Friday, 14 August 2015

The Three-Actor Rule

All the known and surviving Greek tragedies include more than three speaking roles or parts. The three actors' rule, always strictly applied, limited the number of actual persons allowed to play these parts to three. This means that the actors in a production had to take on more than one role or part in a given play. The three actors had to portray all the roles in any classical drama. This rule had interesting consequences.

The spoken parts of a Greek play [excluding the chorus] were played by professional paid actors. The three-actors rule ket the costs of the production down, as the actors themselves were paid for by the state, The participants of the chorus were played by amateurs [ordinary citizens],  the training of the chorus and the costumes of the participants were paid for by a prominent and rich citizen.

Extract from
Reperformances And The Transmission Of Texts by P.J. Finglass
https://bit.ly/2EOrUgA
Publisher: De Gruyter
Year: 2015
DOI identifier: 10.1515/tc-2015-0016
Repository@Nottingham

"The very earliest re-performances, of classical tragedy will usually have involved the poet who composed the work. Today the roles of playwright, director, and producer are separate and almost always undertaken by different people; in classical Greece, all these functions were played by the same man [the didaskalos] . In the early days of tragedy there was only one actor, the playwright himself [Thespis?]. The origin of the professional actor lies in the decision, attributed to Aeschylus, to introduce the second actor, who ex hypothesis could not be played by the first. actor/playwright; Sophocles is said to have introduced the third. The playwright continued to be one of the actors for a while; Sophocles is said to have been the first dramatist who recused himself from this role on the ground of his weak voice. Over time, however, the two roles separated thanks to growing specialisation; the qualities required to be a good writer of poetry only partly overlap with the qualities needed by a good actor, and a man who could devote himself to only one of these tasks was likely to produce work of a higher quality and thus attract greater appreciation from his audience."
A Word of Warning

When translating Greek drama into other languages, translators may choose to follow the three-actor rule or to adapt it for modern audiences. Some translators choose to stick to the original three-actor rule in order to maintain the integrity of the text and the historical context in which it was written.

Others may choose to deviate from the rule, either by adding more actors to the performance or by having actors play multiple roles. This can be done for various reasons, such as to make the play more accessible to contemporary audiences, to highlight certain themes or characters, or to create a more dynamic and visually interesting performance.

References

The Context of Ancient Drama: Eric Csapo and William J. Slater Internet Archive
Chapter IV - Actors and Audience pp. 221-85
              IVA. Actors and Acting
                       IVAi. Actors in the Classical Period pp. 221-4
                       Sources  pp. 224-38 Poet/Actors; The Poets' Actors; Actors Competitions; Structure and 
                       Financing of Acting Troupe; The Rise of the Acting Profession.
                       IVAii. The Artists of Dionysus pp 225-55
   

 Aristotle. Poetics. Courier Corporation. pp. 19–. ISBN 978-0-486-15802-0.

Aristotle, Poetics, section 1449a 16-19 - Perseus Project

Dionysos, étude sur l'organisation matérielle du théâtre athénien: Octave Navarre - Internet Archive
pp 216-221  §76 La règle des trois acteurs.
pp 221-229  §77 Distribution des rôles entre les acteurs.

The so-called rule of three actors in the classical Greek drama - Rees, Kelley

Review: The Three Actors (Kelley Rees)
Reviewed Work: The Rule of Three Actors in the Classical Greek Drama; A Dissertation... for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy by Kelley Rees
Review by: A. W. Verrall
The Classical Review
Vol. 23, No. 6 (Sep., 1909), pp. 191-193
Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/695362


Clifford Ashby (1999). Classical Greek Theatre: New Views of an Old SubjectChapter 9: Ramifications of the Three Actor Rule: University of Iowa Press. pp. 128–. ISBN 978-1-58729-463-1.

The Three-Actor Rule
Clifford Ashby
Theatre Research International / Volume 20 / Issue 03 / Autumn 1995, pp 183-188

Aeschylus and the Third Actor
Bernard M. W. Knox
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DOI: 10.2307/292905

Gerald Frank Else (1957). Aristotle's poetics: the argument... Brill Archive. pp. 167–.

The Case of the Third Actor
Gerald F. Else
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H. D. F. Kitto. Greek Tragedy. The Dramatic Art of Sophocles: 1. The Third Actor: Routledge. pp. 151–. ISBN 978-1-317-76145-7. 

Sifakis, G. M. (1995). THE ONE‐ACTOR RULE IN GREEK TRAGEDY. Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies40(S66), 13-24

Silence in Tragedy and the Three-Actor Rule
Alfred Cary Schlesinger
Classical Philology
Vol. 25, No. 3 (Jul., 1930), pp. 230-235
Published by: The University of Chicago Press

The Ins and Outs of the Three-Actor Rule
Alfred Cary Schlesinger
Classical Philology
Vol. 28, No. 3 (Jul., 1933), pp. 176-181
Published by: The University of Chicago Press

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Joseph A. Dane
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Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press
DOI: 10.2307/3207361

Casting the Oresteia
C. W. Marshall
The Classical Journal
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Actor and Character in Greek Tragedy Author(s): Mark Damen Source: Theatre Journal, Vol. 41, No. 3, Performance in Context (Oct., 1989), pp. 316-340 Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/3208183

The Meaning of Parachoregema
Author(s): Kelley Rees
Source: Classical Philology , Oct., 1907, Vol. 2, No. 4 (Oct., 1907), pp. 387-400
Published by: The University of Chicago Press


The One-Actor Rule in Greek Tragedy
G.M. Sifakis
Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. Supplement
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choregos as an actor-playwright - Google Scholar

The Dramatic Festivals Of Athens: Pickard-Cambridge, Arthur - Internet Archive
Chapter 3 - THE ACTORS pp. 126-76

A. TERMINOLOGY, etc.. pp. 126-35

1. Υποκριτής pp 126-7
2. τραγώδος, κωμωδός, and kindred words pp. 127-32 
3. πρωταγωνιστής, δευτεραγωνιστής, τριταγωνιστής pp. 132-5

B. NUMBER OF ACTORS AND DISTRIBUTION OF PARTS pp. 135-56

1. The 'three-actor rule' (in tragedy and satyric drama) pp. 135
2. κωφὰ πρόσωπα and παραχορηγήματα  pp. 135-7
3. Consequences of limitation of number p. 137
4. Actors and distribution in Aeschylus pp. 137-8
5. Actors and distribution in Sophocles pp. 138-40
6. Actors and distribution in Euripides pp. 140-9
7. Actors and distribution in Aristophanes pp. 149-54 
8. Actors and distribution in New Comedy pp. 154-6 

C. DELIVERY-SPEECH, RECITATIVE, AND SONG
1. Terminology and testimonia pp. 156-8
2. Delivery of tetrameters pp 158- 60
3. Delivery of anapaestic dimeters pp 160-2
4. Delivery of iambic trimeters associated with lyrics pp 162-4
5. Delivery in comedy pp.164-5
6. Flute (aulos) and lyre 165-7

D. VOICE AND ENUNCIATION pp. 167-71

E. GESTURE pp. 171-6


Comedy

MacDowell, D. M. (1994). The Number of Speaking Actors in Old Comedy. The Classical Quarterly, 44(2), 325–335. http://www.jstor.org/stable/639637

Performance in Greek and Roman Theatre - Google Books pp. 257-278.

Ioannis M. Konstantakos. (2005). The Drinking Theatre: Staged Symposia in Greek Comedy. Mnemosyne, 58(2), 183–217. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4433633





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