Theatre History
A curated collection of courses, lesson plans, and resources from the Drama Teacher Academy.
Courses
Hands-On Theatre History: Anti-Realism
by Wendy-Marie Martin
Hands-On Theatre History: Creating a Modern Day Morality Play
by Wendy-Marie Martin
Curriculum
Theatre History
by Drama Teacher Academy
Units
Agatha Rex and Ancient Greek Theatre
by Angel Borths
Ancient Greek Theatre
by Lindsay Price
Ancient Greek Theatre
by Karen Loftus
Ancient Greek Theatre - It's All Greek to Me! *Hyperdoc
by Lea Marshall
Anti-Realism
by Wendy-Marie Martin
Comedy of Manners
by Lindsay Price
East Meets West: Theatre Traditions
by Marsha Walner
Elizabethan Theatre
by Karen Loftus
Musical Theatre History Museum Project
by Annie Dragoo
Overview: Theatre History
by Drama Teacher Academy
Realism and Naturalism
by Drama Teacher Academy
Unit 1: Before and Beyond Ancient Greek Theatre
by Drama Teacher Academy
Unit 3: Medieval Theatre
by Drama Teacher Academy
Unit 4: Commedia Dell'Arte
by Drama Teacher Academy
Lesson Plans
Compare and Contrast: Theatre spaces
by Lindsay Price
Emergency Lesson Plan: Elements of Greek Tragedy
by Lindsay Price
Emergency Lesson Plan: Introduction to Molière
by Lindsay Price
Introduction to Medieval Theatre
by Ruth Richards
Medieval Drama - Morality Plays
by Lindsay Price
Medieval Drama - The Mystery Play
by Lindsay Price
Part 1: Ancient Egypt
by Drama Teacher Academy
The 21st Century Story
by Lindsay Price
The Ancient Greeks
by Lindsay Price
The Ancient Greeks - Handout
by Lindsay Price
The Globe Theatre
by Lindsay Price
Where Did Drama Begin?
by Ruth Richards
Who is Thespis?
by Lindsay Price
Who is Thespis? Project Version
by Lindsay Price
Individual Resources
A Guide to the Elizabethan Age
Directing the Absurd Play
Elizabethan Theatre
Theatre Eras: Commedia dell'Arte
Theatre Eras: Elizabethean
Theatre Eras: Japanese
Theatre Eras: Medieval
Theatre Eras: Roman
PLCs
Theatre History
Hosted by Matt Webster, Lindsay Price, Lea Marshall, Wendy-Marie Martin
Theatre History should be a part of every drama curriculum. But with all the plays and dates and people and places how do you avoid a month of textbooks, tests, and learning by rote? How do you make theatre history come alive in your classroom? Can you make it active? Can you make it fun? Join us for this discussion on bringing the past to life in the present.