Essays24.com - Term Papers and Free Essays
Search

A Comparison Of The Great Gatsby And The Virgin Suicides

Essay by   •  December 14, 2010  •  1,516 Words (7 Pages)  •  2,474 Views

Essay Preview: A Comparison Of The Great Gatsby And The Virgin Suicides

Report this essay
Page 1 of 7

16th and 17th century performance conditions

„h The form of Elizabethan theatre derived from the innyards and animal baiting rings in which actors had been accustomed to perform in in the past. They were circular wooden buildings with a paved courtyard in the middle. Such a theatre would hold around 3,000 spectators. The yards were about 80 feet in diameter and the rectangular stage 40ft by 30ft in height

„h Groundling only paid a penny to get in, but for wealthier spectators there were seats in the three covered tiers or galleries between the inner and outer walls of the buildings extending round most of the auditorium and stage. It depended on your status as to where you viewed it from

„h The stage was partially covered by a roof or canopy, which projected from the wall of the theatre and was supported by two posts at the front. This protected the stage and performers from the changeable weather. It also used to secure winches and other stage machinery used for stage effects. On either side at the back was the stage door that lead to dressing rooms or tiring house and the actors entered and exited through here.

„h In 1608 the kingÐŽ¦s men acquired a second playhouse, indoors in Blackfriars. It held 700 people with seats for all, facilities for elaborate stage effects and artificial lighting. The price of admission was higher that at public playhouses thus leading to a more selective audience.

„h There was little room for scenery and props and nowhere to store them. Performances had to be transferable from the playhouse to court to private noble houses. Due to lack of scenery and props actors had to explain where they were.

„h Setting was used to suggest dramatic mood or situation. Staging was consistent with many short scenes in quick succession. Because of continuous staging and lack of scenery actors had to tell audience what locality the stage represented.

„h It was impossible to pretend that the audience was not watching a contrived performance. Performance took place during the day due to being in the open and the stage used natural lighting to illuminate characters evenly. Actors wore contemporary dress appropriate for the character.

„h The audience would be aware that they could not lose concentration as well

as the actors because unlike conventional theatre they did not have set or elaborate costume to support the presentation of their character to an audience

„h Public performances generally took place in the afternoon, beginning about three o'clock and lasting perhaps two hours. Candles were used when daylight began to fade. The beginning of the play was announced by the hoisting of a flag and the blowing of a trumpet. There were playbills, those for tragedy being printed in red. Often after a serious piece a short farce was also given; and at the close of the play the actors, on their knees, recited an address to the king or queen. The price of entrance varied with the theater, the play, and the actors; but it was roughly a penny to sixpence for the pit, up to half a crown for a box. A three-legged stool on the stage at first cost sixpence extra; but this price was later doubled.

„h The house itself was not unlike a circus, with a good deal of noise and dirt. On the stage, which ran far out into the auditorium, would be seated a few of the early gallants, playing cards, smoking, waited upon by their pages. At first there was little music, but soon players of instruments were added to the company. The stage was covered with straw or rushes. There may have been a painted wall with trees and hedges, or a castle interior with practicable furniture. A placard announced the scene.. The audience was near and could view the stage from three sides, so that no "picture" was possible. Whatever effects were gained were the result of the gorgeous and costly costumes of the actors, together with the art and skill with which they were able to invest their roles. The inn-court type of stage required a bold, declamatory method in acting and speaking.

„h Elizabethan actors acknowledged the audience. They were not only addressed by monologues, epilogues and choruses but also through soliloquies, which were purposeful for audience benefit. The audience did not question impossibly contrived situations

„h Due to the small percentage of the population that could not read or write, the audience would have been used to receiving information aurally. Due to influences of the church and the time spent listening there, the audience would have been used to retaining large amounts of information and sitting still for long periods.

„h Women first appeared on stage in 1660 whereas before men had played female roles. With the introduction of women the audience would have found it mush easier to associate with the cast.

„h Thomas Haywood suggested that were you to see a soldier on stage ÐŽ§he should be shaped like a soldier, walk, talk and behave like a soldierЎЁ. This was the acting style.

„h It is believed that A Midsummer Night's was first performed between 1595 and 1596. In the Elizabethan era there was a huge demand for new entertainment and A Midsummer Night's Dream would have been produced immediately following the completion of the play. There is a myth that A Midsummer Night's Dream was first performed for a private audience after an actual wedding had taken place. The structure of the

...

...

Download as:   txt (8.9 Kb)   pdf (115.2 Kb)   docx (12.4 Kb)  
Continue for 6 more pages »
Only available on Essays24.com