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Drama
Hema Goswami
Visiting faculty at Maharani
Shree Nandkunvarba Mahila
Arts and Commerce College
GSET Qualified (2018)
Drama: An Introduction
• Performance
• Action on the stage
• Purification of heart
• Salvation
• Characterization, plot, dialogues
• Portrayal of fictional and non-fictional events
• Stage, film, radio
• Play and playwrights
Development
• Greek Drama: Religious ceremonies
• Medieval period: re-enactment of the
biblical stories
• Industrial Revolution: ‘Death of a
Salesman’ by Arthur Miller
• ‘I Will Marry When I Want’ by Ngugi wa
Thiong’o
3 E
Education Enlightenment Entertainment
Popular Types of Drama
Comedy
Tragedy
Tragic-
comedyFarce
Melodrama
6 elements of drama
Ancient and Medieval
Drama
• Drama arose in 10th century in
monastries
• Religion explained to illiterate
using the plays
• Events of Christian ritual
celebrations
• Liturgical dramas
• Whom do you seek Easter
Trope (925)
• Regularis Concordia by
Ethewold of Winchester
Anglo-Norman Period
• The battle of Hastings
• Introduction of Anglo Norman as the
language
• French words entered the English
Lexicon
• English began to be discarded in favor
of French and Latin
• Le Mystere D’ Adam :Earliest Play
Anglo Norman Drama
1. Le Jeu d’ Adam
 The Play of Adam in old
french
 Dramatic representation of
the stories from Bible
 It dramatises the fall of Adam
and Eve in the Garden of
Eden and the story of their
sons, Cain and Abel
2. Seinte Resurrection
• Resurrection of the Saviour
• It deals with the burial and
Resurrection of Christ
• Historical Realism Style
• Only 522 lines remains
3. Le Jeu De Saint
Nicholas
• The play of St Nicholas
• Miracle play by Jean Bodel
• Characters like Saracen King,
Tervagan, Preudom are very
important
Drama of the Age of Revival
Mystery
- Stories from bible
Eg- Noah and The
second Shepherds
(Wakefield Cycle)
Miracle
-lives of saints
Eg- The
conversion of St
Paul, Mary
Magdalene, the
play of the
sacrament
Morality
- Life of man, his
temptation,
sinning, quest for
salvation
Eg- The Castle of
Perseverance(142
5), Everyman
Dramatist of the Age of Revival
Henry Medwall
• Nature (Morality Play)
• Fulgens and Lucrece (1497)
John Rastell
• Of gentylnes and nobylyte
• The nature of the four elements
• Calisto and Melibea
John Bale (BD and DD)
• King Johan
• A comedy Concernynge Thre Lawes
• The image of both churches
Elizabethan Age (1550-1625)
• Most glorious and Golden period of
English History
• Time of intense religious conflict
• Great advances in the realm of Science
and technology
• Drama was the dominant genre
• Establishment of theatre, The Rose,
The Swan and The Globe (1576)
• Gorboduc (first English tragedy), Ralph
Roister Doister (first English comedy)
• 1603-1625 is sometimes taken as
Jacobean Period
Dramatists of Elizabethan Age
1. University Wits
• John lyly, George Peele,
Robert Greene,
Christopher Marlowe,
Thomas Loadge, Thomas
Nashe, Thomas kyd
• Heroic themes, style and
treatment
• Tragic in nature
John Lyly
1. Woman in the moon
2. Endymion
3. Sappho and Phao
4. Midas
5. Mother Bombie
6. Love’s
Metamorphosisi
George Peele
1. Arraignment of
Paris (1584)
2. The Battle of
Alcazar (1594)
3. The old wives tale
Robert Greene
1. He is the founder of
romantic comedy
2. Honorable history of
Friar Bongay and Friar
Bacon
3. Pandosto: The triumph
of Wit (from this
Shakespeare drew the
plot for A Winter’s Tale
4. Th ehistory of Orlando
Furioso
5. Philomela
2. William Shakespeare
• Most of his plays written in quarto texts, on a
sheet of paper folded in four ways.
• His literary life can be divided into four main
periods: -
• Pre-1594 (King Richard III, The Comedy of
Errors)
• 1594-1600 (King Henry V, A Midsummer’s
night’s Dream)
• 1601-1608 (Macbeth, King Lear)
• Post-1608 (Cymbeline, The Tempest)
Shakespeare’s Comedies
All’s Well
That Ends
Well
The Comedy
of Errrors
Love’s
Labor’s Lost
The Winter’s
Tale
Taming of
the Shrew
The
Merchant of
Venice
As You Like
It
Cymbeline
The Tempest
Shakespeare’s Tragedies
Romeo and
Juliet
Macbeth
King Lear
The tragedy
of Julius
Caesar
Othello
Hamlet
Antony and
Cleopatra
The history of
Troilus and
Cressida
Cymbeline
Shakespeare’s Historical Plays
King
John
Edward II
Richard
II
Henry VI
Part 1,2,3
Henry V
Henry IV
Part 1.2
Richard
III
Henry
VIII
Other Elizabethan Dramatists
1. George Chapmen: His first extant play was “The Blind Beggar of Alexandria”
2. Thomas Heywood: he was called prose Shakespeare by Charles Lamb, his first
play was The Four Prentices of London
3. Ben Johnson: His first major success ‘Every Man in his Humor’ elaborated his
famous theory of humors
4. Thomas Dekker: most successful play was ‘The Honest Whore’ (1604-05)
5. John Marston: Histriomastix is considered as his first play.
6. Thomas Middleton: his earliest surviving independent play was ‘Blurt,Master
Constable’ (1602)
7. John Webster: his first individually written play was ‘The Devil’s Law Case’, a
tragicomedy
8. Beaumont and Fletcher: their collaboration started in 1607, they worked
together on more than 50 plays
Restoration Age (1660-1700)
• In 1660 monarchy was restored in
England with King Charles II which led
to complete restoration of Puritanical
Ideas
• Drama was the most popular trend in
restoration
• The Heroic Drama and the Comedy of
Manners
• John Dryden was the main exponent of
Heroic Drama
Heroic Drama
• Larger than life characters
• Highly rhetorical dialogues
• The plot of the play involved the fate of an
Empire
• The first Heroic Drama: The Siege of Rhodes by
Sir William D’ Avenant
• Dryden's first Heroic Drama “The Indian Queen”
(1664) was joint effort with Robert Howard
• Dryden’s other Heroic Plays: Tyrranic Love
(1669), The Conquest of Granada (1670),
Amboyna (1673), Aureng- Zebe (1675)
• Dryden and his genre of heroic plays were
mocke dby Buckingham’s burlesque “The
Rehearsal” (1671)
Comedy of Manners
• Life, ideals and manners of
upper class society
• Relations and intrigues of Men
and Women
• Influenced by Ben Johnson’s
Comedy of humors
• Main Dramatists of this form:
William Congreve, George
Etherege, Wycherley and
Aphra Ben
Main Dramatists of Restoration age
1. George Etherege: His first play “The Comical revenge or Love in a
Tub” premiered at the Duke’s Theatre in 1664
2. William Wycherley: his first play “Love in a wood” was performed
by king’s Men at Theatre Royal, in 1671. His two successful
comedies were “The Country Wife” and The Plain Dealer”.
3. William Congreve: His first play “The Old Bachelor” was first acted
in January, 1693
4. Aphra Ben: first professional woman writer, her first play, The
For’d Marriage appeared in 1670
5. John Vanbrugh: first comedy play- The Relapse: Or Virtue in
Danger- sequel to Colley Cibber’s Love’s Last Shift
6. George Farquhar: his first comedy, “Love and a Bottle” (1698) was
performed at Drury Lane in 1699.
Neo Classical drama
• Neo-Classical or Augustan Drama refer to the
Dramas of ancient Rome during the reign of
Caesar Augustus
• In drama it was an age in transition between the
highly witty and sexually playful Restoration
Comedy.
• During the 18th century, drama steadily declined.
Only remarkable dramatists shone out during
this age.
• Goldsmith, Joseph Addison and Richard Steele
were a few prominent figure.
Oliver Goldsmith
1. She stoops to conquer
or Mistakes of a night was
performed in London in
1773
2. The play’s heroine is
Kate hardcastle who falls
in love with Chalrles
Marlow
3.The play deals with the
theme of social class
Joseph Addison
1. Addison is famous as
an essayist
2. He began contributing
to essay “The Tatler”
which Richard Steele had
founded in 1709
3. Another periodical: The
Spectator
4. ‘Cato’, a play with
political overtones
Richard Steele
1. His first play ‘The
Funeral or Grief a-la-
mode, was performed at
Drury Lane Theater in
1701
2. ‘The dear Prue’ of a
series of delightful letters
had been addressed to
the second wife of Steele,
Mary Scurlock,
3. ‘The Conscious lover’ a
popular play
The Age of Johnson
• It is also referred as the age of sensibility
• Samuel Johnson was the most famous poet, critic
and playwright and fictional writer
• He focused on qualities of intellect, reason, balance
and order
• His hundreds papers were contributed to ‘The Idler’
• His only play ‘Irene; is a Neo-classical Tragedy
• Most notable work of this age: A Philosophical
Inquiry into the Origins of Our Ideas on the Sublime
and Beautiful by Burke, The Rambler by Johnson,
The Vicar of Wakefield by Goldsmith
The Victorian Drama
• During this age the theatre took
back seat due to other issues
like growth of industry, labour
legislation etc.
• Oscar Wilde: Lady
Windermere’s fan, a woman of
no importance
• John Millington Synge: Riders to
the Sea, The Playboy of the
western world
• Dion Boucicault: The Colleen
Bawn, The Shaughraun
Modern Age Drama
• Modern Drama focused on the theme of Alienation and
disconnection
• Realism is the outstanding quality of Modern English drama
• Henry Ibsen popularized realism in Modern Drama.
• Modern dramatists dealt with the problems of marriage, justice, law,
administration etc
• Henry Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House” is a good example of Problem play
• Drama of ideas rather than Action
• Poetic drama: The Dog beneath the skin and The Ascent of F6:
Tragedy in two acts (Collaborators: WH Auden and Christopher
Isherwood
• Historical Plays: Caesar and Cleopatra by Shaw, Abraham Lincoln
and Mary Stuart by John Drinkwater
Major dramatists of Modern Age
1. Henry Ibsen:
• His first play Catilina, was published under the pseudonym ‘Brynjolf
Bjarme’ , His first play to be staged, ‘The Burial Mound’
• He is known as father of Modern Drama
• His play ‘Brand’ brought him the critical acclaim
• In ‘Hedda Gabler’ and ‘The Master Builder’ he explored
psychological conflict
2. Lady Gregory
• She was born as Isabella
Augusta Persse
• She helped, found the Irish
National Theatre Society and
served as manager of the
Abbey Theatre in Dublin
• Her first play ‘The Jackdow
and a Losing Game
• Her first performed play was
‘Twenty Five’
3. George Bernard Shaw
• He is the only person to have been
awarded both the Noble Prize in
Literature and an Oscar for his work on
the film Adaption of his plays,
‘Pygmalion’
• His early plays, ‘Widowers’ Houses’,
‘The Philanderer’ and ‘Mrs Warren’s
Profession’ have been characterized as
‘unpleasant plays
• Arms and the man, Candida, You
never can tell, The Man of Destiny
were ‘pleasant plays’
Contemporary Drama
• It began with the
rejection of 19th century
realistic model
• Epic theatre, theatre of
cruelty and the theatre of
absurd took the centre
stage
• Brechtian Epic Theatre,
Artaud’s Theatre of
Cruelty
Major Contemporary dramatists
1. Bertolt Brecht
• German poet and playwright
• He is known for his anti-Aristotalean epic
theatre
• His first play: Baal (1922)
• His play ‘Mother Courage and Her Children’
was written against the backdrop of the rise
of Hitler.
• Other plays: Drums in the Night, Jungle of the
Cities, Man equals Man, A respectable
wedding
2. Arnold Wesker
• British Dramatist born in 1932
• He wrote three plays in the
beginning of his career,
‘Chicken Soup with Barley’,
‘Roots’, ‘ I’ m talking about
Jerusalem’
• He describes in these plays
East End’s Jews search for
security, principles and
happiness
3. Tom Stoppard
• He is a Czech born British Playwright
• He scored his first success with the play
‘Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are dead’
(inspired from Shakespeare’s Hamlet) in
1966
• Other works: If you’re Glad I’ll be Frank,
Jumpers, Travesties, The Real Inspector
Hound, every Good boy deserves Favor
etc
Conclusion
• Drama has developed a lot from beginning to present
time
• There is always the change of theme between all these
ages
• Playwrights reflects the reality, the society, cultural
background, philosophy, problems through their work of
art
• All the plays were a transition between the classical
drama and the plays we see today
Drama from ancient to contemporary

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Drama from ancient to contemporary

  • 1. Drama Hema Goswami Visiting faculty at Maharani Shree Nandkunvarba Mahila Arts and Commerce College GSET Qualified (2018)
  • 2.
  • 3. Drama: An Introduction • Performance • Action on the stage • Purification of heart • Salvation • Characterization, plot, dialogues • Portrayal of fictional and non-fictional events • Stage, film, radio • Play and playwrights
  • 4. Development • Greek Drama: Religious ceremonies • Medieval period: re-enactment of the biblical stories • Industrial Revolution: ‘Death of a Salesman’ by Arthur Miller • ‘I Will Marry When I Want’ by Ngugi wa Thiong’o
  • 6. Popular Types of Drama Comedy Tragedy Tragic- comedyFarce Melodrama
  • 8. Ancient and Medieval Drama • Drama arose in 10th century in monastries • Religion explained to illiterate using the plays • Events of Christian ritual celebrations • Liturgical dramas • Whom do you seek Easter Trope (925) • Regularis Concordia by Ethewold of Winchester
  • 9. Anglo-Norman Period • The battle of Hastings • Introduction of Anglo Norman as the language • French words entered the English Lexicon • English began to be discarded in favor of French and Latin • Le Mystere D’ Adam :Earliest Play
  • 10. Anglo Norman Drama 1. Le Jeu d’ Adam  The Play of Adam in old french  Dramatic representation of the stories from Bible  It dramatises the fall of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden and the story of their sons, Cain and Abel
  • 11. 2. Seinte Resurrection • Resurrection of the Saviour • It deals with the burial and Resurrection of Christ • Historical Realism Style • Only 522 lines remains 3. Le Jeu De Saint Nicholas • The play of St Nicholas • Miracle play by Jean Bodel • Characters like Saracen King, Tervagan, Preudom are very important
  • 12. Drama of the Age of Revival Mystery - Stories from bible Eg- Noah and The second Shepherds (Wakefield Cycle) Miracle -lives of saints Eg- The conversion of St Paul, Mary Magdalene, the play of the sacrament Morality - Life of man, his temptation, sinning, quest for salvation Eg- The Castle of Perseverance(142 5), Everyman
  • 13. Dramatist of the Age of Revival Henry Medwall • Nature (Morality Play) • Fulgens and Lucrece (1497) John Rastell • Of gentylnes and nobylyte • The nature of the four elements • Calisto and Melibea John Bale (BD and DD) • King Johan • A comedy Concernynge Thre Lawes • The image of both churches
  • 14. Elizabethan Age (1550-1625) • Most glorious and Golden period of English History • Time of intense religious conflict • Great advances in the realm of Science and technology • Drama was the dominant genre • Establishment of theatre, The Rose, The Swan and The Globe (1576) • Gorboduc (first English tragedy), Ralph Roister Doister (first English comedy) • 1603-1625 is sometimes taken as Jacobean Period
  • 15. Dramatists of Elizabethan Age 1. University Wits • John lyly, George Peele, Robert Greene, Christopher Marlowe, Thomas Loadge, Thomas Nashe, Thomas kyd • Heroic themes, style and treatment • Tragic in nature
  • 16. John Lyly 1. Woman in the moon 2. Endymion 3. Sappho and Phao 4. Midas 5. Mother Bombie 6. Love’s Metamorphosisi George Peele 1. Arraignment of Paris (1584) 2. The Battle of Alcazar (1594) 3. The old wives tale Robert Greene 1. He is the founder of romantic comedy 2. Honorable history of Friar Bongay and Friar Bacon 3. Pandosto: The triumph of Wit (from this Shakespeare drew the plot for A Winter’s Tale 4. Th ehistory of Orlando Furioso 5. Philomela
  • 17. 2. William Shakespeare • Most of his plays written in quarto texts, on a sheet of paper folded in four ways. • His literary life can be divided into four main periods: - • Pre-1594 (King Richard III, The Comedy of Errors) • 1594-1600 (King Henry V, A Midsummer’s night’s Dream) • 1601-1608 (Macbeth, King Lear) • Post-1608 (Cymbeline, The Tempest)
  • 18. Shakespeare’s Comedies All’s Well That Ends Well The Comedy of Errrors Love’s Labor’s Lost The Winter’s Tale Taming of the Shrew The Merchant of Venice As You Like It Cymbeline The Tempest
  • 19. Shakespeare’s Tragedies Romeo and Juliet Macbeth King Lear The tragedy of Julius Caesar Othello Hamlet Antony and Cleopatra The history of Troilus and Cressida Cymbeline
  • 20. Shakespeare’s Historical Plays King John Edward II Richard II Henry VI Part 1,2,3 Henry V Henry IV Part 1.2 Richard III Henry VIII
  • 21. Other Elizabethan Dramatists 1. George Chapmen: His first extant play was “The Blind Beggar of Alexandria” 2. Thomas Heywood: he was called prose Shakespeare by Charles Lamb, his first play was The Four Prentices of London 3. Ben Johnson: His first major success ‘Every Man in his Humor’ elaborated his famous theory of humors 4. Thomas Dekker: most successful play was ‘The Honest Whore’ (1604-05) 5. John Marston: Histriomastix is considered as his first play. 6. Thomas Middleton: his earliest surviving independent play was ‘Blurt,Master Constable’ (1602) 7. John Webster: his first individually written play was ‘The Devil’s Law Case’, a tragicomedy 8. Beaumont and Fletcher: their collaboration started in 1607, they worked together on more than 50 plays
  • 22. Restoration Age (1660-1700) • In 1660 monarchy was restored in England with King Charles II which led to complete restoration of Puritanical Ideas • Drama was the most popular trend in restoration • The Heroic Drama and the Comedy of Manners • John Dryden was the main exponent of Heroic Drama
  • 23. Heroic Drama • Larger than life characters • Highly rhetorical dialogues • The plot of the play involved the fate of an Empire • The first Heroic Drama: The Siege of Rhodes by Sir William D’ Avenant • Dryden's first Heroic Drama “The Indian Queen” (1664) was joint effort with Robert Howard • Dryden’s other Heroic Plays: Tyrranic Love (1669), The Conquest of Granada (1670), Amboyna (1673), Aureng- Zebe (1675) • Dryden and his genre of heroic plays were mocke dby Buckingham’s burlesque “The Rehearsal” (1671)
  • 24. Comedy of Manners • Life, ideals and manners of upper class society • Relations and intrigues of Men and Women • Influenced by Ben Johnson’s Comedy of humors • Main Dramatists of this form: William Congreve, George Etherege, Wycherley and Aphra Ben
  • 25. Main Dramatists of Restoration age 1. George Etherege: His first play “The Comical revenge or Love in a Tub” premiered at the Duke’s Theatre in 1664 2. William Wycherley: his first play “Love in a wood” was performed by king’s Men at Theatre Royal, in 1671. His two successful comedies were “The Country Wife” and The Plain Dealer”. 3. William Congreve: His first play “The Old Bachelor” was first acted in January, 1693 4. Aphra Ben: first professional woman writer, her first play, The For’d Marriage appeared in 1670 5. John Vanbrugh: first comedy play- The Relapse: Or Virtue in Danger- sequel to Colley Cibber’s Love’s Last Shift 6. George Farquhar: his first comedy, “Love and a Bottle” (1698) was performed at Drury Lane in 1699.
  • 26. Neo Classical drama • Neo-Classical or Augustan Drama refer to the Dramas of ancient Rome during the reign of Caesar Augustus • In drama it was an age in transition between the highly witty and sexually playful Restoration Comedy. • During the 18th century, drama steadily declined. Only remarkable dramatists shone out during this age. • Goldsmith, Joseph Addison and Richard Steele were a few prominent figure.
  • 27. Oliver Goldsmith 1. She stoops to conquer or Mistakes of a night was performed in London in 1773 2. The play’s heroine is Kate hardcastle who falls in love with Chalrles Marlow 3.The play deals with the theme of social class Joseph Addison 1. Addison is famous as an essayist 2. He began contributing to essay “The Tatler” which Richard Steele had founded in 1709 3. Another periodical: The Spectator 4. ‘Cato’, a play with political overtones Richard Steele 1. His first play ‘The Funeral or Grief a-la- mode, was performed at Drury Lane Theater in 1701 2. ‘The dear Prue’ of a series of delightful letters had been addressed to the second wife of Steele, Mary Scurlock, 3. ‘The Conscious lover’ a popular play
  • 28. The Age of Johnson • It is also referred as the age of sensibility • Samuel Johnson was the most famous poet, critic and playwright and fictional writer • He focused on qualities of intellect, reason, balance and order • His hundreds papers were contributed to ‘The Idler’ • His only play ‘Irene; is a Neo-classical Tragedy • Most notable work of this age: A Philosophical Inquiry into the Origins of Our Ideas on the Sublime and Beautiful by Burke, The Rambler by Johnson, The Vicar of Wakefield by Goldsmith
  • 29. The Victorian Drama • During this age the theatre took back seat due to other issues like growth of industry, labour legislation etc. • Oscar Wilde: Lady Windermere’s fan, a woman of no importance • John Millington Synge: Riders to the Sea, The Playboy of the western world • Dion Boucicault: The Colleen Bawn, The Shaughraun
  • 30. Modern Age Drama • Modern Drama focused on the theme of Alienation and disconnection • Realism is the outstanding quality of Modern English drama • Henry Ibsen popularized realism in Modern Drama. • Modern dramatists dealt with the problems of marriage, justice, law, administration etc • Henry Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House” is a good example of Problem play • Drama of ideas rather than Action • Poetic drama: The Dog beneath the skin and The Ascent of F6: Tragedy in two acts (Collaborators: WH Auden and Christopher Isherwood • Historical Plays: Caesar and Cleopatra by Shaw, Abraham Lincoln and Mary Stuart by John Drinkwater
  • 31. Major dramatists of Modern Age 1. Henry Ibsen: • His first play Catilina, was published under the pseudonym ‘Brynjolf Bjarme’ , His first play to be staged, ‘The Burial Mound’ • He is known as father of Modern Drama • His play ‘Brand’ brought him the critical acclaim • In ‘Hedda Gabler’ and ‘The Master Builder’ he explored psychological conflict
  • 32. 2. Lady Gregory • She was born as Isabella Augusta Persse • She helped, found the Irish National Theatre Society and served as manager of the Abbey Theatre in Dublin • Her first play ‘The Jackdow and a Losing Game • Her first performed play was ‘Twenty Five’
  • 33. 3. George Bernard Shaw • He is the only person to have been awarded both the Noble Prize in Literature and an Oscar for his work on the film Adaption of his plays, ‘Pygmalion’ • His early plays, ‘Widowers’ Houses’, ‘The Philanderer’ and ‘Mrs Warren’s Profession’ have been characterized as ‘unpleasant plays • Arms and the man, Candida, You never can tell, The Man of Destiny were ‘pleasant plays’
  • 34. Contemporary Drama • It began with the rejection of 19th century realistic model • Epic theatre, theatre of cruelty and the theatre of absurd took the centre stage • Brechtian Epic Theatre, Artaud’s Theatre of Cruelty
  • 35. Major Contemporary dramatists 1. Bertolt Brecht • German poet and playwright • He is known for his anti-Aristotalean epic theatre • His first play: Baal (1922) • His play ‘Mother Courage and Her Children’ was written against the backdrop of the rise of Hitler. • Other plays: Drums in the Night, Jungle of the Cities, Man equals Man, A respectable wedding
  • 36. 2. Arnold Wesker • British Dramatist born in 1932 • He wrote three plays in the beginning of his career, ‘Chicken Soup with Barley’, ‘Roots’, ‘ I’ m talking about Jerusalem’ • He describes in these plays East End’s Jews search for security, principles and happiness
  • 37. 3. Tom Stoppard • He is a Czech born British Playwright • He scored his first success with the play ‘Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are dead’ (inspired from Shakespeare’s Hamlet) in 1966 • Other works: If you’re Glad I’ll be Frank, Jumpers, Travesties, The Real Inspector Hound, every Good boy deserves Favor etc
  • 38. Conclusion • Drama has developed a lot from beginning to present time • There is always the change of theme between all these ages • Playwrights reflects the reality, the society, cultural background, philosophy, problems through their work of art • All the plays were a transition between the classical drama and the plays we see today