isn't it kinda ironic that the first time someone saved someone else from being tied to a railroad track on stage was a woman who saved a guy. I mean, I saw this scene like a hundred times the other way around.
NOTES ~~~~~~~ 1) Started in early 19th century 2) mixture of sentimental comedies and tragedy 3) dog melodramas? 4) 4 middle class (illiterate) 5) melodrama began in France 6) melodrama was used to get theatre without license 7) exiting stories (happy endings) 8) 6 stock characters.. (photos) 9: different interments for different stock characters 10: very exaggerated... showing emotions... Lmao yeah this is my notes... I don’t have paper and school is killing me...
funny how most people just come here to comment first. its a 12 minute long video that was released 5 minutes ago.Calm down, enjoy, and understand it first before commenting.
I just want to give so many kudos to this guy for narrating these stories in such an interesting, funny and enjoyable way! Thank you Mike Rugnetta! Thanks for amazing content, guys! This is not only a god help for , particularly in my case, theatre homework, but a wonderful overall educative lessons! Keep it up, please! And also, gotta give huge love to the thoughtbubbles' animations :") so cute!
Let's see. Mean Villain: Bowser Sensitive Hero: Mario? Persecuted Heroine: Peach Clown: That mushroom boy? Faithful Friend: Yoshi Villain's Accomplice: The turtle on a cloud?
I really love this channel! It has so much variety in it's topics, and everything is researched and presented so well. The presenter for this course is especially good(he's the one from the old idea channel, right?!) And the course is seriously cool. The channel has actually been one of the channels that inspired me to make my own youtube-channel in sort of the same vein(with different sciency topics). Of course, I'm not nearly as professional, I've just uploaded a few videos, but I hope to be in the future, because I really love to make videos.
Yay! The Astor Place Riot is next! I wrote a play about that a few years aback. And while doing my research, I found out I was hardly the first, so the lesson is that thespians love plays about how dangerous the theater itself is-- a place where humanity from all classes intermingles while new and revolutionary ideas are expressed.
So I don't really come here for the jokes, but uh... gotta admit... that bit about Hollywood movies being Bourgeois tragedies... really brightened my day.
Sure, where are all the pronunciation police today? What, if it isn't in Japanese or Hindi, no-one cares? Now I just have to pay attention to the excellent content. You cowards.
@@jasonspreyer6009 it's hard not to be snarky about this, but it's difficult to imagine that they'd just pass over one of like 3 playwrights that the average English-speaker would recognize.
Why do we learn other languages and instead make the rest of the world learn English because it is the most prominent language. They learn English while we English speakers learn theirs.
Anyone else got this set as drama homework?😂
Lilly Brown yeah... and for some reason I read your username as Lilly Bobbie Brown...
isn't it kinda ironic that the first time someone saved someone else from being tied to a railroad track on stage was a woman who saved a guy. I mean, I saw this scene like a hundred times the other way around.
NOTES
~~~~~~~
1) Started in early 19th century
2) mixture of sentimental comedies and tragedy
3) dog melodramas?
4) 4 middle class (illiterate)
5) melodrama began in France
6) melodrama was used to get theatre without license
7) exiting stories (happy endings)
8) 6 stock characters.. (photos)
9: different interments for different stock characters
10: very exaggerated... showing emotions...
Lmao yeah this is my notes... I don’t have paper and school is killing me...
for working class*
What?? I was rooting for Laura and Snorky
“And these are the women who ain’t to have a vote!” That’s a pretty woke line for 19th century theater
This is a series where the host, the writers, the editors, the animators, and many others come together and make something great. Thank you!
Great Video! I love how Crash Course is so in-depth and is so interesting! I love Theater and I love this video! Thanks! DFTBA!
The girl totally should've left the captain guy. If he really liked her he would've been willing to work past her past.
funny how most people just come here to comment first. its a 12 minute long video that was released 5 minutes ago.Calm down, enjoy, and understand it first before commenting.
I just want to give so many kudos to this guy for narrating these stories in such an interesting, funny and enjoyable way! Thank you Mike Rugnetta!
Thanks for amazing content, guys! This is not only a god help for , particularly in my case, theatre homework, but a wonderful overall educative lessons! Keep it up, please!
And also, gotta give huge love to the thoughtbubbles' animations :") so cute!
Can we take a moment to appreciate just how hilarious bassoons are?
Almost as funny as trombones!
Laura is too good for Captain Trafford
i had to watch this video for my drama homework. i don't regret watching this
Alex Hughes same here
2:15 is that a little john green?
Yes! 'The Sound and the Fury' is a reference to John's Reddit handle.
10:20 We should have a remake of this play with Batman actually fultoning the bad guy straight to Outer Heaven.
This theatre series is SOOOO good... Would love to know if they are thinking of writing a book on the videos they made, would definetely buy it !
👍 it should have been on their minds by now
Oma Rumunna would be so, so, so cool!!!
Let's see.
Mean Villain: Bowser
Sensitive Hero: Mario?
Persecuted Heroine: Peach
Clown: That mushroom boy?
Faithful Friend: Yoshi
Villain's Accomplice: The turtle on a cloud?
Luigi is definitely the clown, no?
Bike was kidnapped by Batman via Fulton device i guess
I chortled heartily at that "bourgeois tragedy" burn.
4:41 Snuffles who is also called Snowball :)
4:40 Revenge is a treat best served cold.
Theater is so interesting.
03:13 Goethe is so badass. People should know more about him.
I really love this channel! It has so much variety in it's topics, and everything is researched and presented so well. The presenter for this course is especially good(he's the one from the old idea channel, right?!) And the course is seriously cool. The channel has actually been one of the channels that inspired me to make my own youtube-channel in sort of the same vein(with different sciency topics). Of course, I'm not nearly as professional, I've just uploaded a few videos, but I hope to be in the future, because I really love to make videos.
Brilliantly done, also fun to watch .
More power to you, Sir.
Yay! The Astor Place Riot is next! I wrote a play about that a few years aback. And while doing my research, I found out I was hardly the first, so the lesson is that thespians love plays about how dangerous the theater itself is-- a place where humanity from all classes intermingles while new and revolutionary ideas are expressed.
I love the ending/preview for the next episode.
Anybody else exclaim in delight at the Rick and Morty shoutout??😂😂
10:25 You mean chom choms, right?
using this for my essay on melodrama ! this video is so helpful :)
*Video ends*... Gonna go look up Dionysius Boucicault and Augustin Daly. Hello rabbit hole, HERE I COME!
Please can this course never end
What about Gilbert and Sullivan?
I need to see the dog melodramas
Was that Snowball aka Snuffles, from "Rick and Morty"? That was one melodramatic dog!
8:39 still better than Twilight
So I don't really come here for the jokes, but uh... gotta admit... that bit about Hollywood movies being Bourgeois tragedies... really brightened my day.
As a professional bassoon player, I take it as a compliment that we are hilarious.
Educational!
Now onto the Enlightenment era and loving your lessons
Also CANADA FTW!!!
I would love to hear your argument about the bourgeois tragedies of Hollywood.
Love your work, sir
thanks for the homework mate
More dog plays
*@**8:11** - **8:23**: Looks like every domain of work has their own little Thomas Edison!*
Informative
Alas, it is too late that i be a daughter of obscurity and crime.
Yay for happy endings! Bourgeois or not, if I want horror I´ll watch the news.
Cool that there was a Gotham by Gaslight easter egg.
Awesome!
not get hit by runaway chariot
is this python reference?
*FINALLY* !!! What took so long. Missed my series.
Missed you Craig 😳.
I kinda ship Laura and Snorky ngl
y the serious ended....expecting more on Antonin artaud...Gratausky....when can we see them?!
How many more episodes are in the theatre course? I haven't been watching because I want to binge it all.
so basically every mexican telenovella and korean dramas are basically melodramas on steroids.
Can we get sources for this @crashcourse ?
Will you ever cover 19th century ballet or is that not under your definition of theater
Hi
and... they're also worried about trains
First comment! This series keeps on getting better and better! Great job!
Yes this is school work
Daughters of obscurity and crime sound like the best women.
banana sundae
we told you this was melodrama...
did we miss oscar wilde? I feel like we missed oscar wilde. shameful.
Who else has this for hw-
Going out is for the poor.
Where's lorde?
Hello I need the bibliography for this
where's lorde
RIP Mac Miller
Sounds like anime. Well with how ostentatious and silly it is.
make videos about ethics, human rights, laws, and justice
Sure, where are all the pronunciation police today? What, if it isn't in Japanese or Hindi, no-one cares? Now I just have to pay attention to the excellent content. You cowards.
If you guys want to explore a complex under discussed form of theater, try pro wrestling
Lorde’s melodrama might have been a little more interesting of a topic
.
What about Richard Wagner and his plays ?
You mean the guy that wasn't even born until the 19th century? Why would he be in an episode about 18th century melodrama?
I mean theater's in the future of crash course theaters episodes
@@jasonspreyer6009 it's hard not to be snarky about this, but it's difficult to imagine that they'd just pass over one of like 3 playwrights that the average English-speaker would recognize.
I'm just saying
Why do we learn other languages and instead make the rest of the world learn English because it is the most prominent language. They learn English while we English speakers learn theirs.
In fact, spanish and chinese are more spoken than english
2 لايك عربي
T-series are better