1 00:00:06,903 --> 00:00:11,598 At the annual Athenian drama festival in 426 BC, 2 00:00:11,598 --> 00:00:14,329 a comic play called The Babylonians, 3 00:00:14,329 --> 00:00:17,392 written by a young poet named Aristophanes, 4 00:00:17,392 --> 00:00:19,588 was awarded first prize. 5 00:00:19,588 --> 00:00:23,989 But the play’s depiction of Athens’ conduct during the Peloponnesian War 6 00:00:23,989 --> 00:00:26,369 was so controversial that afterwards, 7 00:00:26,369 --> 00:00:30,554 a politician named Kleon took Aristophanes to court 8 00:00:30,554 --> 00:00:35,144 for "slandering the people of Athens in the presence of foreigners." 9 00:00:35,144 --> 00:00:40,701 Aristophanes struck back two years later with a play called The Knights. 10 00:00:40,701 --> 00:00:43,293 In it, he openly mocked Kleon, 11 00:00:43,293 --> 00:00:47,618 ending with Kleon’s character working as a lowly sausage seller 12 00:00:47,618 --> 00:00:49,534 outside the city gates. 13 00:00:49,534 --> 00:00:51,803 This style of satire was a consequence 14 00:00:51,803 --> 00:00:55,570 of the unrestricted democracy of 5th century Athens 15 00:00:55,570 --> 00:00:58,411 and is now called "Old Comedy." 16 00:00:58,411 --> 00:01:02,906 Aristophanes’ plays, the world’s earliest surviving comic dramas, 17 00:01:02,906 --> 00:01:09,094 are stuffed full of parodies, songs, sexual jokes, and surreal fantasy. 18 00:01:09,094 --> 00:01:10,969 They often use wild situations, 19 00:01:10,969 --> 00:01:14,184 like a hero flying to heaven on a dung beetle, 20 00:01:14,184 --> 00:01:19,516 or a net cast over a house to keep the owner’s father trapped inside, 21 00:01:19,516 --> 00:01:22,686 in order to subvert audience expectations. 22 00:01:22,686 --> 00:01:27,198 And they’ve shaped how comedy’s been written and performed ever since. 23 00:01:27,198 --> 00:01:32,709 The word "comedy" comes from the Ancient Greek "komos," – revel, 24 00:01:32,709 --> 00:01:35,297 and "oide," – singing, 25 00:01:35,297 --> 00:01:40,093 and it differed from its companion art form, "tragedy" in many ways. 26 00:01:40,093 --> 00:01:45,037 Where ancient Athenian tragedies dealt with the downfall of the high and mighty, 27 00:01:45,037 --> 00:01:47,591 their comedies usually ended happily. 28 00:01:47,591 --> 00:01:51,415 And where tragedy almost always borrowed stories from legend, 29 00:01:51,415 --> 00:01:53,998 comedy addressed current events. 30 00:01:53,998 --> 00:01:59,032 Aristophanes’ comedies celebrated ordinary people and attacked the powerful. 31 00:01:59,032 --> 00:02:01,408 His targets were arrogant politicians, 32 00:02:01,408 --> 00:02:03,122 war-mongering generals, 33 00:02:03,122 --> 00:02:05,607 and self-important intellectuals, 34 00:02:05,607 --> 00:02:08,783 exactly the people who sat in the front row of the theatre, 35 00:02:08,783 --> 00:02:11,603 where everyone could see their reactions. 36 00:02:11,603 --> 00:02:16,165 As a result, they were referred to as komoidoumenoi: 37 00:02:16,165 --> 00:02:18,878 "those made fun of in comedy." 38 00:02:18,878 --> 00:02:22,240 Aristophanes’ vicious and often obscene mockery 39 00:02:22,240 --> 00:02:26,775 held these leaders to account, testing their commitment to the city. 40 00:02:26,775 --> 00:02:31,621 One issue, in particular, inspired much of Aristophanes’ work: 41 00:02:31,621 --> 00:02:35,101 the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta. 42 00:02:35,101 --> 00:02:38,692 In Peace, written in 421 BC, 43 00:02:38,692 --> 00:02:43,310 a middle-aged Athenian frees the embodiment of peace from a cave, 44 00:02:43,310 --> 00:02:46,976 where she’d been exiled by profiteering politicians. 45 00:02:46,976 --> 00:02:53,083 Then, in the aftermath of a crushing naval defeat for Athens in 411 BC, 46 00:02:53,083 --> 00:02:55,453 Aristophanes wrote "Lysistrata." 47 00:02:55,453 --> 00:02:59,111 In this play, the women of Athens grow sick of war 48 00:02:59,111 --> 00:03:03,411 and go on a sex strike until their husbands make peace. 49 00:03:03,411 --> 00:03:08,658 Other plays use similarly fantastic scenarios to skewer topical situations, 50 00:03:08,658 --> 00:03:10,693 such as in "Clouds," 51 00:03:10,693 --> 00:03:14,299 where Aristophanes mocked fashionable philosophical thinking. 52 00:03:14,299 --> 00:03:19,513 The hero Strepsiades enrolls in Socrates’s new philosophical school, 53 00:03:19,513 --> 00:03:22,193 where he learns how to prove that wrong is right 54 00:03:22,193 --> 00:03:24,738 and that a debt is not a debt. 55 00:03:24,738 --> 00:03:30,756 No matter how outlandish these plays get, the heroes always prevail in the end. 56 00:03:30,756 --> 00:03:35,149 Aristophanes also became the master of the parabasis, 57 00:03:35,149 --> 00:03:38,622 a comic technique where actors address the audience directly, 58 00:03:38,622 --> 00:03:43,641 often praising the playwright or making topical comments and jokes. 59 00:03:43,641 --> 00:03:45,737 For example, in "Birds," 60 00:03:45,737 --> 00:03:48,100 the Chorus takes the role of different birds 61 00:03:48,100 --> 00:03:52,104 and threatens the Athenian judges that if their play doesn’t win first prize, 62 00:03:52,104 --> 00:03:55,866 they’ll defecate on them as they walk around the city. 63 00:03:55,866 --> 00:03:58,553 Perhaps the judges didn’t appreciate the joke, 64 00:03:58,553 --> 00:04:00,274 as the play came in second. 65 00:04:00,274 --> 00:04:02,670 By exploring new ideas 66 00:04:02,670 --> 00:04:05,915 and encouraging self-criticism in Athenian society, 67 00:04:05,915 --> 00:04:08,628 Aristophanes not only mocked his fellow citizens, 68 00:04:08,628 --> 00:04:11,793 but he shaped the nature of comedy itself. 69 00:04:11,793 --> 00:04:15,287 Hailed by some scholars as the father of comedy, 70 00:04:15,287 --> 00:04:18,938 his fingerprints are visible upon comic techniques everywhere, 71 00:04:18,938 --> 00:04:19,980 from slapstick 72 00:04:19,980 --> 00:04:20,948 to double acts 73 00:04:20,948 --> 00:04:22,335 to impersonations 74 00:04:22,335 --> 00:04:23,963 to political satire. 75 00:04:23,963 --> 00:04:27,887 Through the praise of free speech and the celebration of ordinary heroes, 76 00:04:27,887 --> 00:04:31,408 his plays made his audience think while they laughed. 77 00:04:31,408 --> 00:04:37,271 And his retort to Kleon in 425 BC still resonates today: 78 00:04:37,271 --> 00:04:40,196 “I’m a comedian, so I’ll speak about justice, 79 00:04:40,196 --> 00:04:43,167 no matter how hard it sounds to your ears.”