This book provides a detailed analysis of the conventions and techniques
of performance characteristic of the Greek theatre of Menander and the
subsequent Roman theatre of Plautus and Terence. Drawing on literary and
archaeological sources, and on scientific treatises, David Wiles
identifies the mask as crucial to the actor's art, and shows how
sophisticated the art of the mask-maker became. He also examines the
other main elements which the audience learned to decode: costume,
voice, movement, etc. In order to identify features that were unique to
Hellenistic theatre he contrasts Greek New Comedy with other traditions
of masked comedy, and shows how different Roman conventions of
performance rest upon different underlying assumptions about religion,
marriage and class. David Wiles offers theatre historians and
classicists a radical new approach to reading play texts. His book will
also be useful to archaeologists seeking to understand what masks mean
and how Greek and Roman theatres were used.