, c. 400 BC. Possibly related to Euripides’ lost play
Andromeda, and is suggestive of the kind of stage props that might have been used. The substantial changes to the theatre in the late fifth century BC are conventionally called
Periclean since they coincide with the completion of the
Odeon of Pericles immediately adjacent and the wider Periclean building programme. However, there is no strong evidence to say the theatre's reconstruction was of the same group as the other works or from Pericles’ lifetime. The new plan of the theatre consisted of a slight displacement of the performance area northward, a banking up of the auditorium, the addition of retaining walls to the west, east and north, a long hall south of the
skene and abutting the Older Temple and a New Temple which was said to have contained a
chryselephantine sculpture of Dionysus by
Alkamenes. The seating during this phase was probably still in the form of
ikria but it may be the case that some stone seating had been installed. Inscribed blocks, displaced but preserved in the retaining walls, with fifth-century BC
epigraphy on them might indicate dedicated or numbered stone seats. The use of
breccia in the foundations of the west wall and the long hall gives a
terminus ante quem of the early fifth century BC, and a likely date of the last half of that century when its use was becoming common. Also the last recorded statue of Alkamenes was 404 BC, again placing the works in the late 400s.
Pickard-Cambridge argues that the reconstruction was piecemeal over the last half of the century into the period of
Kleophon. From the evidence of the plays there is a larger corpus to draw upon during this most vital period of Greek drama.
Sophocles,
Aristophanes and
Euripides were all performed at the Theatre of Dionysus. From these we can deduce that stock sets may have been in use to meet the requirements of the plays such that the Periclean reconstruction included post-holes built into the terrace wall to provide sockets for movable scenery. The
skene itself was likely unchanged from the theatre's earlier phase, with a wooden structure of at most two floors and a roof. It is also possible that the stage building would have had three doors, with two in the projecting side-wings or
paraskenia.
Mechane or
geranos were used for the introduction of divine beings or flights through the air as in
Medea or Aristophanes'
Birds. One point of contention has been the existence or otherwise of the
prothyron or columned portico on a
skene that represents the interior spaces of temples or palaces. It is a supposition partly supported by the texts, but also from vase painting believed to be depictions of plays. Aeschylus
Choēphóroi 966 and
Aristophanes'
Wasps 800-4 both refer directly to a
prothyron, while the parodos-chant in
Euripides’
Ion makes indirect reference to one. The mourning
Niobe loutrophoros in Naples and the Boston volute krater, for example, both depict a
prothyron. Pickard-Cambridge questions if this was permanent structure since interior scenes were rare in tragedy. The evidence from the plays for the use of an
ekkyklema in this period is ambiguous; passages such as
Acharnians 407 ff or
Hippolytus 170-1 suggest but don't require the device. The argument for its use depends largely on reference to the
ekkyklema in later lexographers and scholiasts. ==Lycurgan theatre==