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Twentieth Century Theatre & the Theatre of the Absurd Photos in this lecture come from the film version of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead.

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Presentation on theme: "Twentieth Century Theatre & the Theatre of the Absurd Photos in this lecture come from the film version of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead."— Presentation transcript:

1 Twentieth Century Theatre & the Theatre of the Absurd Photos in this lecture come from the film version of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead

2 What are the essential qualities of theatre? It is live; it is shared; it is communal Each performance is unique, susceptible to change and therefore dangerous  Unpredictable things could happen – someone forgets a line, drops something, the lights go out, or something happens in the audience. It is the co-existence of the there and then and the here and now  While in the audience, we perceive what is happening on the stage as the time period portrayed, yet we sit there in our time watching it all happen.

3 The aim of theatre theory & practice in the twentieth century Theatre has explored itself in relation to our in response to film and TV  Are these media [film & TV] ‘theatre’? They are the media through which most of us experience naturalistic, mimetic performance. The response is no – theatre is not finished like a film or TV show. Even when TV is live, we are at home alone, not part of a group audience. Also, film and TV look more real – there is much more pretend in theatre. Theatre in twentieth century is no longer a mainstream source of live entertainment and leisure  Other live entertainments are more popular, such as concerts, sports, comics, etc…

4 Directors and Actors Directors became important and had a great influence on the course of theatre in the 20 th century.  They often rewrote parts of scripts and completely reinterpreted a play into a different time period for example. Performers also asserted themselves as creative artists, not merely interpretative artists.  Performers had a say in their roles and lines rather than just acting what was on a written page.

5 Realism vs. Symbolism & Expressionism Realism  popular as it mimics television and movies However, Playwrights felt they could do more with the field Symbolism and Expressionism  more pronounced in theatre than in TV or film  share the characteristics of dreams  look to the common un- conscious of humankind  Distortion, Fragmentation or blending of characters occurs  Use of silence, repetition, & consciously symbolic lighting effects.

6 Theatre of the Absurd A reaction to the disappearance of the religious dimension form contemporary life  Authors felt that life is meaningless; there is no hope of salvation – thus their plays reflected these ideas. An attempt to restore the importance of myth and ritual to our age, by making man aware of the ultimate realities of his condition  Not everything is scientific and can be figured out – so plays showed illogic of life. Shows that language is unreliable  There are so many clichés in language that it doesn’t convey real human thought Language in plays can be purposefully confusing. As in Hamlet, language means something and sometimes nothing

7 Theatre of the Absurd Settings are very generalized and could be anywhere Identity is not fixed  Often the characters forget who they are! Merging of the comic and tragic  However frantically characters perform only underlines the fact that cannot do anything to change their existence


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