An undeniable feature of the live theater event is the physical presence of the actor’s body. Some facets of comedy demand or are highlighted by the physical presence of the actor’s body on stage and, therefore, emphasize the importance of the visual as much as the verbal if we consider these texts as pieces of theater rather than as pieces of literature. Aristophanes, Menander, Plautus, and Terence each make use of key techniques which rely on the audience’s awareness of the actor’s physicality and actuality to highlight comic moments in their plays. Whilst not all techniques remain in place across the whole of the period, some techniques recur with enough regularity to form the backbone of this chapter. These key techniques include the a...
This work represents a process of a search of a relationship to the theatre mask and costume, it is ...
The purpose of this research is to identify and summarize the creative stages, components and sequen...
There is no doubt that each of the arts has a material from which the aesthetic achievement is built...
How do audiences look at actors in costume onstage? How does costume shape theatrical identity and f...
Acting on stage is a mode of performing an action, in the context of which the bodily aspects implic...
There has been a great deal of useful research on the appearance of Greek theatre as it was acted on...
International audienceUsing both textual and iconographic sources, this richly illustrated book exam...
Slapstick has rarely been analyzed in any detail and it is only in very recent years that popular f...
Actor Movement: Expression of the Physical Being is a textbook and video resource for the working ac...
In physical theatre 'the best performances tend to affect audiences viscerally and proceed from inst...
In Greek tragedy, characters, masks and actors form a compact unity, whereas comic masks are usually...
The purpose of the article is to argue the factor of pretending in the technique of the theater and ...
The present work has the purpose of thinking about the term dramaturgy which is commonly associated ...
Through the mask, the individual has the potential to challenge the understanding of who they are th...
Donning and removing the performer’s mask in full view of spectators creates an instant transformati...
This work represents a process of a search of a relationship to the theatre mask and costume, it is ...
The purpose of this research is to identify and summarize the creative stages, components and sequen...
There is no doubt that each of the arts has a material from which the aesthetic achievement is built...
How do audiences look at actors in costume onstage? How does costume shape theatrical identity and f...
Acting on stage is a mode of performing an action, in the context of which the bodily aspects implic...
There has been a great deal of useful research on the appearance of Greek theatre as it was acted on...
International audienceUsing both textual and iconographic sources, this richly illustrated book exam...
Slapstick has rarely been analyzed in any detail and it is only in very recent years that popular f...
Actor Movement: Expression of the Physical Being is a textbook and video resource for the working ac...
In physical theatre 'the best performances tend to affect audiences viscerally and proceed from inst...
In Greek tragedy, characters, masks and actors form a compact unity, whereas comic masks are usually...
The purpose of the article is to argue the factor of pretending in the technique of the theater and ...
The present work has the purpose of thinking about the term dramaturgy which is commonly associated ...
Through the mask, the individual has the potential to challenge the understanding of who they are th...
Donning and removing the performer’s mask in full view of spectators creates an instant transformati...
This work represents a process of a search of a relationship to the theatre mask and costume, it is ...
The purpose of this research is to identify and summarize the creative stages, components and sequen...
There is no doubt that each of the arts has a material from which the aesthetic achievement is built...