The document discusses characterization techniques in drama. It describes the basic character roles including the tragic hero, protagonist, antagonist, and confidant. The tragic hero is a noble person whose flaws lead to their downfall. The protagonist is the main character and in tragedies is also the tragic hero. The antagonist opposes the protagonist. Confidants allow characters to express their true feelings to the audience. It also explains that dramatists reveal backstories and future foreshadowing to establish characters as people who exist over time. Characterization devices include physical descriptions, asides where characters share thoughts, and soliloquies where feelings are expressed.
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Drama Hanaaa
The document discusses characterization techniques in drama. It describes the basic character roles including the tragic hero, protagonist, antagonist, and confidant. The tragic hero is a noble person whose flaws lead to their downfall. The protagonist is the main character and in tragedies is also the tragic hero. The antagonist opposes the protagonist. Confidants allow characters to express their true feelings to the audience. It also explains that dramatists reveal backstories and future foreshadowing to establish characters as people who exist over time. Characterization devices include physical descriptions, asides where characters share thoughts, and soliloquies where feelings are expressed.
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THE BASIC CHARACTER ROLES:
Aside from being lovers, wives, husbands, friends, enemies,
etc., characters in dramas have some particular “labels” which are used in the analysis. As we have discussed already in the section on Greek tragedy, we often speak of tragic heroes. The tragic hero, as defined by Aristotle, is a nobleman, neither all good nor all bad, who through some flaw in his character brings death or destruction upon himself or upon someone he loves. The main character in the plot of any drama is known as the protagonist. The tragic hero and the protagonist are the same in a tragedy, for both terms describe the central character. The opponent of the protagonist is known as the antagonist or, in the event that the opposing force is not a person, we speak of the antagonistic force. Another important role in the drama is that of the friend or confidant (feminine, confidante) of the major character. Often both the hero and the heroine have a confidant and a confidante, respectively, so named because the hero and heroine confide in their friend or serving maid or whoever fills the role. The function of a confidant is to give the hero someone to whom to confide onstage, thus allowing the audience to know his true feelings.
THE CHARACTERS IN TIME:
When a character walks onto the stage, we know almost nothing about him. One of the dramatist’s chief concerns, therefore, becomes the presentation-in one way or another —of some information about the character’s past life. We learn through the early speeches of Desdemona and Othello the nature of their courtship. In other words, we must learn action as well as witness action; the same principle of revealing the events prior to the opening of the play operates in revealing deaths offstage. Reporters or sentinels always run onto the stage announcing the death of someone (we saw this to be particularly true in Greek tragedy; recall Antigone). The characters must somehow be brought to be images of real human beings existing in time. They have a past; they are not born in the moment of the play’s opening. And, in the same sense, they have a future. When a character dies in a noble, heroic, and at the same time humanly understandable manner, he goes on living in our minds; and if the character lives at the end of the play, we should be able to make some sort of logical speculation regarding his future. Thus we should always try to determine the extent to which the dramatist has successfully given us the sense of the character in time. And this of course will be accomplished by considering the devices of characterization which the playwright has used.
DEVICES OF CHARACTERIZATION: Every dramatist has at
his fingertips a relatively large galaxy of differing devices of characterization. Some of these devices follow:
The appearance of the character:
In the prologue or in the stage directions the playwright often describes the character in the physical sense. We learn from these stage directions what the character looks like and probably how he dresses; when a character walks onto the stage, it is obvious from his appearance whether he is a meticulous or sloppy person, attractive or unattractive, old or young, small or large, etc. In other words, through the mere appearance of character, we locate our first understanding of him. Asides and soliloquies: All of the further characterizations are of course established through dialogue. We learn about the characters as they speak. And, specifically, we are apt to understand the characters best when they speak in short asides or in longer soliloquies. On these occasions the character is, in effect, telling the audience of his specific characteristics; if he is a villain, he usually explains his evil intentions or at least his malicious hopes; if a lover, he offers us poetic statements of devotion; if a hero is torn between love and duty, he tells us about his conflict and his resulting agony. The use of soliloquies and asides is one of the most expert devices of characterization. THE BASIC CHARACTER ROLES: In addition to being lovers, wives, husbands, friends, enemies, and so on, characters in dramas have some specific "labels" that are used in analysis. As we have already discussed in the section on Greek tragedy, tragic heroes are frequently mentioned. According to Aristotle, the tragic hero is a nobleman who, through some flaw in his character, brings death or destruction upon himself or someone he loves. The protagonist is the main character in any drama's plot. In a tragedy, the tragic hero and protagonist are interchangeable, as both terms describe the central character. The antagonist is the protagonist's adversary; if the opposing force is not a person, we refer to it as the antagonistic force. Another important role in the drama is that of the main character's friend or confidant (feminine, confidante). Both the hero and heroine frequently have a confidant and a confidante, so named because the hero and heroine confide in their friend, serving maid, or whoever fills the role. A confidant's role is to provide the hero with someone to whom he can confide onstage, allowing the audience to learn about his true feelings.
THE CHARACTERS IN TIME: Almost nothing about a character
is known to us before he enters the stage. The giving of some background information about the character's past becomes one of the dramatist's primary priorities as a result. The essence of Desdemona and Othello's courtship is shown in their early utterances. In other words, we must see activity as well as learn from it; the same logic that underlies disclosing the circumstances leading up to the play's start also applies to disclosing off-stage fatalities. When someone passes away, reporters or sentinels always rush onto the platform to announce it (we saw this to be particularly true in Greek tragedy; recall Antigone). The characters must be made in some way to resemble pictures of actual people who existed in time. They are not born at the start of the play; they have a past. They also have a future in the same sense. When a character passes away in a way that is both honorable and humane, he continues to exist in our minds. If the character is still alive at the conclusion of the play, we should be able to logically speculate about what will happen to him in the future. As a result, we should constantly assess how well the dramatist has succeeded in conveying the character's sense of time to us. And of course, this will be achieved by taking into account the devices of characterization. which the playwright has used.
DEVICES OF CHARACTERIZATION: Every dramatist has at
his fingertips a relatively large galaxy of differing devices of characterization. Some of these devices follow:
The appearance of the character:
In the prologue or in the stage directions the playwright often describes the character in the physical sense. We learn from these stage directions what the character looks like and probably how he dresses; when a character walks onto the stage, it is obvious from his appearance whether he is a meticulous or sloppy person, attractive or unattractive, old or young, small or large, etc. In other words, through the mere appearance of character, we locate our first understanding of him. Asides and soliloquies: All of the further characterizations are of course established through dialogue. We learn about the characters as they speak. And, specifically, we are apt to understand the characters best when they speak in short asides or in longer soliloquies. On these occasions the character is, in effect, telling the audience of his specific characteristics; if he is a villain, he usually explains his evil intentions or at least his malicious hopes; if a lover, he offers us poetic statements of devotion; if a hero is torn between love and duty, he tells us about his conflict and his resulting agony. The use of soliloquies and asides is one of the most expert devices of characterization.