06 - Chapter 1 PDF
06 - Chapter 1 PDF
06 - Chapter 1 PDF
a Greek word meaning ‘action’, drawn from the Greek verb dran, ‘to do’.
Drama begins in make- believe, in the play acting of children, in the ritual
someone other than himself, much as a child does, much as primitive people
still do. Thus, like play-acting and ritual, drama creates its experience by doing
this allows participants not to learn facts only, as they would from a book or in a
how they feel about this situation or person, whether it be a war- torn town or
the wolf in the ‘Three Little Pigs’. Every interaction with another character or
label for the sentimental plays dealing with contemporary problems. In the
it is the first and cardinal element in drama. The second element is the presence
of an audience.
Drama like prose fiction, utilizes plot and characters, develops a theme,
arouses emotions or appeals in its dealings with life. Like poetry, it may draw
upon all the resources of language, including verse. But drama has a
story usually involving, conflicts and emotions exhibited through action and
Drama is neither primitive ritual nor child’s play, but it does share with
them the essential quality of enactment. This quality should remind us that
drama is not solely a form of literature. Once it was literary art and represent
national art. As literary art, a play is a fiction made out of words. It has a plot,
characters and dialogue. But it is a special kind of fiction- a fiction acted out
rather than narrated. In a novel or short story, we learn about characters and
events through the words of a narrator who stands between us and them, but in a
play nothing stands between us and the total make-up of its word. Characters
seeing it enacted. For one thing, readers do not have the benefit of the
performance.
interpretation remains in our mind and is not translated to the stage. The
experience. For a fuller experience of the drama when reading plays, one should
keep in mind the historical period and the conventions of staging that are
lines and visualize a setting in which those lines are spoken. When we are in the
theatre, we see the actors, hear the lines are aware of the setting and sense the
other level we realize that serious statements about our society are being made.
Drama is like most other literature in that is both entertains and instructs.
Some plays are meant to be read as well as staged, as evident in plays
audience, such as the colors of the character’s eyes, character’s secret motives
and other such details. It is not a certainly that seeing a play will produce an
experience more ‘true’ to the play’s meaning than reading it. Every act of
can say which the best interpretation is. Each has its own merits and the ideal is
probably to do both for any play. Each of the great ages of drama has affected
the way plays are written, acted and staged in successive ages. Today for
represents the precise reality that we take for granted in our everyday
experience. Rather, drama ranges widely and explores multiple realities, some
of which may seem very close to our own and some of which may seem
When Aristotle wrote about drama in the poetics a work providing one of
the imitation of an action. Those analyzing his work have interpreted this
statement in several ways. One interpretation is that drama imitates life. From
the beginning, drama has had the capacity to hold up on illusion of reality like
the reflection in a mirror-we take the reality for granted while recognizing that it
most drama is not drawn from our actual experience of life, but from our
potential or imagined experience. In the great Greek drama, the illusion includes
the narratives of ancient myths that were thought to hold profound illumination
for the populace. The interpretation of the myths by the Greek playwrights over
a three hundred-year period helped the Greek people participate in the myths,
The Greeks of the fifth century B.C. are credited with the dominating
dramatic age, which lasted from the birth of Aeschylus (525 B.C) to the death of
on stage. The Greeks felt that their plays were exceptionally realistic and yet
their actors spoke in verse and wore masks. The staging consisted of very little
setting and no special costumes. Medieval drama was often acted on push
occasionally conversing with the crowd at their feet near the apron of the stage.
more scenery than the suggesting of it in the spoken descriptions of the players.
The actors recited their lines in verse, except when the author wanted to imply
that the speaker was of low social station. Yet Elizabethans reported that their
In modern drama the dramatic illusion of reality has grown to include not
just the shape of an action, the events and characters but also the details of
primary purpose, shaping the tone of the language to reflect the way modern
people speak, re-creating contemporary reality in the setting, language and other
Verse drama :
drama. In poetic drama the dialogue is written in verse which in English usually
means blank verse, (blank verse consists of lines of iambic pentameter which
are unrhymed) and in French in the twelve syllables line called an Alexandrine.
providing an artistic reason to write in this form, as well as the practical one that
Closet drama :
and stage directions, but is intended by the author to be read rather than to be
performed. Most plays, after all, are written to be performed. Those eccentric
few that are not-that are written only to be read we usually refer to as closet
dramas, very little can take place in a closet, but anything is possible in the
theatre. For most of us, however, the experience of drama is usually confined to
have to be creative readers as well. We have to imagine drama on the stage, not
only must we attend to the meanings and implications of words-we also have to
other one is Comedy. In this chapter I have tried to express elaborately the two
major parts of drama and its importance and value. Because without
The tragedy is presented in the form of action, not narrative. It will arouse
pity and fear in the audience as it witnesses the action. It allows for an arousal
of this pity and fear and creates an affect of purgation or catharsis of these
strong emotions by the audience. Tragedy is serious by nature in its theme and
deals with profound problems. These profound problems are universal when
the center of the drama that is a great person, usually of upper class birth. He is
a good man that can be admired, but he has a tragic flaw, a hamartia, that will
be the ultimate cause of his down fall. This tragic flaw can take on many
characteristics but it is most often too much pride or hubris. The protagonist
always learns, usually too late, the nature of his flaw and his mistakes that have
caused his downfall. He becomes self-aware and accepts the inevitability of his
fate and takes full responsibility for his actions. We must have this element of
inevitability in tragedy. There must be a cause and effect relationship from the
beginning through the middle to the end or final catastrophe. It must be logical
in the conclusion of the necessary outcome. Tragedy will involve the audience
in the action and create tension and expectation. With the climax and final end
the audience will have learned a lesson and will leave the theatre not depressed
The Greeks were the first and perhaps the greatest practitioners of
tragedy. They were the first to theorize about what tragedy was and what made
it ‘work’. Tragedy was first defined by the Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-
322 B.C.) who inferred its essential elements from witnessing the plays of his
own time. He traced tragedy to the satyr plays in which the characters were
half- man half- goat. The term was applied to all plays of high seriousness, with
or without an unhappy ending. Much of what has been written and said about
the poetics.
down in the poetics, cannot be expected to explain all the tragedies that have
ever been written; no single theory could possible do so. But Aristotle’s theory
has influenced more dramatists- and critics- than any other propounded since
his time, and thus it remains the best guide we have to the nature of tragedy.
Tragedy is usually divided into two basic kinds; Traditional and Modern.
A lot of great tragedies were traditional tragedies. The modern kind did not
fate. The character usually feels helpless but after the situation becomes too
difficult, and the character realizes that there is no honorable avenue of escape,
they decide to meet their fate. The hero then accepts responsibility for his or her
actions and at most times shows a willingness to suffer for whatever they
deserve. Another thing that sets traditional tragedy and modern apart is the
actual language of the play. In traditional tragedy the language is verse. This is
because often times the character is found trying to express profound ideas;
dealing with and expressing extreme emotions in a human's life; most find that
this is best expressed in poetry. In Traditional tragedies there are many morals,
and hold so much meaning, that most people can spend their lives analyzing
In Modern tragedies, kings and queens are not the central figures, and the
language in which the play is written is "prose" rather than "verse". Modern
tragedy is a form of tragedy which relates to our modern age. Many playwrights
of modern drama argue that we do not have so many kings and queens in real
life today, as we did before. This being said, they claim we can, and do, still
have characters today who stand as symbolic figures for important segments of
society. While traditional tragedy uses eccentric language and poetry to convey
the plot, the movements and gestures used elements; such as sound and light, all
of a character appeared much stronger when they weren't displayed directly into
the text.
convey the same message and ask the same questions: "Why do people suffer,
why violence does and injustice exists, what is the meaning of our lives."
Comedy :
ordinary situations. Comedy often begins with a sad or difficult situation but
human feelings rather than tragedy’s disastrous crimes. Its ending will usually
be happy for the leading character. The more topical ‘comedy of ideas’ in the
plays of George Bernard Shaw. Among its less sophisticated forms are
which the materials are selected and managed primarily in order to interest and
amuse us: the characters and their discomfitures engage our pleasurable
attention rather than our profound concern, we are made to feel confident that
no great disaster will occur, and usually the action turns out happily for the
chief character. The term “Comedy” is customarily applied only to plays for the
stage or motion pictures; it should be noted, however, that the comic form, so
Comedy a form of drama that is intended to amuse and that ends happily.
Comedy differs from Farce and Burlesque by having a more sustained plot,
more weighty and subtle dialogue, more natural characters and less boisterous
behavior. However, the borderline between comedy and other dramatic forms
Since comedy strives to amuse, both wit and humor are utilized. The
range of appeal is wide, varying from the crude effects of low comedy, to the
the religious drama, the morality plays and interludes, and the performances of
discovery of Latin comedy and the effort to apply the rules of classical criticism
compositions marked by a happy ending and by less exalted style than was
found in tragedy.
By Plato comedy is defined as the generic name for all exhibitions which
have a tendency to excite laughter. Though its development was mainly due to
the political and social conditions of Athens, it finally held up the mirror to all
has been arranged in three divisions, or rather should they be termed variations
in form-the old, the middle and the new-and these will be convenient to follow.
Old Comedy :
It was upon this stock that the mighty genius of Aristophanes grafted the
Pantagruelism, which, ever since it was reproduced by Rabelais, has had among
characters sustained by court fools, he made a free use both of the spirit and
mechanical appliances of old Greek comedy, adopting the disguise of
buffoonery to attack some prevailing form of cant and hypocrisy. And this is
precisely what Aristophanes did, the term invented by the great French master
Dramatic comedy grew out of the boisterous choruses and dialogue of the
fertility rites of the feasts of the Greek god Dionysus. What became known to
particular situation was thoroughly exploited through farce, fantasy, satire, and
New Comedy :
Comedy gradually declined and was replaced by less vital and imaginative
drama. New Comedy, generally considered to have begun in the mid-4th cent.
B.C., the plays were more consciously literary, often romantic in tone, and
decidedly less satirical and critical. Menander was the most famous writer of
New Comedy.
During the middle Ages the Church strove to keep the joyous and critical
aspects of the drama to a minimum, but comic drama survived in medieval folk
plays and festivals, in the Italian commedia dell'arte, in mock liturgical dramas,
such as Tamburlaine (1587), Dr. Faustus (1588) and The Jew of Malta (1589).
Marlowe was one of the best known names of a group of dramatists known as
the University Wits. These playwrights had contact with the classical tragedies.
Marlowe dealt with the conflict within the mind of man himself. He, as
Shakespeare, wrote plays on human ambition. The character could pour out his
man’s life were much involved. He seemed also to be influenced by the Senecan
model in revenge and in using blank verse as well. His style in each play
assonances and balance of adjectives in both halves of the lines in his poetical
arrangement. Several new tones were added into blank verse. Eliot described
him in his Essays on Poetry and Criticism that “Marlowe was a deliberate and
conscious workman.
the greatness of man. The most obvious fact about an Elizabethan audience was
His genius actually springs from applying poetic language to drama. Being a
creative man in poetry and drama, he realized early that the play must come first
and the words however brilliant must be subservient to it. Shakespeare wrote
With the Renaissance, a new and vital drama emerged. In the 16th century the
tradition of the interlude, developed by John Heywood and others, blended with
that of Latin classic comedy produced the great. This form reached its highest
comedies ranged from the farcical to the tragicomic, was the master of the
classical tenets and wrote caustic, rich satire. The performers of Elizabethan
comedy were not only expected to dance but also to be able to sing.
the middle of his career, such as As You Like It and Twelfth Night, not only
display with great skill many sides of human nature, but with indescribable
poetry and sparkling with wit, and bring before our imaginations whole series of
delightful scenes.
"The Tempest" does more than this. While it gives us again much of the
charm of the earlier comedies, it is laden with the mellow wisdom of its author's
riper years.
the like.
Comedy of Humours :
derived largely from the exhibition of “humorous” Characters; that is, persons
exaggerated trait of character gave each important figure in the action a definite
bias of disposition and supplied the chief motive for his action. Jonson’s Every
but more to a desire to imitate the classical comedy of Plautus and Terence.
Satiric purpose and realistic method are emphasized in the comedies, which
later into more serious character studies, as in Jonson’s The Alchemist. The
period.
Comedy of Manners :
the commedia dell'arte in the drama of Molière, one of the greatest comic and
satiric writers in the history of the theater. After a period of suppression during
the Puritan Revolution, the English comic drama remerged with the witty,
and depends completely on the lines delivered and the dialogue and not so much
on the actions. The wit of the dialogue and how it is manipulated is makes it
funny, not the characters or situation. This type of comedy is for upper class
Towards the end of the 17th century, however, such stern reaction had set in
against the bawdiness and frivolity of the Restoration stage that English comedy
descended into a new form known as sentimental comedy. This drama, which
sought more to evoke tears than laughter, had its counterpart in France in the
comédie larmoyante.
In the stricter sense of the term, the type is concerned with the manners
atmosphere and satire. The prose dialogue is witty and polished. One
Comedy of Morals :
pride, avarice, social pretensions, simony and nepotism. Moliere is the supreme
playwright in the genre. Ben Jonson and Shaw are other notable instances.
Romantic Comedy :
made as real and down to earth as possible and the plays often involve
endings. Perhaps the most popular of all comic forms both on stage and on
screen is the romantic comedy. In this genre the primary distinguishing feature
is a love plot in which two sympathetic and well-matched lovers are united or
likeable, and apparently meant for each other, yet they are kept apart by some
Satirical Comedy :
Satire is comedy without punch lines. Often human error is poked fun at
albeit in a very serious manner. Often mistakes made by those in power and
celebrities are made fun. Very sophisticated and requires much knowledge on
the situation at hand. The subject of satire is human vice and folly. Its characters
hypocrites, and fortune-seekers and the gullible dupes, knaves, goofs, and
other types of comedy in that they trace the rising fortune of a central character.
However, in this case, the central character (like virtually everybody else in the
Aristophanes’ The Birds, Ben Jonson's Volpone. In its most extreme forms (e.g.,
the movies Fargo and Pulp Fiction), satirical comedy spills over into so-called
grotesque.
Farce :
the situation is, the more hilarious it is. For example, someone wakes up and
finds a goat in their bathtub. Characters can range from normal actors to
caricatures. Actors always stay in character because it is easy for the audience to
tell when humour is strained. The identifying features of farce are zaniness,
typically fantastic or absurd and usually far more ridiculous than those in other
forms of comedy. At the same time, farcical plots are often full of wild
intrigues involving deception, disguise, and mistaken identity are the rule.
Panther movies, and the films of the Marx Brothers and Three Stooges.
In England during the late 18th century a resurgence of the satirical and
witty character comedies was found in the plays of Sheridan. After an almost
complete lapse in the early to mid-19th cent., good comedy was again brought
to the stage in the comedies of manners by Oscar Wilde and in the comedies of
ideas by George Bernard Shaw. In the late 1880s the Russian dramatist Anton
Chekhov began writing his subtle and delicate comedies of the dying Russian
aristocracy.
for people to pass from village to village, some in carts, uttering the vile jests
and abuse unjustly attributed to the tragic choruses; others on foot, bearing aloft
the Phallic emblem and singing the praises of Phales, the comrade of Bacchus.
In cities it was also the custom, after an evening banquet, for young men to
roam around the streets with torches in their hands, headed by a lyre or flute-
player. Such a band of revelers was called a comu, and a member of the band a
The Phallic processions were continued till the days of Aristotle, and idea
was provided about the orations of Demosthenes that the riotous youths who
of the coarsest kind were part of the exhibitions, and hence, probably, it was
that comedy found a home at Athens during the time of Pericles, for it furnished
the demagogues with a safe and convenient means of attacking their political
chorus, though less numerous and costly than the dithyrambic choir, and the
actors, at first without masks, disguised their features by smearing them with the
lees of wine.
In his Poetics the Greek philosopher Aristotle put forth the idea that ("A
view of a plot structure (with a beginning, middle, and end – technically, the
protasis, epitasis, and catastrophe) prevailed until the Roman drama critic
Horace advocated a 5-act structure in his Ars Poetica: "Neue minor neu sit
quinto productior actu fabula" (lines 189-190) ("A play should not be shorter or
The third act is the climax, or turning point, which marks a change, for
the better or the worse, in the protagonist’s affairs. If the story is a comedy,
things will have gone badly for the protagonist up to this point; now, the tide, so
to speak, will turn, and things will begin to go well for him or her. If the story is
a tragedy, the opposite state of affairs will ensue, with things going from good
to bad for the protagonist. Simply put, this is where the main part happens or the
The denouement comprises events between the falling action and the
actual ending scene of the drama or narrative and thus serves as the conclusion
of the story. Conflicts are resolved, creating normality for the characters and a
Etymologically, the French word dénouement is derived from the Old French
word dénouer, "to untie", and from nodus, Latin for "knot." In simple words
protagonist is better off than at the story's outset. The tragedy ends with a
catastrophe in which the protagonist is worse off than at the beginning of the
comedy As You Like It, in which couples marry, an evildoer repents, two
disguised characters are revealed for all to see, and a ruler is restored to power.
The evolution of comedy is much simpler than that of its sister art, though
its earlier development has little exact information. With the passing of time
the recipient end has accepted it with appreciation throughout the ages.
from various parts of the world, and the incredible love for this genre among the
contemporaries seems to justify the hope that a worthy future awaits it. This
creative journey will continue adopting the changing colors of the socio-
All plays share some basic elements with which playwrights and
producers work: plot, character, setting, dialogue, movement, themes music and
drama in action together and the total experience is rich, complex and subtle.
characterization, for instance- but that is rare. Our awareness of the elements of
drama is most useful when we are thinking analytically about a play and the
Plot :
The plot in a dramatic or narrative work is constituted by its events and
actions, as these are rendered and ordered towards achieving particular artistic
and emotional effects. Plot is a term for the action of a drama. Plot implies that
the action has a shape and form that will ultimately prove satisfying to the
explanation of what happened before the play began and of how to characters
arrived at their present situation. The play then continues, using suspense to
build tension in the audience and in the characters in developing further the
pattern of Rising Action. The audience wonders what is going to happen, sees
the characters set in motion, and then watches as certain questions implied by
the drama are answered one by one. The action achieves its greatest tension as it
chief characters. Once the climax has been reached, the plot continues,
better than they did at the beginning of the play. The function of plot is to give
action a form that helps us understand elements of the drama in relation to one
another. Often, plays can have several interrelated plots or only one.
The events of a play; the story as opposed to the theme; what happens
rather than what it means. The plot must have some sort of unity and clarity by
setting up a pattern by which each action initiating the next rather than standing
alone without connection to what came before it or what follows. In the plot of
a play, characters are involved in conflict that has a pattern of movement. The
action and movement in the play begins from the initial entanglement, through
rising action, climax, and falling action to resolution.
Characterization :
Character are the persons represented in a dramatic or narrative work, who are
and emotional qualities by inferences from what the persons say and their
distinctive ways of saying it- the dialogue and from what they do- the action.
The grounds in the character’s temperament, desires and moral nature for their
The plays have some of the most remarkable characters ever created in
through their own words, through their interaction with other characters,
such as Hedda Gabler, Miss Julie, Nora Helmer and Maurya in Riders to the
sea. But just as effective in certain kinds of drama are characters drawn as types,
drama, and the characters in the first act of Caryl Churchill’s top Girls. Type
characters from their strength and weaknesses. In such plays we live through an
arbitrary sequence of events. Instead we feel that they create their own
These are the people presented in the play that are involved in the
perusing plot. Each character should have their own distinct personality, age,
Setting :
The settings of a play includes many things. First, it refers to the time and
place in which the action occurs. Second, it refers to the scenery, the physical
elements that appear on stage to verify the author’s stage directions. The overall
setting of a narrative or dramatic work is the general locale, historical time and
social circumstances in which its action occurs; the setting of a single episode or
scene within such a work is the particular physical location in which it takes
place. The overall setting of Macbeth, for example, is medieval Scotland, and
the setting for the particular scene in which Macbeth comes upon the witches is
basted heath.
décor, which is a French term denoting both the scenery and the properties or
is more useful, however, to apply the term more broadly, as the French do, to
performance.
Dialogue :
speeches that the characters use to advance the action. Since there is no
must tell the whole story. Fine playwrights have developed ways of revealing
dialogue.
herself. Ordinarily, such speeches take on special importance because they are
thought to be especially true, but when they speak to each other, may well wish
to deceive, but when they speak to themselves, they have no reason to say
Movement :
ritualistic fashion from one side of the stage to the other. Their movement was
play. As we read, stage directions inform us where the characters are, when they
move, how they move and perhaps even what the significance of actors’
They move physically closer to one another as they become closer in their
thinking. Their movement seems o pivot around the barrel and in one of the
most charming moments of the play; they meet each other’s eyes when the
ballad- singer sits on the barrel and comments on the way the sergeant is pacing
back and faith. They then both sit on the barrel, facing in opposite directions
Theme :
What the play means as opposed to what happens (the plot). Sometimes
the theme is clearly stated in the title. It may be stated through dialogue by a
obvious and emerges only after some study or thought. The abstract issues and
The theme of a play is its message, its central concerns- in short, what it
and many plays contain several rather just a single theme. Often, the search for
simple catchphrase.
missing their thematic intentions and reveal them in one or two speeches.
Usually, a careful reader or viewer has already divined the theme and the
speeches are intrusive. But Lady Gregory is able to introduce thematic material
in The Rising of the Moon is spread evenly throughout as is the case in most
good plays.
Music :
can also mean the aspects of the melody and music compositions as with
musical theatre. Each theatrical presentation delivers music, rhythm and melody
in its own distinctive manner. Music is not a part of every play. But, music can
be included to mean all sounds in a production. Music can expand to all sound
effects, the actor’s voices, songs, and instrumental music played as underscore
in a play. Music creates patterns and establishes tempo in theatre. In the aspects
of the musical the songs are used to push the plot forward and move the story to
playwrights to strengthen the themes and ideas of the play. Character’s wants
and desires can be strengthened for the audience through lyrics and music.
Spectacle :
The spectacle in the theatre can involve all of the aspects of scenery,
costumes and special effects in a production. The visual elements of the play
created for theatrical event. The qualities determined by the playwright that
create the world and atmosphere of the play for the audience’s eye.
giving us the feeling that character is dominant over theme, or plot over
character, or setting over both. Ordinarily, critics feel that character, plot and the
theme are the most important elements of drama, while setting, dialogue, music
and movement come next. But in the best of dramas each has its importance and
each balances the others. The interaction of the elements of drama, their balance
and their harmony all imply excellence in the theatre. The plays in this
Comedy exposes human folly, its function is partly critical and corrective.
Congreve are first of all good fun, but secondly they are antidotes for human
folly.