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Theatre History Commons

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Articles 1 - 9 of 9

Full-Text Articles in Theatre History

The Brilliance Of The Servant Without Qualities, Daniel Sack Oct 2012

The Brilliance Of The Servant Without Qualities, Daniel Sack

Daniel Sack

British playwright Howard Barker's work as a tragedy on the traditions of characterlogical thinking. What happens when a figure loses all distinguishing features and exposes him or herself to a world without character?


Intended For The Stage?: Samson Agonistes In Performance, Timothy Burbery Aug 2012

Intended For The Stage?: Samson Agonistes In Performance, Timothy Burbery

Timothy J. Burbery

The year 2000 marked the centenary of an important but overlooked milestone in Milton studies, namely the first staging of Samson Agonistes, by William Poel, in 1900. While many scholars may be aware of isolated productions of the tragedy, the extent and variety of its stage history is perhaps less well-known. The work was successful as a dramatic reading throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, yet it had never been attempted on the boards until Poel’s landmark production. That event ushered in a range of performances throughout the twentieth century, and nearly every decade saw several dramatizations. At least fifteen …


Jared Brown, Jared Brown Jun 2012

Jared Brown, Jared Brown

Jared Brown

Interview with Professor Emeritus Jared Brown, as part of the Oral History collection at Illinois Wesleyan. To view all Oral Histories in the IWU collection, please see this link.


Feminist Realism In Canada: Then And Now, Kim Solga, Susan Bennett Dec 2011

Feminist Realism In Canada: Then And Now, Kim Solga, Susan Bennett

Kim Solga

No abstract provided.


New Canadian Realisms: New Essays On Canadian Theatre Vol. 2, Kim Solga, Roberta Barker Dec 2011

New Canadian Realisms: New Essays On Canadian Theatre Vol. 2, Kim Solga, Roberta Barker

Kim Solga

New Essays in Canadian Theatre Volume 2: New Canadian Realisms gathers writing by celebrated scholars and artists from both Canada and the US in order to explore what this much-debated genre might be doing for political performance in Canada today. Topics range from Hollywood’s influence on the look and feel of the contemporary Canadian “real,” to the power and the pitfalls of a “realism of redress” in intercultural Canadian theatre, to the apparently oxymoronic notion of “devised” realism, to the complexities of Indigenous realism(s). Together, this book’s authors suggest that Canada’s theatrical realisms are, like so much else among us, …


New Canadian Realisms: Eight Plays, Kim Solga, Roberta Barker Dec 2011

New Canadian Realisms: Eight Plays, Kim Solga, Roberta Barker

Kim Solga

New Canadian Realisms: Eight Plays collects works of contemporary theatre, each of which may be defined as “realist” through both a crucial link to the past and a zest for re-tooling old definitions. Grounded by Gwen Pharis Ringwood’s pioneering Still Stands the House, the anthology also features trey anthony’s ’da Kink in my hair, Tara Beagan’s Miss Julie: Sheh’mah, Madeleine Blais-Dahlem’s sTain, Hillar Liitoja’s The Last Supper, selections from the Impromptu Splendor series by National Theatre of the World, Theatre Replacement’s BioBoxes, and Zuppa Theatre’s Penny Dreadful, as well as a series of text-specific introductions and a resource page for …


Introduction: Reclaiming Canadian Realisms, Part 2, Kim Solga, Roberta Barker Dec 2011

Introduction: Reclaiming Canadian Realisms, Part 2, Kim Solga, Roberta Barker

Kim Solga

No abstract provided.


A Dull Enigma: Historians' Analysis Of Gilbert And Sullivan's Impact On The Development Of The American Musical, Andrew Vorder Bruegge Dec 2011

A Dull Enigma: Historians' Analysis Of Gilbert And Sullivan's Impact On The Development Of The American Musical, Andrew Vorder Bruegge

Andrew Vorder Bruegge, Ph.D.

Historians of musical theatre have been ambivalent when assessing the historical significance of Gilbert and Sullivan upon the development of the American musical. Historical narratives typically jump from The Black Crook to Friml, with only passing reference to G&S (and Offenbach, and Strauss). Gilbert and Sullivan (encouraged by D’Oyly Carte), however, anticipated not only most of the formal elements, but also many of the creative/production processes of the American musical genre. The shows that we associate with the “Golden Era” of the American musical theatre contain many components that G&S devised three score years earlier. Historians should acknowledge the importance …


Introduction: Reclaiming Canadian Realisms, Kim Solga, Roberta Barker Dec 2011

Introduction: Reclaiming Canadian Realisms, Kim Solga, Roberta Barker

Kim Solga

No abstract provided.