Synopses & Reviews
Collection of essays exploring all aspects of the actor in the Greek and Roman worlds.
Synopsis
Includes bibliographical references (p. 441-478) and indexes.
About the Author
Pat Easterling is Emeritus Regius Professor of Greek at the University of Cambridge, a Fellow of Newnham College and a Fellow of the British Academy. She was Professor of Greek at University College London from 1987 to 1994, and has also served as President of the Classical Association (1989/1990) and the Hellenic Society (1996 1999). In addition to serving as General Editor of the Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics ever since its foundation over thirty years ago, she has published an edition within this series of SophoclesâTrachiniae (1982), co-edited, with B. M. W. Knox, Volume 1 of the Cambridge History of Classical Literature (1985) and edited The Cambridge Companion to Greek Tragedy (1997). She is currently working on an edition of SophoclesâOedipus at Colonus for the Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics series.Edith Hall is Professor of Greek Cultural History at the University of Durham and has previously taught at the Universities of Cambridge, Reading and Oxford. She is Co-Director of the Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama at the University of Oxford and author of Inventing the Barbarian (1989), editor of AeschylusâPersians (1996) and co-editor of Medea in Performance (2000).
Table of Contents
Introduction; Maps; Part I. The Art of the Actor: 1. The singing actors of antiquity Edith Hall; 2. The musicians among the actors Peter Wilson; 3. The use of the body by actors in tragedy and satyr play Kostas Valakas; 4. Towards a reconstruction of performance style Richard Green; 5. The limits of realism in classical acting and performance styles Eric Csapo; 6. Looking for the actorâs art in Aristotle Gregory Sifakis; 7. Acting, actions and words in New Comedy Eric Handley; 8. Acting down Richard Hunter; Part II. The Professional World: 9. Nothing to do with the Technitai of Dionysus? Jane Lightfoot; 10. Actors and actor-managers at Rome in the time of Plautus and Terence Peter G. McC. Brown; 11. The masks on the propylon of the Sebasteion at Aphrodisias John Jory; 12. Images of performance: new evidence from Ephesus Charlotte Roueché; 13. Female entertainers in Late Antiquity Ruth Webb; 14. Actors in the Byzantine theatre: evidence and problems Walter Puchner; Part III. The Idea of the Actor: 15. Actor as icon Pat Easterling; 16. Scholars vs. actors: text and performance Thomas Falkner; 17. Orator and/et actor Elaine Fantham; 18. Acting and self-actualisation in imperial Rome: some death scenes Catharine Edwards; 19. The subjectivity of Greek performance Ismene Lada-Richards; 20. The ancient actorâs presence since the Renaissance Edith Hall; Glossary.