Sunday 10 February 2013

The history of Theatre



The word theatre means a “place for seeing,” it originated in Ancient Greece some 5000 years back. but theatre is more than just a building where plays are performed. Theatre is a branch of performing arts that focuses on live performances by actors, which creates a self-contained drama. It’s the whole idea behind what happens there. Since its inception, theatre has taken many forms that involve dance, gestures, and pantomime combined with various other performing arts to portray a single artistic form.

The history of theatre charts the development of theatre over the past 2,500 years. The first buildings used for theatrical performances in Britain were amphitheatres introduced by the Romans, who copied theatres from ancient Greece.



Medieval theatre was presented on elaborate temporary stages inside great halls, barns, or in the open courtyards of galleried inns. It was from these that Elizabethan timber-framed open-air theatres took their form, such as the Globe in London. The most famous Elizabethan playhouse which was built by the company in which Shakespeare had a stake - now often referred to as the Shakespearean Globe as many believe that Shakespeare influenced us by helping make the English language universal, and introduced hundreds of everyday remarks into the language through his plays and poems. 


The History of Medieval Theatre: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WHHbwIPB0j4

Globe Theater Documentary: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVmOric9nUo

By the middle of the nineteenth century theatre building was becoming a specialist architectural discipline, led by architects such as J T Robinson and C J Phipps. Often, older theatres were demolished and rebuilt to accommodate larger audiences. In the auditorium, rectangular galleries began to be replaced by horseshoe-shaped balconies that enveloped the stage and provided better viewing. The intention was to bring respectability to theatre-going and make it more socially acceptable for the middle classes.

The beginning of the twentieth century saw the introduction of a new component – the cinema. It was so popular that new or refurbished theatres often included provision for screening films.  But In 1976, the Theatres Trust Act was passed, founding a new organisation, The Theatres Trust, the National Advisory Public Body for Theatres. It is tasked with protecting theatres and theatre use, and has a statutory role to advice on all planning applications affecting land on which there is a theatre. Further good news for theatres came in 1994, with the creation of the National Lottery. Such funding for the Arts has helped in educating the new generation on theatre and its importance to London’s culture.

  
Sayonara

Joycelyn

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