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The "Father of Tragedy,"
Aeschylus was born in 525 B.C. in the city of Eleusis.
Immersed early in the mystic rites of the city and in
the worship of the Mother and Earth goddess Demeter,
he was once sent as a child to watch grapes ripening
in the countryside. According to Aeschylus, when he
dozed off, Dionysus appeared to him in a dream and ordered
him to write tragedies. The obedient young Aeschylus
began a tragedy the next morning and "succeeded very
easily."
When Aeschylus first began writing, the theatre had
only just begun to evolve. Plays were little more than
animated oratorios or choral poetry supplemented with
expressive dance. A chorus danced and exchanged dialogue
with a single actor who portrayed one or more characters
primarily by the use of masks. Most of the action took
place in the circular dancing area or "orchestra" which
still remained from the old days when drama had been
nothing more than a circular dance around a sacred object.
It was a huge leap for drama when Aeschylus introduced
the second actor. He also attempted to involve the chorus
directly in the action of the play. In Agamemnon,
the chorus of Elders quarrels with the queen's lover,
and in The Eumenides, a chorus of Furies pursue
the grief-stricken Orestes. Aeschylus directed many
of his own productions, and according to ancient critics,
he is said to have brought the Furies onstage in so
realistic a manner that women miscarried in the audience.
Although Aeschylus is said to have written over ninety
plays, only seven have survived. His first extant work,
The Suppliants, reveals a young Aeschylus still
struggling with the problems of choral drama. The tale
revolves around the fifty daughers of Danaus who seek
refuge in Argos from the attentions of the fifty sons
of Aegyptus. His second extant drama, The Persians,
recounts the battle of Salamis--in which Aeschylus and
his brother actually fought--and deals primarily with
the reception of the news at the imperial court. This
play contains the first "ghost scene" of extant drama.
In his third surviving play, Prometheus
Bound, Aeschylus tackles the myth of Prometheus,
the world's first humanitarian. As the play begins,
the titan is being fastened against his will to a peak
in the Caucasian mountains for giving mankind the gift
of fire without the consent of the gods. Prometheus
knows Zeus is destined to fall. In fact, he holds the
secret of the Olympian's doom--a certain woman that
will be his undoing--but Prometheus will not reveal
her name. Even amid the fire from heaven that is hurled
at him in a frightening climax, Prometheus remains fearless
and silent.
In Seven Against Thebes, Aeschylus deals with
themes of patricide and incest. He was not, however,
willing to settle for the conventional explanation of
the "family curse". Instead, Aeschylus delved deeper,
suggesting that heredity is nothing more than a predisposition--that
the true cause of such "acts of wickedness" is ambition,
greed, and a lack of moral fortitude. Thus, eliminating
the gods as an excuse for wickedness, Aeschylus demanded
that men take responsibility for their actions.
The Oresteia,
a trilogy, was performed in 458 BC, less than two years
before Aeschylus' death. Once again, he dealt with the
tragedy of a royal house, a "hereditary curse" which
began in a dim, legendary world in which Tantalus was
cast into the pit of Tartarus for revealing to mankind
the secrets of the gods. This situation paralleled events
in Aeschylus' own life. He was reportedly charged with
"impiety" for revealing the Eleusinian mysteries--the
secret rites of the city of his birth--to outsiders.
It is likely, however, that these charges were politically
motivated, and he was not convicted.
Legend has it that Aeschylus met his death when an
eagle mistook his bald head for a rock and dropped a
tortoise on it. Whatever the cause of his death, his
life laid the groundwork the dramatic arts would need
to flourish, and by the time of his death, there were
two notable successors ready to take his place--Sophocles
and Euripides.
In addition, Aeschylus left behind two sons who would
carry on his dramatic legacy, and one of them, Euphorion,
would even claim first prize at the City Dionysia, defeating
both Sophocles and Euripides in 431 BC.
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