The Stagecraft and Performance of Roman Comedy

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Cambridge University Press, 02.11.2006
A comprehensive survey of Roman theatrical production, this book examines all aspects of Roman performance practice, and provides fresh insights on the comedies of Plautus and Terence. Following an introductory chapter on the experience of Roman comedy from the perspective of Roman actors and the Roman audience, addressing among other things the economic concerns of putting on a play in the Roman republic, subsequent chapters provide detailed studies of troupe size and the implications for role assignment, masks, stage action, music, and improvisation in the plays of Plautus and Terence. Marshall argues that Roman comedy was raw comedy, much more rough-and-ready than its Hellenistic precursors, but still fully conscious of its literary past. The consequences of this lead to fresh conclusions concerning the dramatic structure of Roman comedy, and a clearer understanding of the relationship between the plays-as-text and the role of improvisation during performance.
 

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Seite 4 - Epidamnum veniet cum servo suo 70 hunc quaeritatum geminum germanum suom. haec urbs Epidamnus est, dum haec agitur fabula ; quando alia agetur, aliud fiet oppidum.
Seite xiv - Populus convolat : Tumultuantur , clamant, pugnant de loco : Ego interea meum non potui tutari locum.
Seite 287 - Postquam est mortem aptus Plautus. Comoedia luget, Scaena est deserta, dein Risus, Ludus locusque Et Numeri innumeri simul omnes conlacrimarunt.

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