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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almahu_9947414680602882
    Format: 1 online resource (xvi, 311 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 9780511920820 (ebook)
    Content: Alan Hughes presents a new complete account of production methods in Greek comedy. The book summarises contemporary research and disputes, on such topics as acting techniques, theatre buildings, masks and costumes, music and the chorus. Evidence is re-interpreted and traditional doctrine overthrown. Comedy is presented as the pan-Hellenic, visual art of theatre, not as Athenian literature. Recent discoveries in visual evidence are used to stimulate significant historical revisions. The author has directly examined 350 vase scenes of comedy in performance and actor-figurines, in 75 collections, from Melbourne to St Petersburg. Their testimony is applied to acting techniques and costumes, and women's participation in comedy and mime. The chapters are arranged by topic, for convenient reference by scholars and students of theatre history, literature, classics and drama. Overall, the book provides a fresh practical insight into this continually developing subject.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015). , Comedy in art, Athens and abroad -- , Poets of Old and Middle comedy -- , Theatres -- , The comic chorus -- , Music in comedy -- , Acting, from lyric to dual consciousness -- , Technique and style of acting comedy -- , The masks of comedy -- , Costumes of Old and Middle Comedy -- , Comedy and women -- , New Comedy -- , Catalogue of objects discussed: vases, terracottas, other media.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9781107009301
    Language: English
    RVK:
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Book
    Book
    Cambridge [u.a.] :Cambridge Univ. Press,
    UID:
    almahu_BV039734804
    Format: XVI, 311 S. : , Ill.
    Edition: 1. publ.
    ISBN: 978-1-107-00930-1
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Language: English
    RVK:
    Keywords: Griechisch ; Komödie ; Aufführung
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  • 3
    Book
    Book
    Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press
    UID:
    gbv_664909671
    Format: XVI, 311 S. , Ill.
    ISBN: 9781107009301
    Content: "Alan Hughes presents a new complete account of production methods in Greek comedy. The book summarises contemporary research and disputes, on such topics as acting techniques, theatre buildings, masks and costumes, music and the chorus. Evidence is re-interpreted and traditional doctrine overthrown. Comedy is presented as the pan-Hellenic, visual art of theatre, not as Athenian literature. Recent discoveries in visual evidence are used to stimulate significant historical revisions. The author has directly examined 350 vase scenes of comedy in performance and actor-figurines, in 75 collections, from Melbourne to St Petersburg. Their testimony is applied to acting techniques and costumes, and women's participation in comedy and mime. The chapters are arranged by topic, for convenient reference by scholars and students of theatre history, literature, classics and drama. Overall, the book provides a fresh practical insight into this continually developing subject"--
    Content: "Theatre is a mimetic art, composite and ephemeral. Directed by an underlying aesthetic, conscious or intuitive, theatrical imitation may be culturally determined or intellectually constructed. Performers deliberately imitate the 'other', whether human or animal, divine or spirit, allegory or force of nature. This mimesis is a compound, a variable array of associated arts, which may include music, dance, song and speech, supported by oral or literary composition. And every performance occurs in a unique, irrecoverable moment of time. Greek theatre is no exception. Ancient performances cannot be revived, but we have learned a good deal about their form and circumstances. This is a book about performance practice, the art of comic theatre in classical Greece. Historically, comedy has been examined less thoroughly than tragedy, in part perhaps because the extant texts are fewer and less representative, and documentary evidence comparatively scarce. While thirty-three extant tragedies are attributed to the three most celebrated poets, we have only eleven comedies by Aristophanes, and one by Menander, with some substantial fragments. The works of their rivals have disappeared"--
    Content: "Theatre is a mimetic art, composite and ephemeral. Directed by an underlying aesthetic, conscious or intuitive, theatrical imitation may be culturally determined or intellectually constructed. Performers deliberately imitate the 'other', whether human or animal, divine or spirit, allegory or force of nature. This mimesis is a compound, a variable array of associated arts, which may include music, dance, song and speech, supported by oral or literary composition. And every performance occurs in a unique, irrecoverable moment of time. Greek theatre is no exception. Ancient performances cannot be revived, but we have learned a good deal about their form and circumstances. This is a book about performance practice, the art of comic theatre in classical Greece. Historically, comedy has been examined less thoroughly than tragedy, in part perhaps because the extant texts are fewer and less representative, and documentary evidence comparatively scarce. While thirty-three extant tragedies are attributed to the three most celebrated poets, we have only eleven comedies by Aristophanes, and one by Menander, with some substantial fragments. The works of their rivals have disappeared"--
    Content: "Alan Hughes presents a new complete account of production methods in Greek comedy. The book summarises contemporary research and disputes, on such topics as acting techniques, theatre buildings, masks and costumes, music and the chorus. Evidence is re-interpreted and traditional doctrine overthrown. Comedy is presented as the pan-Hellenic, visual art of theatre, not as Athenian literature. Recent discoveries in visual evidence are used to stimulate significant historical revisions. The author has directly examined 350 vase scenes of comedy in performance and actor-figurines, in 75 collections, from Melbourne to St Petersburg. Their testimony is applied to acting techniques and costumes, and women's participation in comedy and mime. The chapters are arranged by topic, for convenient reference by scholars and students of theatre history, literature, classics and drama. Overall, the book provides a fresh practical insight into this continually developing subject"--
    Note: Literaturverz. S. 292 - 308 , Machine generated contents note: 1. Comedy in art, Athens and abroad; 2. Poets of Old and Middle Comedy; 3. Theatres; 4. The comic chorus; 5. Music in comedy; 6. Acting, from lyric to dual consciousness; 7. Technique and style of acting comedy; 8. The masks of comedy; 9. Costumes of Old and Middle Comedy; 10. Comedy and women; 11. New Comedy; Catalogue of objects discussed: vases, terracottas, other media; Bibliography.
    Language: English
    RVK:
    Keywords: Griechisch ; Komödie ; Griechenland ; Komödie ; Motiv ; Vasenmalerei
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    UID:
    kobvindex_INT59308
    Format: 1 online resource (330 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781139340090
    Content: Drawing upon a wide range of fresh visual evidence, Alan Hughes presents a new account of comedy production in the classical period. Clearly organised by topic, the book summarises contemporary research and disputes, on such subjects as acting techniques, theatre buildings, masks and costumes, music and the chorus
    Note: Cover -- PERFORMING GREEK COMEDY -- TITLE -- COPYRIGHT -- Contents -- Illustrations -- Preface -- CHAPTER 1: Comedy in art, Athens and abroad -- THE EVIDENCE -- Vases -- Figurines -- Is this evidence reliable? -- FESTIVAL AND COMPETITION -- THE PROFESSION OF ACTOR -- TOURING -- CHAPTER 2: Poets of Old and Middle Comedy -- ARCHAIC COMEDY -- OLD COMEDY AND FESTIVAL -- Magnes -- THE SICILIAN CONNECTION -- Epicharmos -- MATURE OLD COMEDY -- Kratinos -- Krates -- Pherekrates -- Eupolis -- Aristophanes -- Aristophanic comedy -- Lost Aristophanes -- MIDDLE COMEDY -- Professional theatre -- Navigating Middle Comedy -- Aristophanes' Middle Comedies -- Decline of the chorus? -- POETS AND TYPES OF MIDDLE COMEDY -- Myth and tragedy upside-down -- City comedy -- Satire -- THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECORD -- Archaeology, uses and limitations -- Vases, changing comic styles -- Figurines, stage characters -- BEYOND ATHENS -- CHAPTER 3: Theatres -- ATHENS: THE EARLIEST THEATRE -- Orchestra and theatron -- Skene -- SECOND PHASE, 446-440 -- THEATRES OUTSIDE ATTICA -- Lost theatres -- FOURTH-CENTURY STAGES IN THE GREEK WEST -- Taras -- Paestum -- Sicily -- ATHENS: THE STONE THEATRE -- Theatron and orchestra -- Skene -- SPECIAL EFFECTS -- Ekkyklema -- Mechane -- Skene painting -- CHAPTER 4: The comic chorus -- EARLY COMEDY IN WRITING -- EARLY COMEDY IN PICTURES -- Fat men -- Archaic choruses -- Presenting the chorus -- ENTER THE ACTOR -- THE CHORUS IN LATER ART -- CHORIC DANCE -- Formation and size -- The chorus in the Greek west -- DECLINE OF THE CHORUS? -- CHAPTER 5: Music in comedy -- THE AULOS -- Musicians at festivals -- Musicians and convention -- MUSICAL LANGUAGE -- Choral music -- THE NEW MUSIC -- SONG AND DANCE -- CHAPTER 6: Acting, from lyric to dual consciousness -- BEGINNERS ON STAGE -- From poet to actor -- First comic actors -- PLOT AND THE RISING ACTOR , 6 ACTING, FROM LYRIC TO DUAL CONSCIOUSNESS -- 7 TECHNIQUE AND STYLE OF ACTING COMEDY -- 8 THE MASKS OF COMEDY -- 9 COSTUMES OF OLD AND MIDDLE COMEDY -- 10 COMEDY AND WOMEN -- 11 NEW COMEDY -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- ABBREVIATIONS -- TRANSLATIONS OF ANCIENT TEXTS -- MODERN COMMENTARY -- Index , ACTORS IN SOCIETY -- CASTING -- How many actors? -- Doubling opportunities -- Nothing to do with Stanislavsky -- VOICE, SPEECH, MOVEMENT -- AESTHETICS, PROCESS -- Believing characters -- Transitions -- CHAPTER 7: Technique and style of acting comedy -- PHYSICAL CHARACTERIZATION -- THE EVIDENCE -- ATTITUDE, GESTURE -- TYPES OF GESTURE -- Emblems -- Affective gestures -- Manipulators -- ACTING WOMEN -- The maiden -- The wife -- The crone -- PROBLEMS OF INTERPRETATION -- Helping the sick -- Mistaken identity -- Terracotta husbandmen -- CHAPTER 8: The masks of comedy -- WHAT MASKS WERE LIKE -- SIGNIFICANCE OF THE MASK -- Spiritual or practical? -- Mask and metatheatre -- Actor and mask -- Symbolism -- HOW MASKS WERE MADE -- Origins -- Fabric and plaster -- Wood -- MASK TYPES -- CHAPTER 9: Costumes of Old and Middle Comedy -- CHORUSES -- Archaic -- Later choruses -- THE ACTOR'S UNDERCOSTUME -- OUTER COSTUME: EVIDENCE -- The comic costume controversy -- Evidence in two media -- WOMEN'S COSTUME -- Tunics -- Outerwear: cloaks, headgear -- Shoes -- MEN'S COSTUME -- Tunics -- Cloaks -- Shoes -- Headgear -- DEVELOPMENT AND TRANSITION -- CHAPTER 10: Comedy and women -- IMAGINARY WOMEN -- Protagonist roles: Lysistrata, Praxagora -- Deities -- REAL WOMEN -- Women in the audience -- Poets -- Design and production -- WOMEN PERFORMING -- Musicians -- Women on stage -- Mutes -- CHAPTER 11: New Comedy -- CANONICAL POETS -- FAME AND FORTUNE -- NEW THEATRES -- Orchestra -- Logeion -- THE DETACHED CHORUS -- HELLENISTIC THEATRES -- COSTUMES, MASKS -- Identifying mask types -- Old men -- Young men -- Slaves -- Old women -- Young women -- EPILOGUE -- Catalogue of objects discussed -- VASES -- TERRACOTTAS -- OTHER MEDIA -- Notes -- 1 COMEDY IN ART, ATHENS AND ABROAD -- 2 POETS OF OLD AND MIDDLE COMEDY -- 3 THEATRES -- 4 THE COMIC CHORUS -- 5 MUSIC IN COMEDY
    Additional Edition: Print version Hughes, Alan Performing Greek Comedy Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,c2011 ISBN 9781107009301
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books ; Electronic books
    URL: FULL  ((OIS Credentials Required))
    URL: FULL  ((OIS Credentials Required))
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