I found myself sometimes laughing when something serious would be happening, and this was because of the expression that was permanently on the mask. At times the single look couldn’t portray human life and emotion correctly. With this said, it is interesting to think about how Aeschylus deliberately wrote humorous moments in the dialogue to bring comedy into tragedy, and maybe my laughter was provoked by that element (Aeschylus xiv). But I highly doubt this because I was laughing at how they looked, not what they said. So to fix this, I might research how different expressions on masks could look more neutral so that the body language could set the mood instead of the mask. Also, I wished the live production had used three main actors like the original production would have used, making it a more successful version of the Oresteia (we know the three actor rule was not upheld because Clytemnestra and Cassandra were on stage together) (xii-xiii). With the masks and costumes covering the entire body it would have been possible to stick to three actors, and the vague entrances in the text could have provided for the support to make this
I found myself sometimes laughing when something serious would be happening, and this was because of the expression that was permanently on the mask. At times the single look couldn’t portray human life and emotion correctly. With this said, it is interesting to think about how Aeschylus deliberately wrote humorous moments in the dialogue to bring comedy into tragedy, and maybe my laughter was provoked by that element (Aeschylus xiv). But I highly doubt this because I was laughing at how they looked, not what they said. So to fix this, I might research how different expressions on masks could look more neutral so that the body language could set the mood instead of the mask. Also, I wished the live production had used three main actors like the original production would have used, making it a more successful version of the Oresteia (we know the three actor rule was not upheld because Clytemnestra and Cassandra were on stage together) (xii-xiii). With the masks and costumes covering the entire body it would have been possible to stick to three actors, and the vague entrances in the text could have provided for the support to make this