Menander

Menander,ÂÂÂ (bornÂÂÂ c.ÂÂÂ 342—diedÂÂÂ c.ÂÂÂ 292ÂÂÂ bce),ÂÂÂÂ Athenian dramatist whom ancient critics considered the supreme poet of GreekÂÂÂ New Comedy—i.e., the last flowering of Athenian stageÂÂÂ comedy. During his life, his success was limited; although he wrote more than 100 plays, he won only eight victories at Athenian dramatic festivals.
Comedy had by his time abandoned public affairs and was concentrating instead on fictitious characters from ordinary life; the role of the chorus was generally confined to the performance of interludes between acts. Actors’ masks were retained but were elaborated to provide for the wider range of characters required by a comedy of manners and helped an audience without playbills to recognize these characters for what they were. Menander, who wrote in a refined Attic, by his time the literary language of the Greek-speaking world, was masterly at presenting such characters as stern fathers, young lovers, greedy demimondaines, intriguing slaves, and others.
Menander’s nicety of touch and skill at comedy in a light vein is clearly evident in theÂÂÂ DyscolusÂÂÂ in the character of the gruff misanthrope Knemon, while the subtle clash and contrast of character and ethical principle in such plays asÂÂÂ PerikeiromenēÂÂÂ (interesting for its sympathetic treatment of the conventionally boastful soldier) andÂÂÂ Second AdelphoeÂÂÂ constitute perhaps his greatest achievement.
Menander’s works were much adapted by the Roman writersÂÂÂ PlautusÂÂÂ andÂÂÂ Terence, and through them he influenced the development of European comedy from the Renaissance. Their work also supplements much of the lost corpus of his plays, of which no complete text exists, except that of theÂÂÂ Dyscolus,ÂÂÂ first printed in 1958 from some leaves of a papyrus codex acquired in Egypt.
The known facts of Menander’s life are few. He was allegedly rich and of good family, and a pupil of the philosopherÂÂÂ Theophrastus, a follower ofÂÂÂ Aristotle. In 321 Menander produced his first play,ÂÂÂ OrgēÂÂÂ (“Anger”). In 316 he won a prize at a festival with theÂÂÂ DyscolusÂÂÂ and gained his first victory at the Dionysia festival the next year. By 301 Menander had written more than 70 plays. He probably spent most of his life in Athens and is said to have declined invitations to Macedonia and Egypt. He allegedly drowned while swimming at the Piraeus (Athens’s port).