Types of production
Numerous forms of spectacle, such as dramatic and nondramatic pageants, the circus, son et lumière, and gymnastic presentations, are closely allied with theatre and indeed are considered by some classifications to be theatrical.
Pageantry
Nondramatic pageantry includes civic processions, such as parades, as well as static displays, such as gymnastic demonstrations. The appeal of nondramatic pageantry lies in coordinated visual spectacle. The performer is presented as a member of the collective, and, even where one individual may stand out, such as the parade “royalty,” he is essentially passive and wins attention merely as the focal point of a number of performers. In certain religious pageants the focal figure is not a living person at all but the icon or statue of a god or saint.
Dramatic pageantry has much in common with the nondramatic: both have communal involvement, stress on visual display, processional or static masses, and fictional or allegorical characters. Segments of the pageant may illustrate a historical or legendary incident, or the pageant as a whole may have a historical, mythical, or allegorical theme. Performers in the United States reenacting the dumping of tea into Boston Harbor exemplify historical pageantry; in England the assault on the Castle of Beauty by Knights of the Mount of Love, a pageant celebrating the marriage of Prince Arthur to Catherine of Aragon in 1501, exemplifies the allegorical type common at Renaissance courts. Pageantry of both the dramatic and nondramatic sort continues to play a significant role in the legitimization of political actions and the assertion of social prestige.
Nondramatic theatre
Nondramatic productions include diverse oral and musical presentations, circus and vaudeville acts, sporting displays, and ceremonial occasions such as the coronation of a monarch. There is no narrative line in such productions, but the technical virtuosity of the performers or the ritual significance of the event becomes the focus of audience attention. There may be the element of catharsis (purging), which Aristotle identified as the aim of tragedy. As a form of presentation, the circus encompasses a wide range of different types of performance, including feats of daring, illusion, and skill. The type of circus performance that comes closest to dramatic theatre is that of clowns. The clown engages in simplified and circumscribed dramatic activity, sometimes a ludicrous parody of other forms of performance, but one that follows established conventions of dress, gesture, and behaviour.
In the latter part of the 20th century, boundaries between types of theatrical production became increasingly eroded. So-called third theatre companies often used circus training techniques, and actors employed juggling and acrobatic skills in their dramatic performances. In the 1980s the Footsbarn company began traveling the world in a manner reminiscent of the medieval and Renaissance players, with productions of Shakespeare that used circus imagery and techniques. Samuel Beckett used the image of the clown in Waiting for Godot to create a parable on the absurdity of the human predicament, perhaps in direct quotation of vaudeville traditions.
Cabaret and vaudeville shows also bring together different types of performance, such as music and dancing, dramatic sketches, feats of daring, and illusion. These productions can take place in any kind of theatre or in nightclubs and restaurants, since staging requirements are usually minimal. It is possible to see this kind of performance as deriving directly from the street entertainers of folk culture and from the entertainments that took place between courses during medieval court banquets.
Dramatic theatre
The most common form of dramatic theatre is the presentation of a scripted play in which the actions of the performers depict a narrative. Typically, performers of such works consist of actors portraying characters, although Sicilian Paladin puppets, Javanese wayang shadow puppets, and Japanese Bunraku puppets are examples of nonliving representations of characters, manipulated by living performers.
In some forms of dramatic production, music and dance may provide or supplement the narrative content. Opera inhabits a special region between drama and music and has prompted much discussion as to the relative importance of literary and musical elements in advancing opera’s dramatic aspects. The musical development of opera predominated in the 17th and 18th centuries, whereas new works and productions since Richard Wagner in the late 19th century have increasingly emphasized dramatic features. Opera is often the site of the greatest innovation in the visual arts of the theatre, attracting ambitious directors and designers who see its aesthetic (and budgets) as appropriate to spectacular experimentation. Operetta and musical comedy are often seen as more closely allied to the theatre than to opera (see theatre music and opera).
Over the course of the 20th century, the musical, which developed out of the operetta and musical comedy as an indigenous American theatrical genre, became a powerful art form in its own right. Beginning with Oscar Hammerstein and Jerome Kern’s Show Boat in 1927 and proceeding by way of the Rogers and Hammerstein musicals to the work of Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim, the musical exhibited a growing sophistication and maturity in both themes and techniques. The modern musical integrates singing, dancing, and acting to a degree that no other Western theatre form attempts. It is usually the most expensive (and potentially remunerative) genre in contemporary theatre.
Dance theatre
While dance usually is recognized as an art in its own right, it sometimes shares so many features with the theatre that it is difficult to distinguish the two. Dance figured strongly in the early development of drama in the West and remains an essential feature of African and Asian drama.
Dance theatre, combining elements of dramatic presentation and dance, may be considered a separate art form. Originally this type of performance was predominantly American, though the term Tanztheater (“dance theatre”) was adopted by an independent theatre founded in Wuppertal, W.Ger., in the mid-1970s by Pina Bausch. Bausch, who sought to break down the traditional boundaries between theatrical forms by melding movement, environment, fragmented narrative, and sound, was one of the most innovative performers in European theatre in the 1980s.
Mime
Mime remains closely connected to drama, being merely a highly specialized form of enactment. Relying on movement without words, it enjoyed an immense vogue in imperial Rome, contributed to the style of commedia dell’arte, and underwent a revival in the latter half of the 20th century at the hands of such French performers as Jean-Louis Barrault and Marcel Marceau. While dramatic actors are often taught the elements of mime, as a performance practice it remains a distinct entity.