greece, only in the rich part though!!
Show who they are to a large audience.
The most popular theater, the Amphitheater packed 11,000 people into it. However most small theaters only held 1 or 2 thousand.
Thespis emerged from the chorus as the first actor. Aeschylus added the second actor and decreased the chorus to twelve from fifty. Sophocles added the third actor and increased the chorus to fifteen. From that point, the number of actors and size of the chorus became frozen as the rules for the tragic competition.
Almost every Greek city had a theatre because plays were part of many religious festivals. The Greeks enjoyed singing and dancing. At first, theatres were only used for festivals. The theatres were built on hillsides in the open air and could often hold more than 18,000 spectators. The theatres were open air and built in a semi-circular shape with rows of tiered stone seating around it. The shape of the theatres gave everyone in the audience excellent viewing and also meant they could hear the actors well too. In the centre of the theatre was a circular dancing floor (orchestra), with an altar for sacrifices dedicated to Dionysus. The stage was a raised area within this circle. All the actors were men. They wore large masks that exaggerated facial features and emotions. The mouth hole was large to help amplify the voices. Greek plays were either comedies or tragedies. Tragedies were often about the past, whereas comedies tended to be about current and everyday life. Actors in comedies wore bright colours. Actors in tragedies wore dark colours. Plays were either spoken or sung in rhyme.
The cast of Calamity Anne Takes a Trip - 1913 includes: Charlotte Burton as Audience member in movie theater Pauline Bush as Audience member in movie theater Violet Knights as Audience member in movie theater Louise Lester as Calamity Anne Wallace Reid as Policeman Jack Richardson Harry von Meter as Audience member in movie theater
The three main parts of ancient Greek theater are the orchestra, the skene, and the theatron. The orchestra is a circular space where the chorus performed and interacted with the actors. The skene served as a backdrop and storage area, often featuring doors for entrances and exits. The theatron is the seating area where the audience watched the performances, typically built into a hillside for better acoustics and visibility.
The cast of Last Summer in the Hamptons - 1995 includes: Marilyn Arenas as Theater Audience Sigalit Banai as Theater Audience Barbara Bercu as Theater Audience Jorge Bosch as Apprentice Gregory Braun as Apprentice Judith Bruce De La Huerta as Theater Audience Amy Chanos as Theater Audience Rich Crooks as Apprentice Luis De la Garza as Chauffeur Rafaela De La Huerta as Theater Audience Peg De La Huerta as Theater Audience Kat Elwynn Devlin as Apprentice Michael Emil as House Guest Joseph Feury as Producer Michele Fleischman as Waitress at Cafe Barbara Flood as Wealthy Lady Victoria Foyt as Oona Hart Katrina Fried as Apprentice Elaine Fruin as Theater Audience Ecuaris Gonzales as Theater Audience Nick Gregory as George Andre Gregory as Ivan Axelrod Garry Gross as Theater Audience Megan Hughes as Apprentice Henry Jaglom as Max Berger Sabrina Jaglom as Theater Audience Chris Knoblock as Student Actor Roscoe Lee Browne as Freddy Arnold Leo as Doctor Melissa Leo as Trish Axelrod Viveca Lindfors as Helena Mora Roddy McDowall as Thomas Laurel Moglen as Apprentice Jeffrey Monte as Apprentice Raina Paris as Theater Audience Martha Plimpton as Chloe Garfield Gary Rabinowitz as Theater Audience Ron Rifkin as Eli Garfield Jon Robin Baitz as Jake Axelrod Dorien Ross as Theater Audience Alex Rubin as Apprentice Diane Salinger as Marian Mora Garfield Lynne Sawyer as Theater Audience Mark Shulgasser as Theater Audience Barbara Shulgasser as Theater Audience Brooke Smith as Lois Garfield Savannah Smith Boucher as Suzanne Alexandra Styron as House Guest Linda Sunshine as Theater Audience Kristoffer Tabori as Nick Mora Lena Tabori as Theater Audience Natasha Tabori Fried as Theater Audience Holland Taylor as Davis Mora Axelrod Lissa Townsend Rogers as Apprentice Matt Webber as Theater Audience Jed Weissberg as Theater Audience Jeremy Workman as Apprentice
Producers, directors, stage managers, designers , dramatists, playwrights, make up artists, audience, actors and actresses.
The fourth wall is the imaginary wall between the actors in a play and the audience. The front of the stage doesn't have a wall like the ones on the sides or back of the stage. But there's usually a separation between the actors and the audience, and the actors typically ignore the audience when they're acting (like there was a wall between them).
Theaters all over the world are very similar. They usually all have a stage, seats for the audience, and a backstage for actors.
It is when the audience sits/ stands in a circular and watches the performance eaither facing in or out (this is down purely to the desired wish of the actors)
Traditional theater in the round is a round stage with no back stage. The actors are surrounded by the audience in all directions with no curtains like traditional stages in musicals or vaudeville. This type of theater is said to originate in Greek theater.
Greeks designed theaters to have excellent acoustics. Sound quality is greatest at the performance area and bounced off the hard pavement of the orchestra and skene to disburse evenly and clearly throughout the audience. The speekers, (actors), would develp strong voices to project out to the entire audience. By haveing no wals around the theater, vibrations and counter sounds couldnot be reflected.
It gives everyone in the audience a good view, because the actors don't need to move all over the stage because the audience is only in front of them, not at the sides. So the actors only need to focus on the front!
Where the acting is realistic enough to be understood by the audience, but where the emotions and gestures of the actors are exaggerated. Like in Ancient Greek Theatre.
Brechtian theatre is an abstract form of theatre. Its main feature consists of breaking that boundary between actors on stage and the audience watching. Generally, the actors will enter and/or exit from the audience and pose socio-cultural issues that will make the audience member ask themselves a sub-conscious question about the issue. Shakespearean and Greek theatre is somewhat your stock standard form of theatre.