on pageant wagons.
A mystery play is a kind of f vernacular drama in Europe during the Middle Ages. It was played on pageant wagons which provided both scaffold stage and dressing room.
A pageant wagon was used as a place for actors who were not associated with the church to perform. It was basically a stage on wheels. The players (actors) would take their pageant wagons all over Europe and perform to the public. The plays were usually presented in a comedic manner and that is why lots of people would go and see the performances.
Audiences. Medieval plays were sometimes performed for royalty or nobility as a part of a feast or entertainment, but they were also performed on wagons during fairs, where they were seen by everyone of all classes.
Plays and the theater are woven deeply into the history of many cities such as London. Prior to the first theaters being built, shows took place in pageant wagons.
on pageant wagons.
A mystery play is a kind of f vernacular drama in Europe during the Middle Ages. It was played on pageant wagons which provided both scaffold stage and dressing room.
Some plays were performed in churches. These would have been mystery plays, miracle plays, and morality plays intended to instruct in the Bible or issues of morality. Some plays were staged on special wagons set up for the purpose. These were performed in church yards sometimes. They were also staged in towns, at fairs, at crossroads where a lot of people might go by, and wherever the actors thought they could make money.
A pageant wagon was used as a place for actors who were not associated with the church to perform. It was basically a stage on wheels. The players (actors) would take their pageant wagons all over Europe and perform to the public. The plays were usually presented in a comedic manner and that is why lots of people would go and see the performances.
The point was to spread the teachings of the bible because many people couldnt read at that time. They used to perform the acts in churches but were thrown out because people were watching it for entertainment. The local people then performed the plays each year on pageant wagons.
Mystery plays were performed on wagons, and consisted of series of short subjects usually taken from the Bible.
Audiences. Medieval plays were sometimes performed for royalty or nobility as a part of a feast or entertainment, but they were also performed on wagons during fairs, where they were seen by everyone of all classes.
Plays and the theater are woven deeply into the history of many cities such as London. Prior to the first theaters being built, shows took place in pageant wagons.
Depending on the area of the performances, the plays were performed in the middle of the street, on pageant wagons in the streets of great cities (this was inconvenient for the actors because the small stage size made stage movement impossible), in the halls of nobility, or in the round in amphitheatres, as suggested by current archaeology in Cornwall and the southwest of England. All medieval stage production was temporary and expected to be removed upon the completion of the performances
Well we don't know which morality play is 'the morality play' but usually a morality play focuses on some moral.
Plays in the Middle Ages consisted of Miracle or Morality plays, acted out stories from scripture or intended to reinforce religious teaching. They were performed generally in temporary theatres constructed in fairgrounds or in churches.
In Medieval Europe (esp England), at first in the precincts of the local church, but later in temporary stages set up during festivals and fairs.