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melodrama

  (mĕl'ə-drä'mə, -drăm'ə) pronunciation
n.
    1. A drama, such as a play, film, or television program, characterized by exaggerated emotions, stereotypical characters, and interpersonal conflicts.
    2. The dramatic genre characterized by this treatment.
  1. Behavior or occurrences having melodramatic characteristics.

[Alteration of melodrame, from French mélodrame, spoken drama that includes some musical accompaniment, melodrama : Greek melos, song + French drame, drama (from Late Latin drāma; see drama).]


 
 

A kind of drama, or a section of one, in which spoken lines are accompanied or punctuated by music. The music of French mélodrames, of which Rousseau's Pygmalion (score by Coignet) is an early and influential example, was divided into short, independent numbers to be played between the spoken passages. The German form (Melodram), perfected by Georg Benda in such works as Ariadne auf Naxos, aimed for greater musical continuity. Mozart's enthusiasm for Benda's work bore fruit in the Singspiel Zaide (1779-80), and Beethoven's interest in the genre is evident in the dungeon scene in Fidelio and in the incidental music to Die Ruinen von Athen, König Stephan and Egmont. Weber, Schubert, Schumann, Liszt and many 19th-century opera composers tried their hand, and the melodrama thrived in the Czech lands. 20th-century examples are no less numerous, and include some which make use of Sprechgesang.

The term is also used for a kind of play, popular in the 19th century, in which romantic and frequently sensational happenings are carried through until Good triumphs and Evil is frustrated.



 

melodrama, a popular form of sensational drama that flourished in the 19th‐century theatre, surviving in different forms in modern cinema and television. The term, meaning ‘song‐drama’ in Greek, was originally applied in the European theatre to scenes of mime or spoken dialogue accompanied by music. In early 19th‐century London, many theatres were only permitted to produce musical entertainments, and from their simplified plays—some of them adapted from Gothic novels—the modern sense of melodrama derives: an emotionally exaggerated conflict of pure maidenhood and scheming villainy in a plot full of suspense. Well‐known examples are Douglas Jerrold's Black‐Ey'd Susan (1829), the anonymous Maria Marten (c.1830), and Sweeney Todd, the Demon Barber of Fleet Street (1842); the Irish playwright Dion Boucicault wrote several melodramas from the 1850s onwards, notably The Colleen Bawn (1860). Similar plots and simplified characterization in fiction, as in Dickens, can also be described as melodramatic. See also drame, Grand Guignol. For a fuller account, consult James L. Smith, Melodrama (1973).

 

Sentimental drama marked by extravagant theatricality, subordination of character development to plot, and focus on sensational incidents. It usually has an improbable plot that features such stock characters as the noble hero, the long-suffering heroine, and the hard-hearted villain, and it ends with virtue triumphing over vice. Written by such playwrights as Guilbert de Pixérécourt and Dion Boucicault, melodramas were popular in Europe and the U.S. during the 19th century. They often featured spectacular events such as shipwrecks, battles, fires, earthquakes, and horse races. Melodrama died out as a theatrical form in the early 20th century but remained popular in silent film. It can still be seen in contemporary film genres such as the action movie.

For more information on melodrama, visit Britannica.com.

 

The French mélodrame is derived from the Greek word for ‘music-drama’, and was applied to a form of dramatic performance in which one or more actors recited to music. It became popular in France in the second half of the 18th c. and was used of J.-J. Rousseau's Pygmalion (1775), a scène lyrique in which brief spoken passages alternate with expressive instrumental music. Its current meaning dates from about 1802, when Pixerécourt applied it to big stage-plays with incidental music, spectacular scenic effects, and sensational plots, of which he was the acknowledged master and which were wildly popular. Many features of the melodrama—its stock characters, violent emotions, inflated language, and moral sententiousness, together with its passion for crime and punishment, remorse and retribution—are drawn from 18th-c. models, including the English Gothic novel, the comédie larmoyante, and the drame bourgeois. The novelty of Pixerécourt's melodrama lies in the degree to which it theatricalizes these features by exploiting all the resources of the stage (music, costume, scene-painting, machinery) in order to produce a fast-moving action, peopled with heroes and villains, that is fully integrated with the spectacular sets (designed by Ciceri and others) representing wild, picturesque, or sinister places. [See Drama in France since 1789].

[S. Beynon John]

 

Melodrama in German literature signifies a passage or scene in which either a speaking voice or a musically declamatory voice is accompanied by music. Examples of the one kind are the finale of Goethe's Egmont and Johanna's monologue in Act IV of Schiller's Die Jungfrau von Orleans; of the other the accompanied recitative in Beethoven's Fidelio or Weber's Der Freischütz.

Monodrama is sometimes included under the heading Melodrama, as is also the recitation of a poem against a background of music, e.g. the composition by M. von Schillings of the Hexenlied by Wildenbruch; in this sense the original performance of Walton's Façade would be accounted a Melodrama. The word does not include in German the crass and sensational plays known in English as melodramas.

 
[Gr.,=song-drama], originally a spoken text with musical background, as in Greek drama. The form was popular in the 18th cent., when its composers included Georg Benda, J. J. Rousseau, and W. A. Mozart, among others. Modern examples of the true music melodrama are found in Richard Strauss's setting of Tennyson's Enoch Arden, and in Arnold Schoenberg's Pierrot Lunaire. J. J. Rousseau's melodrama Pygmalion (1762; first performed 1770) helped create a vogue for stage plays in which the action was generally romantic, full of violent action, and often characterized by the final triumph of virtue. The common use of the term melodrama refers to sentimental stage plays of this sort. The leading authors of melodramas in the early 19th cent. were Guilbert de Pixérécourt of France and the German August von Kotzebue. The term was used extensively in England in the 19th cent. as a device to circumvent the law that limited legitimate plays to certain theaters. One of the most-popular of theatrical genres in 19th. cent England and America, its “tear-jerking” style easily made the transition to film, radio and television, where they are represented by the maudlin excesses and unbelievable coincidences of contemporary soap operas. The term is now applied to all scripts with overdrawn characterizations, smashing climaxes, and appeal to sentiment. Famous examples of stage melodramas include East Lynne by Mrs. Henry Wood and Ten Nights in a Barroom by W. W. Pratt.

Bibliography

See D. Gerould, ed., Melodrama (1980).


 

A play or film in which the plot is often sensational and the characters may display exaggerated emotion.

 
Word Tutor: melodrama
pronunciation

IN BRIEF: A play in which there is much suspense and strong feeling, and a great exaggeration of good and evil in the characters.

pronunciation We enjoyed the melodrama because of the antics of the villain and the twist at the end of the play.

 
Wikipedia: melodrama
For other uses see Melodrama (disambiguation)
Poster for The Perils of Pauline (1914).

The word "melodrama" comes from the Greek word for song "melody", combined with "drama". Music is used to increase the emotional response or to suggest characters. There is a tidy structure or formula to melodrama: a villain poses a threat, the hero escapes the threat (or rescues the heroine) and there is a happy ending. In melodrama there is a constructed world of connotations.

A melodrama in a more neutral and technical sense of the term is a play, film, or other work in which plot and action are emphasized in comparison to the more character-driven emphasis within a drama. Melodramas can be distinguished from tragedy by the fact that they are open to having a happy ending.

Melodrama in opera and song

Originating in the 18th century, melodrama was a technique of using short pieces of music in contrast to, and sometimes accompanying, spoken drama. Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Pygmalion, with music by Horace Coignet, is generally regarded as the first example of the form. This was a monodrama. Written in 1762, this was first staged in Lyon in 1770. It was then taken up by Goethe in Weimar in 1772 with music by Anton Schweitzer. Some 30 other monodramas were produced in Germany in the fourth quarter of the 18th century.

Georg Benda developed the duodrama with his 1775 works Ariadne auf Naxos and Medea and this form of melodrama was taken up by other composers, notably Mozart in Zaide and Thamos, König in Ägypten and Carl Maria von Weber in Der Freischütz. The technique was also used in lieder and song.

By the end of the 19th century the term melodrama had nearly exclusively narrowed down to a specific genre of salon entertainment: more or less rhythmically spoken words (often poetry) - not sung, sometimes more or less enacted, at least with some dramatic structure or plot - synchronized to an accompaniment of music (usually piano). It was looked down on as a genre for authors and composers of lesser stature (probably also the reason why virtually no realisations of the genre are still remembered). This was probably also the time when the connotation of cheap overacting first became associated with the term. As a cross-over genre mixing narration and chamber music it was eclipsed nearly overnight by a single composition: Schoenberg's Pierrot Lunaire (1912), where Sprechstimme was used instead of rhythmically spoken words and which took a freer and more imaginative course regarding the plot prerogatives.

A few musicals and operettas contain melodramas in this sense of music played under spoken dialogue, for instance, Gilbert and Sullivan's Ruddigore (itself a parody of melodramas in the modern sense) has a short "melodrame" (reduced to dialogue alone in many productions) in the second act;[1] Jacques Offenbach's Orpheus in the Underworld opens with a melodrama delivered by the chararacter of "Public Opinion"; and other pieces from operetta and musicals may be considered melodramas, such as the "Recit and Minuet"[2] in Gilbert and Sullivan's Sorcerer. In musicals, several long speeches in Lerner and Loewe's Brigadoon are delivered to the accompaniment of rather beautiful, evocative music.

In a similar manner, Victorians often added "incidental music" under the dialogue to a pre-existing play. This type of often lavish production is now mostly limited to film (see film score) due to the cost of hiring an orchestra. Modern recording technology is producing a certain revival of the practice in theatre, but not on the former scale.

A particularly complete version of the older form, Sullivan's incidental music to Tennyson's The Foresters is available online,[3] complete with several melodramas, for instance, No. 12 found here.[4]

The John Williams' score to Star Wars, and Korngold's score to The Adventures of Robin Hood are excellent examples of the modern usage.

The classic and contemperary melodramas are still very popular in todays society.

Victorian Stage Melodrama

According to Michael Booth in his classic study English Melodrama the Victorian stage melodrama featured a limited number of stock characters: the hero, the villain, the heroine, an old man, an old woman, a comic man and a comic woman engaged in a sensational plot featuring themes of Love and Murder. Often the good but not very clever hero is duped by a scheming villain, who has eyes on the damsel in distress until fate intervenes at the end to ensure the triumph of good over evil.

The first English play to be called a melodrama or 'melodrame' was A Tale of Mystery (1802) by Thomas Holcroft. This was an example of the Gothic genre, a previous theatrical example of which was The Castle Spectre (1797) by Matthew Gregory Lewis. English melodrama was influenced by German Sturm und Drang drama and Parisian melodrama of the post-Revolutionary period (Booth 1991: 151). Other examples of early Gothic melodramas include The Miller and his Men (1813) by Isaac Pocock, The Woodsman's Hut (1814) by Samuel Arnold and The Broken Sword (1816) by William Dimond. Another popular sub-genre, beginning in the 1820's, was the nautical melodrama such as The Red Rover (1829) by Edward Fitzball and Black-Eyed Susan (1829) by Jerrold. Later melodramas developed domestic and urban situations such as The Streets of London (1864) and The Corsican Brothers by Dion Boucicault; and Lost in London (1867). The villain was always the central character in melodrama and crime was a favorite theme. This included dramatisations of the murderous careers of Burke and Hare, Sweeney Todd (Sweeny Todd the Demon Barber of Fleet Street (1842) by George Dibdin Pitt), the murder of Maria Marten in the Red Barn and the bizarre exploits of Spring Heeled Jack. Early silent films, such as The Perils of Pauline had similar themes. Later, after silent films were superseded by the 'talkies', stage actor Tod Slaughter, at the age of 50, transferred to the screen the Victorian melodramas in which he had played villain in his earlier theatrical career. These films, which include Maria Marten or Murder in the Red Barn and Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street are a unique record of a bygone art-form.

Current use

Melodrama is ubiquitous on television: it is evident, for example, in a long series of TV movies about diseases or domestic violence, or the large number of hour-long television programs about lawyers, police officers, or physicians.

Issues melodrama is a subspecies of melodrama in which current events or politics are given a dramatic treatment, hoping to use some recent crime or controversy as a vehicle to draw an emotional response from the viewer. The usual method is to involve lawyers, police officers, or physicians, who can then make speeches about the crime or controversy being dramatized. By this artifice, the dramatist seeks to engage the audience's recently refreshed sense of fear or moral disapproval, while simultaneously maintaining the posture that the drama so produced is timely and socially engaged.

Action melodrama is another subgenre of melodrama that is particularly prevalent in the action Hollywood film blockbuster. An athletic action hero is pitted against an evil villain, and through a bevy of fights, car chases, love scenes and splatter, the hero overcomes the villain and restores the balance of good in the universe. This subgenre often includes a heroine who fights then falls in love with the hero. Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger are examples of the stars of these action melodramatic flicks.

Informal use / Slang Casual use of the word as an adjective translates to exaggerated emotional affect display or ways of expressing oneself. For example: "Don't be so melodramatic!" This has fallen into common parlance.

See also

References

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ [2]
  3. ^ [3]
  4. ^ [4]



 
Translations: Translations for: Melodrama

Dansk (Danish)
n. - melodrama

Nederlands (Dutch)
melodrama

Français (French)
n. - mélodrame

Deutsch (German)
n. - Melodrama

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - μελόδραμα

Italiano (Italian)
melodramma

Português (Portuguese)
n. - melodrama (m)

Русский (Russian)
мелодрама

Español (Spanish)
n. - melodrama

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - melodram

中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
音乐剧, 戏剧似的事件, 通俗剧

中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 音樂劇, 戲劇似的事件, 通俗劇

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 감성적인 드라마

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - メロドラマ, 大げさな言動, 通俗劇, メロドラマ的事件

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) أحداث أو سلوكيات مثيرة, الميلودراما‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮מחזה דרמטי הפונה לרגשות, בד"כ עם סוף טוב, התבטאות, התנהגות או התרחשות ברוח המלודרמה, מלודרמה‬


 
 

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Grammar Dictionary. The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition Edited by E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil. Copyright © 2002 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.  Read more
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