Theatre studies Books
McFarland & Co Inc Staging Emily Dickinson
Book Synopsis With a writer who had never written a play, an actress who had never taken the stage alone, and a director who had never headed a live performance, The Belle of Amherst managed to become an American theater classic. Despite being savaged by critics attending its opening night in April 1976, the play, which details the life of Emily Dickinson, survived its baptism by fire and went on to appear in theaters across the world. This is the remarkable untold story of "the little play that could." Covering the play''s humble beginnings as well as its pioneers--like writer William Luce, director Charles Nelson Reilly and actress Julie Harris--this work also documents the modern efforts to keep the play alive. Exploring the show''s enduring dramatic power, this book ultimately pays respect to the one-woman show that has triumphed for decades. Trade ReviewGrant Hayter-Menzies was the companion, caretaker, and archivist of a great American playwright, but he is also a writer of uncommon perceptiveness and grace. In this book, Grant gives us a probing backstage look at William Luce's most celebrated work; at the same time, he shows us a literary friendship that is in itself worthy of a play."—James Gavin, author of Stormy Weather: The Life of Lena Horne and Is That All There Is? The Strange Life of Peggy Lee "Hayter-Menzies has composed a poetic, touching, and insightful tribute worthy of his subjects. Julie Harris, Charles Nelson Reilly, and the Belle herself would delight in their portraits, but most of all, this work reveals the gifted, glorious, funny, witty, sly, and brilliant William Luce. In the most heartfelt, honest, and compassionate prose, Hayter-Menzies has brought Luce into the light!"—John W. Lowell, award-winning playwright, author of Autumn Canticle and The Letters "In Staging Emily Dickinson, Grant Hayter-Menzies gives us the full story of how Julie Harris, playwright William Luce, and director Charles Nelson Reilly came together to give the world the beautiful and still-traveling play The Belle of Amherst. A book like this does not come along often. Make an appointment to spend time with it."—Jim Grissom, author, Follies of God: Tennessee Williams and the Women of the Fog Hayter-Menzies has given us a fascinating and fully realized look into how three artistic geniuses forged their creative prowess into one of the greatest American plays of the 20th century. Gorgeously told, with unstoppable cadence and powerful imagery, the book is refreshingly candid with an inspired blending of courage and grace. A valuable work for anyone concerned with the theater."—Bill Haworth, crisis communications specialist, former award-winning broadcast reporter.Table of Contents Table of Contents Foreword by Jordan R. Young Prologue Acknowledgments 1. Sober ecstasy 2. Julie 3. Charles and Bill 4. "Bitchy little spinster" 5. The play 6. Miracle on West 48th Street 7. Tour and television 8. Dickinson's letter to the world 9. Play in a time of plague: The Belle navigating Covid-19 10. Julie: "A thousand summers" 11. Charles: "Save it for the stage" 12. William Luce, "Playwrote" Epilogue: I will not let thee go Appendix. Helen Kingsley Krauss: Her letter to the world Chapter Notes Bibliography Index
£34.19
McFarland & Co Inc Nights That Shook the Stage
Book Synopsis Some of the most raucous evenings in the history of theater are chronicled in this lively discussion of occasions when theater-makers changed the course of theatrical, and sometimes world, history. Covering a wide range of events from the inauspicious opening of Oedipus Rexin Athens, to the assassination of Abraham Lincoln in Washington, D.C., to the violence-riddled performance of Halla Bol in New Delhi, this book offers detailed and studied observations of specific minutes, hours, and days on the stage. For each staging covered, the author examines the reactions of critics and the public and tells the inside story, identifies the key players, and examines why these events still resound today.Table of Contents Table of Contents Preface Of Murder and Premonitions Chapter 1. Who Is Dead in the White House? Our American Cousin, Ford's Theatre, Washington, April 14, 1865 Chapter 2. A Night at the Adelphi: Secret Service, Adelphi Theatre, London, December 16, 1897 Chapter 3. A Beauty That Cannot Be Conveyed: Machinal, Plymouth Theatre, New York, September 7, 1928 Chapter 4. All Hell Broke Loose: Halla Bol, Janya Natya Manch, Jhandapur, India, January 1, 1989 Brave New Theaters Chapter 5. Free Theater: The Serenade, Théâtre Libre, Paris, December 23, 1887 Chapter 6: The Slavyanski Bazaar: The Moscow Art Theatre, June 22, 1897 Chapter 7. A Wonderful, Heretical Play: The Seagull, Moscow Art Theatre, Moscow, December 17, 1898 Chapter 8. La Mama: One Arm, Café La Mama, New York, July 27, 1962 Riotous Behavior Chapter 9. Old Price: Macbeth, Covent Garden Theatre, London, September 18, 1809. Chapter 10. A Cut-Throat Competition: Macbeth, Astor Place Opera House, New York, May 10, 1849 Chapter 11. Round Dance: La Ronde, Deutsches Volkstheater, Vienna, February 7, 1921 Chapter 12. Oh, What an Arse You Have! Oh! Calcutta!, Eden Theater, New York, June 17, 1969 Theatrical Quarrels Chapter 13. La Querelle: The Rehearsal at Versailles, The Palace at Versailles, October 14, 1663 Chapter 14. Nora's Incomprehensible Act: A Doll's House, Royal Theatre, Copenhagen, December 21, 1879 Chapter 15. A Mighty Personage: Ubu Roi, Théâtre de l'Œuvre, Paris, December 10, 1896 Chapter 16. A Purse to the Jaw: The Little Foxes, National Theatre, New York, February 13, 1939 Theater Out of Doors Chapter 17. Second Prize: Oedipus Tyrannus, The City Dionysia, Athens, March 427 bc Chapter 18. Moving the Globe: The Globe Theatre, London, December 28, 1598 Chapter 19. Good Cheer: The Theatre of Neptune, Port Royal, New France, November 14, 1606 A Tale of Two Countries Chapter 20. In the Palm of One's Hand: The Frozen Deep, Tavistock House, January 5, 1857 Chapter 21. First Knight: The Bells, Lyceum Theatre, London, November 25, 1871 Chapter 22. The Meininger: Julius Caesar, Friedrich Wilhelm Municipal Theatre, Berlin, May 1, 1874 Chapter 23. Genius or Madman? The Ring of Nibelung, Bayreuth Festspielhaus, Germany, August 13, 1876 Political Theater Chapter 24. Threepenny: The Threepenny Opera, Theatre am Schiffbauerdamm, Berlin, August 31, 1928 Chapter 25. Coughing and Sighs: The Song of the Chaste Wife, Shinkyō Theater Company, Japan and Korea, March 1938 Chapter 26. Acid Test: Marat/Sade, Aldwych Theatre, London, August 20, 1964. Reactions to War Chapter 27. Marinetti: The Feasting King, Théâtre de l'Œuvre, Paris, April 3, 1909 Chapter 28. Dada: Dada Early Spring, Cologne, April 1920 Chapter 29. Ill Omens: The Glass Menagerie, Civic Theatre, Chicago, December 26, 1944 Chapter 30. Waiting: Waiting for Godot, San Quentin Prison, California, November 19, 1957 The Angry 1950s Chapter 31. Look Back: Look Back in Anger, Royal Court Theatre, London, May 8, 1956 Chapter 32. The Man Who Discovered Pinter: The Room, University of Bristol, England, May 1957 Chapter 33. Hansberry: A Raisin in the Sun, Ethel Barrymore Theatre, New York, March 11, 1959 True North Chapter 34. Spittle in the Face: Richard III, Stratford Festival, Stratford, Canada, July 13, 1953 Chapter 35. 1967: Fortune and Men's Eyes, Colours in the Dark, and The Ecstasy of Rita Joe, Canada, 1967 Chapter 36. Dogged Intrepidity: Paper Wheat, St. Thomas Wesley Hall, Saskatoon, March 18, 1977 Chapter 37. Highway: The Rez Sisters, Native Earth Theatre, Toronto, November 26, 1986 After 2000 Chapter 38. Howl of Pain: 4.48 Psychosis, Royal Court Theatre, London, June 23, 2000 Chapter 39. The Revolution: Hamilton, Richard Rodgers Theater, New York, November 11, 2016 Chapter 40. One of Those Stories: Come from Away, Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre, New York, March 12, 2017 Epilogue Chapter Notes Bibliography Index
£34.85
McFarland & Co Inc Charlotte Cushman
Book Synopsis Charlotte Cushman, one of the great actors of 19th century American theatre, was a lesbian who kept her identity hidden by focusing her career on male characters (Romeo, Claude Melnotte, Wolsey), and also on strong and passionate women (Lady Macbeth, Bianca in Fazio, and Queen Katherine in Henry VIII). This biography is an authoritative record of Cushman''s life and performances, showing how her complex gender identity illuminates and is illuminated by 19th century theatre critical views. Part One is a biography; Part Two is a performance history listing all of Cushman''s known performances, often with a description of her role and critical commentary.Trade ReviewA vivid picture emerges of Charlotte Cushman both on and off the stage in this sorely-needed update of her life and performance history. Arthur Bloom has captured definitively the essence of Cushman's challenges, successes, and relationships (both professional and personal). Significantly, he combines extensive contemporary documentation and context with an appropriate 21st Century interpretation to pay overdue homage to this uniquely powerful actress."—Thomas A. Bogar, author of American Presidents Attend the Theatre and Backstage at the Lincoln Assassination"An engaging biographical account of a colorful female actor of the nineteenth century. A must-read for those who have only just begun discussing non heteronormativity in acting—you might have much to learn from theatre history and indeed this precious book!"—Professor Ross W. Prior, author of Teaching Actors: Knowledge Transfer in Actor Training."Precisely researched and skillfully written, Charlotte Cushman: A Biography and Performance History qualifies as an important addition to the field of cultural studies. Arthur W. Bloom delivers an engrossing account of a woman who had the boldness to follow her passions—both on and off the stage."—David Freeland, author of American Hotel: The Waldorf-Astoria and the Making of a Century"With meticulous research and careful commentary, Bloom walks through the challenge and success of Cushman's navigating life in the nineteenth century as an actor and a queer woman. At a time when women were expected to conform to acceptable values of 'true womanhood,' brash Cushman (who towered over her male counterparts in height and emotion as Lady Macbeth) comes across as both remarkable and relatable in her efforts to be good in the public eye, to be great onstage, and to be true to herself throughout."—Betsy Golden Kellem, historian and media attorney, board member of the Barnum Museum and the Circus Historical SocietyTable of Contents Table of Contents Acknowledgments Part Introduction One. Pilgrim Roots and Early Performances: 1816–1835 Two. New Orleans: 1835–1836 Three. Acting in New York and Albany: 1836–1837 Four. Stock Company Actress, Manager and Leading Lady: 1837–1844 Five. Working with Macready Six. First English Tour: "I Could Make a Fortune Here" Seven. "Miss Cushman is a very dangerous young man": 1846–1849 Eight. Return to America: 1849–1852 Nine. Italy, England and Ireland: 1852–1857 Ten. American Tour and Emma Crow: 1857–1858 Eleven. On the Via Gregoriana: 1858–1860 Twelve. Touring During the Civil War: 1860–1863 Thirteen. Retirement: 1863–1871 Fourteen. "I Never Give Up": 1870–1875 Fifteen. Death: 1875–1876 Sixteen. "My Genius Is Hard Work" Part Performance History Sources for Appendix and Performance History of Charlotte Cushman Chapter Notes Bibliography Index
£34.19
McFarland & Co Inc Fall of the Big Top
Book Synopsis Once an eagerly awaited spectacle, the traveling circus--that miracle of red wagons, trumpeting elephants and spangled trapeze artists that slipped into town at dawn and disappeared by midnight--has all but vanished from the American landscape. This work explores circus history from 1793 to the present and addresses the forces of modern culture (such as the popularity of Cirque du Soleil, and pressure from the animal rights movement) that are pushing big top shows toward what the author calls circus ballet. Numerous photographs and in-depth interviews conducted with show owners, performers and directors enrich the narrative. Overall, the book reveals a sobering contrast between circuses of yesterday and today, even as it honors the outstanding performers who created, and have sustained, the enduring appeal of the circus.Table of Contents Table of Contents Preface 1. The Big One Falls 2. Back Before Barnum 3. American Heyday 4. Brother, Can You Spare a Ring? 5. Spectacles Unsublime 6. Mavericks on the Midway 7. Cirque du Invasion 8. Encore for the Eighties 9. Vanishing Visions 10. Laliberte Latitudes 11. Ringling in Retreat 12. Reparations for Jumbo? 13. Gunther in Black 14. There Go the Shriners 15. And the Band Did Not Play On 16. Minus Clyde Beatty 17. This Way to the Ballet 18. Bumpin' Back with a Voice 19. Big Apple Delicious 20. And in the Only Ring That Matters Chapter Notes Bibliography Index
£20.89
McFarland & Co Inc Eleanor Robson Belmont
Book Synopsis When Mrs. August Belmont died in 1979, just before her 100th birthday, she was remembered as a philanthropist and advocate for the arts, especially the Metropolitan Opera--but before her triumphs as Mrs. Belmont, she had dignified the American stage for 13 glorious years as Eleanor Robson, actress. Her splendid voice, understated style, and always-evident intelligence thrilled legions of theatregoers and enthralled the best playwrights of her time, including Israel Zangwill, Clyde Fitch, and George Bernard Shaw. Despite the brevity of her career, Eleanor Robson stands as a prototype for many actresses who followed her--women who sought to control their own careers and demanded artistic respect and freedom, and who, by the twenty-first century, would confidently call themselves not actresses, but actors. This is the first book-length biography of her, focusing especially on her theatrical career.Table of Contents Table of Contents Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction A Note on Scope and Purpose Preparing the Stage—Madge Carr Cook: "A woman of individuality and no end of 'snap'" Season 1. "Still in braids and an unclouded smile on her face" Season 2. "Dainty, refined, girlish, but well-poised" Season 3. "So many natural qualities" Season 4. "About to become" Season 5. "Something that holds attention" Season 6. "Fire and energy and intellectual poise" Season 7. "Merely" Season 8. "You are an artist" A Shavian Interlude: "Wonderful and mystical things" Season 9. "Something there that I have only seen Duse do" Season 10. "Nearly everything" Season 11. "Nothing left after the night is over" Season 12. "I'm tired, tired!" Season 13. "Near the edge of greatness" Later Stages: "Enthusiasm" Chronology and Production History Chapter Notes Bibliography Index
£34.19
McFarland & Co Inc Brooklyn Takes the Stage
Book Synopsis America''s third largest city until 1890, Brooklyn, New York, had a striking theatrical culture before it became a borough of Greater New York in 1898. As the city gained size and influence, more and more theatres arose, with at least 15 venues ultimately vying for favor. Too many theatregoers, however, preferred the discomforts of a ferry and horsecar trip to New York''s playhouses instead of supporting the local product. Nor did the completion of the Brooklyn Bridge in 1883 do Brooklyn''s theatres any favors. Manhattan''s Goliath slayed Brooklyn''s David. This first comprehensive study of Brooklyn''s old-time theatre describes the city''s early history, each of its many playhouses, its plays and actors (including nearly every foreign and domestic star), and its scandals and catastrophes, including the theatre fire that killed nearly 300. Brooklyn''s ongoing struggle to establish theatres in a society dominated by anti-theatrical preachers, including Henry Ward Beecher,Table of Contents Table of Contents Preface and Acknowledgments Introduction: More Than Trees Grew in Brooklyn 1. The City of Homes and Churches 2. The Curtain Rises 3. The Battle of Brooklyn's Theaters 4. Failure, Folly, and Futility: Managing a Brooklyn Theater 5. Theater Can Be Dangerous 6. Plays, Playwrights, and Premieres 7. The Stock, the Stars, the Scandals, and the Stranded 8. The Curtain Falls Appendix A: A Narrative Performance Timeline, 1861-1893 Appendix B: A Performance Chronology, 1894-1897 Chapter Notes Bibliography Index
£38.69
McFarland & Company John Hodiak
Book Synopsis
£27.54
Simon & Schuster Playing to the Gods
Book SynopsisTrade Review“Thrilling [and] deeply researched. [Rader] has a sizzling way of delivering 100-year-old scandals.” — The New York Times“Playing to the Gods is the best sort of dual biography, deftly intertwining the lives of two fascinating people. Rader masterfully plays these powerful women off each other. This is the book for all of us who binge-watched Feud.” —Daniel de Visé, author of Andy & Don: The Making of a Friendship and a Classic American TV Show“Rader’s fluid narrative moves from stage to boudoir with grace and intrigue, pitting two great theater rivals against one another in an epic battle of styles that elevates both to the iconic status they deserve.” —Michael Sucsy, writer, director, and producer of Grey Gardens“Playing to the Gods argues that the Duse-Bernhardt rivalry, dragging on for years, was more than just personal, it was crucial to the art of modern acting.... [Rader] has done his research and he clearly has sympathy for his leading ladies.” — The Wall Street Journal “Writing in a style both humorous and romantic, and throwing in juicy tidbits (catty notes, cheating lovers) all along.... This entertaining chronicle illustrates how both women captivated audiences and made a lasting impact on the theater.” —Publishers Weekly“Palpably sensuous. Rader brings surging back to life two 19th century theatrical titans and the world they inhabited. Bravo!” —Scott Eyman, bestselling author of Hank and Jim: The Fifty-Year Friendship of Henry Fonda and James Stuart “Theater buffs will love the way Rader captures a global moment in theater—Ibsen, Chekhov, and Shaw all make appearances. A fascinating and thoroughly enjoyable book.” —Booklist“Lovers of theater and theater history will devour this book, an entertaining and immaculate look at a time that in many ways served as the primordial beginnings of the modern stage.” —The Maine Edge“Delightfully readable and informative, Rader’s book examines a rivalry that defined modern theater while also exploring the origins of modern celebrity culture. A well-researched and thoroughly entertaining dual biography.” —Kirkus Reviews“Entertaining and insightful. Rader has taken two legendary figures from theater’s past and put flesh on their bones—bringing them to life, charting their amazing careers, and illuminating their impact on the modern stage.” —Richard Zoglin, author of Hope: Entertainer of the Century
£16.15
Simon & Schuster The Taming of the Shrew
Book Synopsis
£9.99
Hal Leonard Corporation The Best American Short Plays 20112012 Applause
Book SynopsisTHE BEST AMERICAN SHORT PLAYS: 2011--2012
£14.99
Duke University Press Worldmaking
Book SynopsisDorinne Kondo draws on critical ethnographic work and over twenty years of experience as a dramaturge and playwright to theorize how racialized labor, aesthetics, affect, genre, and social inequity operate in contemporary theater.Trade Review"A timely publication. . . [that] keenly reflects the complexity and entanglements of race, history, politics, representation and contemporary identities in North America." -- David J. Scott * The Australian Journal of Anthropology *"Working across disciplines, Kondo reverses the imperative of many scholars to read theory onto performance by instead focusing on the emergence of theory in theater, how it is deployed by theater artists and comes into contact with audiences. . . . For theater makers, Worldmaking serves as another kind of reparative, as it de-centers Eurocentric theatrical models in exchange for processes that enact the minoritarian, the non-hegemonic, the reparative." -- Kristen Holfeuer * Women & Performance *“This book … suits courses on theatre, race, and performance, and on ethnographic methods. Crucially, this book expands necessary conversations on race and dramaturgy, and ways in which ‘dramaturgical critique’—conscious of racial logics and embodied meanings—might make and repair theatrical and racial worlds.” -- Jasmine Mahmoud * TDR: The Drama Review *“Worldmaking is a stunning contribution to discussions of racial representation, affect, ethnography, and practice-led research in our post-racial world. Working to ‘defamiliarize’ American theatre for artists and scholars, the book re-evaluates the dichotomies of theory/practice, artistic passion/compensation, and resistance/complicity that are firmly ingrained in our thinking about the arts. The rigour with which Kondo encourages us to reassess artistic practices and scholarly enquiry, however, never verges on harsh criticism. Instead, it is with stirring generosity that she opens up avenues for further enquiry and redress.” -- Jessica Nakamura * Modern Drama *“Kondo demonstrates the power of theatre to address the complexities of race in contemporary America not only through what is seen onstage but also in the processes of rehearsal, revision, and reception, as artists question representational authority and negotiate collaboration.” -- Josephine Lee * Theatre Journal *"Kondo’s Worldmaking explores how artistic approaches might add to anthropological research and offers a multi-layered ethnography of US theatre. This book is also insightful for theatre practitioners and could be used for teaching undergraduates." -- Cassis Kilian * Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Overture 1 Entr'acte 1. Racial Affect and Affective Violence 17 Act I. Mise-en-Scène 1. Theoretical Scaffolding, Formal Architecture 25 2. Racialized Economies 56 Entr'acte 2. Acting and Embodiment 93 Act II. Creative Labor 3. (En)Acting Theory 97 4. The Drama behind the Drama 130 5. Revising Race 167 Entre'acte 3. The Structure of the Theater Company 205 Act III. Reparative Creativity 6. Playwriting as Reparative Creativity 209 7. Seamless, A Full-Length Play 237 Notes 311 Works Cited 325 Index 349
£132.00
Duke University Press Worldmaking
Book SynopsisIn this bold, innovative work, Dorinne Kondo theorizes the racialized structures of inequality that pervade theater and the arts. Grounded in twenty years of fieldwork as dramaturg and playwright, Kondo mobilizes critical race studies, affect theory, psychoanalysis, and dramatic writing to trenchantly analyze theater''s work of creativity as theory: acting, writing, dramaturgy. Race-making occurs backstage in the creative process and through economic forces, institutional hierarchies, hiring practices, ideologies of artistic transcendence, and aesthetic form. For audiences, the arts produce racial affect--structurally over-determined ways affect can enhance or diminish life. Upending genre through scholarly interpretation, vivid vignettes, and Kondo''s original play, Worldmaking journeys from an initial romance with theater that is shattered by encounters with racism, toward what Kondo calls reparative creativity in the work of minoritarian artists Anna Deavere Smith, DavidTrade Review"A timely publication. . . [that] keenly reflects the complexity and entanglements of race, history, politics, representation and contemporary identities in North America." -- David J. Scott * The Australian Journal of Anthropology *"Working across disciplines, Kondo reverses the imperative of many scholars to read theory onto performance by instead focusing on the emergence of theory in theater, how it is deployed by theater artists and comes into contact with audiences. . . . For theater makers, Worldmaking serves as another kind of reparative, as it de-centers Eurocentric theatrical models in exchange for processes that enact the minoritarian, the non-hegemonic, the reparative." -- Kristen Holfeuer * Women & Performance *“This book … suits courses on theatre, race, and performance, and on ethnographic methods. Crucially, this book expands necessary conversations on race and dramaturgy, and ways in which ‘dramaturgical critique’—conscious of racial logics and embodied meanings—might make and repair theatrical and racial worlds.” -- Jasmine Mahmoud * TDR: The Drama Review *“Worldmaking is a stunning contribution to discussions of racial representation, affect, ethnography, and practice-led research in our post-racial world. Working to ‘defamiliarize’ American theatre for artists and scholars, the book re-evaluates the dichotomies of theory/practice, artistic passion/compensation, and resistance/complicity that are firmly ingrained in our thinking about the arts. The rigour with which Kondo encourages us to reassess artistic practices and scholarly enquiry, however, never verges on harsh criticism. Instead, it is with stirring generosity that she opens up avenues for further enquiry and redress.” -- Jessica Nakamura * Modern Drama *“Kondo demonstrates the power of theatre to address the complexities of race in contemporary America not only through what is seen onstage but also in the processes of rehearsal, revision, and reception, as artists question representational authority and negotiate collaboration.” -- Josephine Lee * Theatre Journal *"Kondo’s Worldmaking explores how artistic approaches might add to anthropological research and offers a multi-layered ethnography of US theatre. This book is also insightful for theatre practitioners and could be used for teaching undergraduates." -- Cassis Kilian * Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix Overture 1 Entr'acte 1. Racial Affect and Affective Violence 17 Act I. Mise-en-Scène 1. Theoretical Scaffolding, Formal Architecture 25 2. Racialized Economies 56 Entr'acte 2. Acting and Embodiment 93 Act II. Creative Labor 3. (En)Acting Theory 97 4. The Drama behind the Drama 130 5. Revising Race 167 Entre'acte 3. The Structure of the Theater Company 205 Act III. Reparative Creativity 6. Playwriting as Reparative Creativity 209 7. Seamless, A Full-Length Play 237 Notes 311 Works Cited 325 Index 349
£35.10
Duke University Press Race and Performance after Repetition
Book SynopsisExamining theater, performance art, music, sports, dance, and photography, the contributors to Race and Performance after Repetition explore how theater and performance studies account for the complex relationship between race and time.Trade Review“Offering a groundbreaking take on one of the most central premises of performance studies, this innovative volume advances theoretical and interpretive articulations of time that expand upon and challenge long-held assumptions about performance as repetition. It significantly expands performance theory and promises to animate conversations about performance, race, and time going forward. This collection is truly a breath of fresh air.” -- Ramón H. Rivera-Servera, coeditor of * Blacktino Queer Performance *“‘What time is it?!’ Race and Performance after Repetition offers a pathbreaking and long overdue intervention in performance studies by posing this sly and urgent question from a multiplicity of critical vantage points. This brilliant and inspired collection of essays unsettles the very foundations of the field by tracing, interrogating, and ultimately questioning the dominant logic of repetition as a foundational theoretical axiom in performance studies scholarship by way of calling attention to the difference that race makes. As this anthology demonstrates, the material historical conditions of race demand a wider, deeper, and more robust critical lexicon that moves beyond the grammar of temporal repetition. It is a volume that heralds new times in the field.” -- Daphne A. Brooks, author of * Bodies in Dissent: Spectacular Performances of Race and Freedom, 1850–1910 *“Race and Performance After Repetition is worth reading from cover to cover, both for the engaging and diverse methodologies on offer and for its overarching interest in what scholars of performance studies miss if they adhere too closely to the conventions of the field.” -- Christina Knight * American Literary History *“The new collection Race and Performance After Repetition moves several fields forward, among them theatre, dance, and performance studies, Black studies, cultural studies, anthropology, and American studies. That it does so is a testament to the richness and interdisciplinarity of the animating impulse behind the collection, the thought of José Esteban Muñoz.” -- Ariel Nereson * Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism *“Colbert, Jones, and Vogel have assembled a truly excellent collection of new work . . . of some of the most exciting performance theorists working in the field today. . . . The editors and contributors alike have collectively produced something magnificent.” -- Takeo Rivera * Modern Drama *“As a collection [Race and Performance after Repetition] pushes on how repetition takes shape; it offers enlightening albeit disparate interventions in thinking about how race, time and performance produce meaning as an ensemble. . . . I finished the book and wanted to start it again.” -- Sean Metzger * Performance Research *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments vii Introduction: Tidying Up after Repetition / Soyica Diggs Colbert, Douglas A. Jones Jr., and Shane Vogel 1 Part I. Toggling Time: Metatheaters of Race 1. So Far Down You Can't See the Light: Afro-Fabulation in Branden Jacob-Jenkins's An Octoroon / Tavia Nyong'o 29 2. The Performance and Politics of Concurrent Temporalities in George C. Wolfe's Shuffle Along / Catherine M. Young 46 3. A Sonic Treatise of Futurity: Universes' Party People / Patricia Herrera 71 Part II. Choreo-Chronographies 4. Joe Louis's Utopic Glitch / Tina Post 103 5. Sorrow's Swing / Jasmine Johnson 127 6. Parabolic Moves: Time, Narrative, and Difference in New Circus / Katherine Zien 142 7. Choreographing Time Travel: Rethinking Ritual through Korean Diasporic Performance / Elizabeth W. Son 173 Part III. Temporal (Im)mobilities: Dwelling Out of Time 8. Carceral Space-Times and The House That Herman Built / Nicholas Fesette 199 9. Performance Interventions: Natality and Carceral Feminism in Contemporary India / Jisha Menon 220 10. Whitnessing Queer Flights: Josué Azor's Lougawou Images and Antihomosexual Unrest in Haiti / Mario Lamothe 242 11. The Body Is Never Given, nor Do We Actually See It / Joshua Chambers-Letson 270 Bibliography 293 Contributors 317 Index 321
£98.60
Duke University Press Race and Performance after Repetition
Book SynopsisThe contributors to Race and Performance after Repetition explore how theater and performance studies account for the complex relationship between race and time. Pointing out that repetition has been the primary point of reference for understanding both the complex temporality of theater and the historical persistence of race, they identify and pursue critical alternatives to the conceptualization, organization, measurement, and politics of race in performance. The contributors examine theater, performance art, music, sports, dance, photography, and other forms of performance in topics that range from the movement of boxer Joe Louis to George C. Wolfe''s 2016 reimagining of the 1921 all-black musical comedy Shuffle Along to the relationship between dance, mourning, and black adolescence in Flying Lotus''s music video “Never Catch Me.” Proposing a spectrum of coexisting racial temporalities that are not tethered to repetition, this collection reconsiders centraTrade Review“Offering a groundbreaking take on one of the most central premises of performance studies, this innovative volume advances theoretical and interpretive articulations of time that expand upon and challenge long-held assumptions about performance as repetition. It significantly expands performance theory and promises to animate conversations about performance, race, and time going forward. This collection is truly a breath of fresh air.” -- Ramón H. Rivera-Servera, coeditor of * Blacktino Queer Performance *“‘What time is it?!’ Race and Performance after Repetition offers a pathbreaking and long overdue intervention in performance studies by posing this sly and urgent question from a multiplicity of critical vantage points. This brilliant and inspired collection of essays unsettles the very foundations of the field by tracing, interrogating, and ultimately questioning the dominant logic of repetition as a foundational theoretical axiom in performance studies scholarship by way of calling attention to the difference that race makes. As this anthology demonstrates, the material historical conditions of race demand a wider, deeper, and more robust critical lexicon that moves beyond the grammar of temporal repetition. It is a volume that heralds new times in the field.” -- Daphne A. Brooks, author of * Bodies in Dissent: Spectacular Performances of Race and Freedom, 1850–1910 *“Race and Performance After Repetition is worth reading from cover to cover, both for the engaging and diverse methodologies on offer and for its overarching interest in what scholars of performance studies miss if they adhere too closely to the conventions of the field.” -- Christina Knight * American Literary History *“The new collection Race and Performance After Repetition moves several fields forward, among them theatre, dance, and performance studies, Black studies, cultural studies, anthropology, and American studies. That it does so is a testament to the richness and interdisciplinarity of the animating impulse behind the collection, the thought of José Esteban Muñoz.” -- Ariel Nereson * Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism *“Colbert, Jones, and Vogel have assembled a truly excellent collection of new work . . . of some of the most exciting performance theorists working in the field today. . . . The editors and contributors alike have collectively produced something magnificent.” -- Takeo Rivera * Modern Drama *“As a collection [Race and Performance after Repetition] pushes on how repetition takes shape; it offers enlightening albeit disparate interventions in thinking about how race, time and performance produce meaning as an ensemble. . . . I finished the book and wanted to start it again.” -- Sean Metzger * Performance Research *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments vii Introduction: Tidying Up after Repetition / Soyica Diggs Colbert, Douglas A. Jones Jr., and Shane Vogel 1 Part I. Toggling Time: Metatheaters of Race 1. So Far Down You Can't See the Light: Afro-Fabulation in Branden Jacob-Jenkins's An Octoroon / Tavia Nyong'o 29 2. The Performance and Politics of Concurrent Temporalities in George C. Wolfe's Shuffle Along / Catherine M. Young 46 3. A Sonic Treatise of Futurity: Universes' Party People / Patricia Herrera 71 Part II. Choreo-Chronographies 4. Joe Louis's Utopic Glitch / Tina Post 103 5. Sorrow's Swing / Jasmine Johnson 127 6. Parabolic Moves: Time, Narrative, and Difference in New Circus / Katherine Zien 142 7. Choreographing Time Travel: Rethinking Ritual through Korean Diasporic Performance / Elizabeth W. Son 173 Part III. Temporal (Im)mobilities: Dwelling Out of Time 8. Carceral Space-Times and The House That Herman Built / Nicholas Fesette 199 9. Performance Interventions: Natality and Carceral Feminism in Contemporary India / Jisha Menon 220 10. Whitnessing Queer Flights: Josué Azor's Lougawou Images and Antihomosexual Unrest in Haiti / Mario Lamothe 242 11. The Body Is Never Given, nor Do We Actually See It / Joshua Chambers-Letson 270 Bibliography 293 Contributors 317 Index 321
£25.19
Duke University Press The Only Way Out
Book SynopsisIn The Only Way Out, Katherine Brewer Ball explores the American fascination with the escape story. Brewer Ball argues that escape is a key site for exploring American conceptions of freedom and constraint. Stories of escape are never told just once but become mythic in their episodic iterations, revealing the fantasies and desires of society, the storyteller, and the listener. While white escape narratives have typically been laden with Enlightenment fantasies of redemption where freedom is available to any individual willing to seize it, Brewer Ball explores how Black and queer escape offer forms of radical possibility. Drawing on Black studies, queer theory, and performance studies, she examines a range of works, from nineteenth-century American literature to contemporary queer of color art and writing by contemporary American artists including Wilmer Wilson IV, Tourmaline, Tony Kushner, Junot Díaz, Glenn Ligon, Toshi Reagon, and Sharon Hayes. Throughout, escape emerge
£72.25
Duke University Press The Only Way Out
Book SynopsisIn The Only Way Out, Katherine Brewer Ball explores the American fascination with the escape story. Brewer Ball argues that escape is a key site for exploring American conceptions of freedom and constraint. Stories of escape are never told just once but become mythic in their episodic iterations, revealing the fantasies and desires of society, the storyteller, and the listener. While white escape narratives have typically been laden with Enlightenment fantasies of redemption where freedom is available to any individual willing to seize it, Brewer Ball explores how Black and queer escape offer forms of radical possibility. Drawing on Black studies, queer theory, and performance studies, she examines a range of works, from nineteenth-century American literature to contemporary queer of color art and writing by contemporary American artists including Wilmer Wilson IV, Tourmaline, Tony Kushner, Junot Díaz, Glenn Ligon, Toshi Reagon, and Sharon Hayes. Throughout, escape emerge
£18.89
New York University Press Black Performance on the Outskirts of the Left
Book SynopsisArticulates the role black theatricality played in the radical energy of the sixties Black Performance on the Outskirts of the Left illustrates the black political ideas that radicalized the artistic endeavors of musicians, playwrights, and actors beginning in the 1960s. These ideas paved the way for imaginative models for social transformation through performance. Using the notion of excessits transgression, multiplicity, and ambivalenceMalik Gaines considers how performances of that era circulated a black political discourse capable of unsettling commonplace understandings of race, gender, and sexuality. Following the transnational route forged by W.E.B. Du Bois, Josephine Baker, and other modern political actors, from the United States to West Africa, Europe and back, this book considers how artists negotiated at once the local, national, and diasporic frames through which race has been represented. Looking broadly at performances found in music, theater,Trade ReviewBlack Performance on the Outskirts of the Left provides an impressive account of embodied tactics, affects, and experiments that launched provisional challenges to hegemonic systems of order and charted energetic paths for future radical acts to follow. Constructing a genealogy that defies generic, national, and gendered bounds, Gaines supplies black performance studies with an expansive and heterogeneous approach to the history of radicalism, to performance, and to blackness itself. -- The Drama ReviewEvery reader interested in the sexual and revolutionary politics of black feminist and queer performance needs to read Malik Gaines's Black Performance on the Outskirts of the Left. This examination of 1960s music, theater, film, and experimental performance scenes is detail-rich, sophisticated, and sharp. One emerges from this text inspired while we must look to the margins to find these black, queer, and feminist artists who have navigated difficult revolutionary and post-revolutionary waters, in moving toward them we move in the direction that the left needs to go. -- Jennifer Doyle, author of Hold It against Me: Difficulty and Emotion in Contemporary ArtMalik Gaines's artistry and intellection is so important to me that I can scarcely remember a time now when both didn't influence my own. Black Performance on the Outskirts of the Left is alive with what is essential to Gaines's way of seeing and thinking: politics, race, sexuality, and the theater of being. An important contribution on any number of levels, including man's further understanding of man, with and without masks. A wonderful achievement. -- Hilton Als, Pulitzer Prize Winner for Criticism and theater critic for the New YorkerMalik Gaines's position as both a practitioner and a scholar lend a unique depth to this study... reveals a striking sensitivity to the subtle frequencies on which black performance operates and is an important addition to the expanding black performance studies canon. * The Journal of American Drama and Theatre *Rhetorically and structurally, this [book] provides a fascinating coda. Histories and theatrical legacies of black expressivity ... do not exist solely on the page or in the brick-and-mortar archive but are embodied and reexamined through live performance. * PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art *
£23.74
New York University Press Fck The Army
Book SynopsisReveals the theatrical dimensions of civilian support for the revolutionary GI Movement of the 1960s-70sPerformance played a role both crucial and complicated in the antiwar activism of the 1960s and 1970s. As soldiers and civilian actors, activists, and celebrities worked together to end the Vietnam War, their theatrical acts of solidarity and resistance connected liberation struggles across the lines of race, gender, enlisted status, and nationality.F*ck The Army! offers the first, fully narrated history of the FTA, an antiwar variety show featuring Jane Fonda that played to tens of thousands of active-duty troops over the course of nine months in 1971. From its very conception, the civilian-led show was directed towards the project of making visible the growing antiwar movement organized by GIs, inspired by but also acting as a rebuttal to the increasingly out-of-touch USO tours presented by Bob Hope. Through an analysis of the FTA's tactical performance
£62.90
MI - New York University Fck The Army
Book SynopsisReveals the theatrical dimensions of civilian support for the revolutionary GI Movement of the 1960s-70sPerformance played a role both crucial and complicated in the antiwar activism of the 1960s and 1970s. As soldiers and civilian actors, activists, and celebrities worked together to end the Vietnam War, their theatrical acts of solidarity and resistance connected liberation struggles across the lines of race, gender, enlisted status, and nationality.F*ck The Army! offers the first, fully narrated history of the FTA, an antiwar variety show featuring Jane Fonda that played to tens of thousands of active-duty troops over the course of nine months in 1971. From its very conception, the civilian-led show was directed towards the project of making visible the growing antiwar movement organized by GIs, inspired by but also acting as a rebuttal to the increasingly out-of-touch USO tours presented by Bob Hope. Through an analysis of the FTA's tactical performance
£21.59
New York University Press Black Performance on the Outskirts of the Left
Book SynopsisArticulates the role black theatricality played in the radical energy of the sixties Black Performance on the Outskirts of the Left illustrates the black political ideas that radicalized the artistic endeavors of musicians, playwrights, and actors beginning in the 1960s. These ideas paved the way for imaginative models for social transformation through performance. Using the notion of excessits transgression, multiplicity, and ambivalenceMalik Gaines considers how performances of that era circulated a black political discourse capable of unsettling commonplace understandings of race, gender, and sexuality. Following the transnational route forged by W.E.B. Du Bois, Josephine Baker, and other modern political actors, from the United States to West Africa, Europe and back, this book considers how artists negotiated at once the local, national, and diasporic frames through which race has been represented. Looking broadly at performances found in music, theater,Trade ReviewBlack Performance on the Outskirts of the Left provides an impressive account of embodied tactics, affects, and experiments that launched provisional challenges to hegemonic systems of order and charted energetic paths for future radical acts to follow. Constructing a genealogy that defies generic, national, and gendered bounds, Gaines supplies black performance studies with an expansive and heterogeneous approach to the history of radicalism, to performance, and to blackness itself. -- The Drama ReviewEvery reader interested in the sexual and revolutionary politics of black feminist and queer performance needs to read Malik Gaines's Black Performance on the Outskirts of the Left. This examination of 1960s music, theater, film, and experimental performance scenes is detail-rich, sophisticated, and sharp. One emerges from this text inspired while we must look to the margins to find these black, queer, and feminist artists who have navigated difficult revolutionary and post-revolutionary waters, in moving toward them we move in the direction that the left needs to go. -- Jennifer Doyle, author of Hold It against Me: Difficulty and Emotion in Contemporary ArtMalik Gaines's artistry and intellection is so important to me that I can scarcely remember a time now when both didn't influence my own. Black Performance on the Outskirts of the Left is alive with what is essential to Gaines's way of seeing and thinking: politics, race, sexuality, and the theater of being. An important contribution on any number of levels, including man's further understanding of man, with and without masks. A wonderful achievement. -- Hilton Als, Pulitzer Prize Winner for Criticism and theater critic for the New YorkerMalik Gaines's position as both a practitioner and a scholar lend a unique depth to this study... reveals a striking sensitivity to the subtle frequencies on which black performance operates and is an important addition to the expanding black performance studies canon. * The Journal of American Drama and Theatre *Rhetorically and structurally, this [book] provides a fascinating coda. Histories and theatrical legacies of black expressivity ... do not exist solely on the page or in the brick-and-mortar archive but are embodied and reexamined through live performance. * PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art *
£66.60
Hal Leonard Corporation The Playbill Broadway Yearbook
Book Synopsis
£30.00
Hal Leonard Corporation Film Scripts Two
Book SynopsisThe Film Scripts Series is a new printing of some of the greatest screenplays ever written. Each of the four volumes in the series ä edited by George P. Garrett O. B. Hardison Jr. and Jane R. Gelfman ä contains three classic shooting scripts written by some of the finest writers to ever work in Hollywood. Every volume also features a highly informative introduction a glossary of technical terms an extensive bibliography and the credits for each film. These enduring screenplays will be of great interest to the general film buff the aspiring screenwriter and the professional filmmaker. Of particular value to the screenwriter and filmmaker is the fact that all scripts are printed in standard screenplay format.ÞÞÊFilm Scripts TwoÊ features:ÞÞÊHigh NoonÊ (1952 United Artists): Script by Carl Foreman; Directed by Fred Zinnemann; Starring Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly; Academy Awards for Gary Cooper best film editing best song and best score; Academy Award nominations for best pictu
£17.99
Hal Leonard Corporation Film Scripts Four
Book SynopsisThe Film Scripts Series is a new printing of some of the greatest screenplays ever written. Each of the four volumes in the series ä edited by George P. Garrett O. B. Hardison Jr. and Jane R. Gelfman ä contains three classic shooting scripts written by some of the finest writers to ever work in Hollywood. Every volume also features a highly informative introduction a glossary of technical terms an extensive bibliography and the credits for each film. These enduring screenplays will be of great interest to the general film buff the aspiring screenwriter and the professional filmmaker. Of particular value to the screenwriter and filmmaker is the fact that all scripts are printed in standard screenplay format.ÞÞÊFilm Scripts FourÊ features:ÞÞÊA Hard Day''s NightÊ (1964 United Artists): Script by Alun Owen; Directed by Richard Lester; Starring the Beatles; Academy Award nominations for best screenplay and best score (George Martin).ÞÞÊThe Best ManÊ (1964 United Artists): Script b
£24.22
Hal Leonard Corporation Rodgers Hammersteins Cinderella
Book SynopsisÊMusic by Richard RodgersÊÞÊLyrics by Oscar Hammerstein IIÊÞÊNew book by Douglas Carter BeaneÊÞÊOriginal book by Oscar Hammerstein IIÊÞIn March 2013 a new Rodgers and Hammerstein musical opened on Broadway ä new to Broadway but based on a TV musical first written nearly 60 years before and beloved by audiences all over the world. It was ÊRodgers + Hammerstein''s CinderellaÊ which very quickly became the belle of the ball of the Broadway season winning cheers for its fresh take on a timeless classic. Douglas Carter Beane created a new Tony-nominated book that was hailed for complementing the inspirational themes of Rodgers and Hammerstein with a 21st-century sensibility giving the musical new characters surprising plot twists and revelatory moments that harkened back to the Charles Perrault version of the fairy tale. The score was cheered as well: the familiar songs from the television versions ä In My Own Little Corner Impossible A Lovely Night Do I Love You Because
£16.02
Hal Leonard Corporation You Fascinate Me So The Life and Times of Cy
Book SynopsisYOU FASCINATE ME SO!THE LIFE AND TIMES OF CY COLEMAN
£23.75
Hal Leonard Corporation Sound of Music FAQ All Thats Left to Know About
Book SynopsisTHE SOUND OF MUSIC FAQ:ALL THATS LEFT TO KNOW ABOUT MARIA THE VON TRAPPS AND OUR FAVORI
£19.99
Hal Leonard Corporation A Chorus Line FAQ All Thats Left to Know About
Book SynopsisA CHORUS LINE FAQ:ALL THAT'S LEFT TO KNOW ABOUT BROADWAY'S SINGULAR SENSATION
£14.99
Hal Leonard Corporation How I Did it Establishing a Playwriting Career
Book SynopsisHOW I DID IT: ESTABLISHING A PLAYWRITING CAREER
£19.99
Hal Leonard Corporation The Playbill Broadway Yearbook
Book SynopsisTHE PLAYBILL BROADWAY YEARBOOK: JUNE 2013 TO MAY 2014 TENTH ANNUAL EDITION
£30.00
Hal Leonard Corporation 25 10Minute Plays for Teens
Book Synopsis25 10 MINUTE PLAYS FOR TEENS
£12.99
Hal Leonard Corporation Mainly on Directing
Book SynopsisAs a playwright screenwriter and director Arthur Laurents has a unique place in the history of theater. In this moving exhilarating and provocative account he presents readers with a front-row look at the making of two of the greatest musicals of the American stage ÊWest Side StoryÊ and ÊGypsyÊ. He writes in rich detail about his new bilingual production of ÊWest Side StoryÊ along with his most recent production of ÊGypsyÊ how it began as an act of love and how that love spread through the entire company and resulted in a ÊGypsyÊ unlike any other.ÞLaurents offers behind-the-scenes details about the musicals he directed including ÊI Can Get It for You WholesaleÊ its producer David Merrick (the Abominable Showman ) and its (very young) stars Barbra Streisand and Elliott Gould. He dishes on Stephen Sondheim''s ÊAnyone Can WhistleÊ which starred Angela Lansbury and Lee Remick marking the debut for each in musical theater. And he recounts the challenges and surprises that cTrade ReviewRequired reading for anyone who is passionate about musical theatre ...a sublimely dishy portrait of Broadway's golden age and beyond, ranging from legends such as Ethel Merman, Jerome Robbins and Stephen Sondheim to Laurents' late partner, Tom Hatcher, whose influence on his work is movingly detailed. - USA Today
£11.69
Hal Leonard Corporation The Best Plays of 2014 Applause Books
Book SynopsisTHE BEST PLAYS OF 2014
£15.19
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform Beating Broadway How to Create Stories for Musicals That Get Standing Ovations
£19.06
House of Anansi Press Ltd ,Canada Buffoon
Book SynopsisThree-time Governor General's Literary Awardshortlisted author and playwright Anosh Irani's critically acclaimed one-man showBuffoonis a masterclass of tragicomic theatre.Born to circus folk who prefer trapezing over parenting, Felix quickly learns to turn life's misfortunes into jokes. His longing for family and home is piqued at the tender age of seven when he falls hopelessly in love with an older woman, the beguiling Aja, who is eight. In the process, a clown is born, and we watch him grow into a middle-aged buffoon. Over time, Felix stops waiting for someone else to love him; his journey becomes one of loving himself. A story of love, loss, and the fate that binds us, Buffoon is a gut-wrenching one-man show that expertly walks the tightrope between heartbreak and hilarity.Trade ReviewBuffoon matches a multilayered script with a magnificent solo performance … [An] epic tale of love and betrayal, triumph and loss, connection and abandonment — the human story. * Globe and Mail *A marvel of solo storytelling. * NOW Magazine (NNNN) *The play … begins with Felix as a hopeful child … and tracks his growing cynicism around life and love … An involving journey. * Toronto Star *An engrossing, heart wrenching tale of love lost, regained, and lost again … Bittersweet, poignant, funny and gripping … This is one play that will keep your mind — and your heart — engaged for a long time. Don’t miss it. * Entertainment Vancouver *Irani’s storytelling is a mix of fanciful wordplay … punctuated by poetic insights. * Stir *Buffoon is full of powerful moments and rich metaphor. * Broadway World *
£13.49
University of Toronto Press Theatre of Anger
Book SynopsisIn Theatre of Anger, Olivia Landry offers a provocative new vision of anger as more than just hate and violence. Studying the work of a new generation of transnational theatre practitioners in Berlin, she illuminates how anger can be an affirmative and critical tool in the project of social justice and resistance. To develop her theory of anger, Landry delves into philosophical texts, theatre history, and Black feminist theory from Aristotle, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, and Bertolt Brecht to Audre Lorde, bell hooks, and Sara Ahmed. Landry focuses not only on the social and political significance of the theatre of anger and the ways in which it rages against racism, antisemitism, Islamophobia, sexism, and homophobia, but also on its aesthetic and theoretical innovation. Through readings of key works, Theatre of Anger asks what it means in our present world to construct political theatre.Trade Review"Olivia Landry's original study of the theatre of anger as a distinct genre makes an important and timely contribution to German studies, theatre studies, and to postcolonial and critical race studies. Scholars and students in these fields will find much to admire in the way she brings these fields into conversation." -- Katrin Sieg, Georgetown University * Monatshefte *"Theatre of Anger is a confident and highly readable book, which stages a complex, multi-faceted take on its subject matter. It is well argued, engaging, and informative throughout, managing several trajectories of argument and exploration in a way that remains clear, helpful, and illuminating." -- Sophie Nield, Royal Holloway, University of London * Comparative Drama *Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgments Glossary of Plays Introduction: Theatre of Anger as Theatre of Desintegration 1. In Defence of Anger: From a History of Social Justice to the Theatre 2. Get Deutsch or Die Tryin’; or, Confronting a History of Exclusion and Violence 3. Staging “Muslim Rage” 4. Documentaries of Outrage 5. Salzmann’s Angry Youths 6. “Theatre of the Twenty-First Century”: An Interview with Sasha Marianna Salzmann Conclusion: Anger in the Future Sense Notes Bibliography Index
£46.75
University of Toronto Press Cures for Chance
Book SynopsisCures for Chance examines how early modern dramatic representations of adoption test conventional notions of family and nature.Trade Review“Ellerbeck’s study makes a contribution to our understanding of family more generally and to ‘early modern concepts of familial possibility.’” -- Jonathan Locke Hart, Shandong University * Renaissance and Reformation / Renaissance et Réforme *Table of ContentsIntroduction: Shaping the Family 1. Shakespeare’s Adopted Children and the Language of Horticulture 2. Animal Parenting in Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus 3. Adopted Bastards in A Chaste Maid in Cheapside 4. Adoptive Names in Middleton’s Women Beware Women Afterword: In loco parentis Bibliography
£32.30
University of Toronto Press A Stage for Debate
Book SynopsisA Stage for Debate presents a detailed analysis of the repertoire of the leading German-language stage of the nineteenth century, Vienna’s Burgtheater. The book explores the extent to which the Burgtheater repertoire contributed to important political and cultural debates on individual liberty, the role of women in society, and the understanding of national and regional identity. The relevance of the Burgtheater as a forum for political debate is assessed not by the degree to which the performed plays transgressed established norms, but by the range of positions that were voiced on a given topic. Martin Wagner investigates the roughly 1,000 plays from across Europe that were introduced to the Burgtheater’s repertoire between 1814 and 1867 by combining a general overview with detailed interpretations of especially successful plays. Wagner reveals that the Burgtheater was significantly more involved in contemporary debates than the stereotype of this stagTable of ContentsIntroduction: Reassessing the Mid-Nineteenth-Century Burgtheater 1. What Makes a Theatre Politically Significant? 2. Making the Burgtheater Repertoire 3. The Scope of the Burgtheater Repertoire 4. Mourning and Reforming Obedience 5. Performing the Women’s Movement 6. The Drama of National and Regional Belonging Conclusion: The Mid-Nineteenth-Century Burgtheater as a Case Study Works Cited Index
£39.10
University of Toronto Press Hope in a Collapsing World
Book SynopsisFor young people, the space of the drama classroom can be a space for deep learning as they struggle across difference to create something together with common purpose. Collaborating across institutions, theatres, and community spaces, the research in Hope in a Collapsing World mobilizes theatre to build its methodology and create new data with young people as they seek the language of performance to communicate their worries, fears, and dreams to a global network of researchers and a wider public. A collaboration between a social scientist and a playwright and using both ethnographic study and playwriting, Hope in a Collapsing World represents a groundbreaking hybrid format of research text and original script titled Towards Youth: A Play on Radical Hope for reading, experimentation, and performance. Table of ContentsDedication Figures and Tables Acknowledgements I Acknowledgements II Prologue Part I: Listening, Pedagogy, Theatre, and Cultural Citizenship Listening as an Artful Practice of Care Listening and Caring as Political Acts Creating Social Value from Theatre The System: Worlds Apart but Structurally Familiar The Settings: Brief Social, Political and Educational Portraits of Athens, Lucknow, Coventry, Tainan, Toronto Athens, Greece: Setting the Context Lucknow, India: Setting the Context Coventry, England: Setting the Context Tainan, Taiwan: Setting the Context Toronto, Canada: Setting the Context Ethnography and its Ecologies An Overview of Data Collection A Word about Ethnography The Qualitative Landscape: Care and Cultural Citizenship Daring to Dream in Greek Austerity Misfit Citizenship and Political Personhood in India: A Methodology of Critical Dialogue and Rehearsed Futurity Hope, Performance Pedagogies, and Democratic Citizenship Canley Youth Theatre’s Missive to the World—Listen A Pedagogy of Hope Tainan Students Making the World they Need The Self, the Collective: Theatre and Social Change Interdependency Against All Odds Voicing Toronto Stories for a more Equal World The Territory of Race, Racism, and Gender in Verbatim Theatre Creation Visible and Invisible Vulnerabilities in Oral History Storytelling Muckles’ Story of Hearing and Being Heard Youth Alienation from Mainstream Politics: Who is the Knowledgeable Citizen? Devising Theatre, Identity and the Search for Structure and Meaning Hope and Care in the Quantitative Landscape Key Quantitative Findings Across Sites ‘Outside the Mainstream’ and the Nature of Personal Hope and Experiences of Care Generating Hope through Self-Creation in the School, the Community, and in the Drama-Making Space Young People as Care-Givers Finding and Giving Care in Context To Conclude: Wrestling Towards Hope through Relationships of Care Epilogue: Acting in Concert Turning Towards Part II: Towards Youth Audience Research Part II: A Step Towards Youth By Andrew Kushnir Towards Youth: A Play on Radical Hope By Andrew Kushnir Appendix References Index
£23.39
University of Toronto Press Hans Christian Andersen and the Romantic Theatre
Book SynopsisThe romantic theatre, with all its imaginative vigour and eagerness for experimentation, appeals to those who like total theatre – unabashed, unashamedly spectacular, unforgettably pathetic. Critics who take a purely literary approach the drama often neglect or malign the theatre of the nineteenth century. Yet even in terms of literary, influence it is a hazardous to ignore the debt the exponents of naturalism owed to the drama of the prenaturalistic period. Despite universal critical agreement about the significance of Ibsen and Strindberg as creators of modernism, no attempt has previously been made to describe and delineate the theatrical context from which these major Scandinavian playwrights emerged. Hans Christian Andersen stands squarely astride the romantic period in Scandinavia. His plays, appearing from 1829 to 1865, span the important transition from the actor-dominated theatre to the naturalist theatre controlled by the director. Although recognized as a great
£21.59
University of Toronto Press Citizen Comedy in the Age of Shakespeare
Book SynopsisThis is the first book to survey comprehensively the field of Elizabethan and Jacobean citizen comedy. Most studies of the period focus on major authors; this one follows recurring themes and motifs, through a variety of plays by many authors from the moralizing comedies of the boys' companies. Professor Leggatt provides not only a fresh perspective on familiar plays by such figures as Jonson, Middleton, and Dekker, but also a new look at a number of neglected comedies, some by unfamiliar authors, some by major authors working together. Standard figures – the usurer, the prodigal, and the prostitute – and standard plots – notably intrigues based on money or sex (or both) – are traced to show the changes that occur in apparently stereotyped material at the hands of individual authors. The result is to display the range and internal variety of a genre that too often is seen as all of a piece, and to show the different ways in which social thinking can inte
£19.79
University of Toronto Press The Heresy of Wu Han
Book SynopsisAt the centre of China's Cultural Revolution in its first stages stands the ambiguous figure of Wu Han. Occupying until the mid-sixties a favoured position among the intellectual elite of the People's Republic, he was the eighth-ranking figure in the Chinese Communist Party, and his Peking Opera Hai Jui's Dismissal was performed all over China. Gradually it became apparent that Wu Han was using Hai Jui to lampoon Chairman Mao Tse-tung and the core policies of the CPP. Other dissidents began to pen articles and plays on similar themes. For several years Mao chafed under these literary attacks, but in late 1965 he retaliated. A sudden, scathing attack on Wu Han and his play by an obscure newspaper editor marked the beginning of the Cultural Revolution, a cataclysm in which the Party leadership was decimated while Mao regained full supremacy. This volume presents the first translation of Wu Han's plays and helps to clarify the obscure origins of a national phenomenon that was at
£16.19
University of Toronto Press Studies in the Textual Tradition of Terence
Book SynopsisThe textual tradition of the Latin dramatist Publius Terentius Afer (second century BC) is unusually rich and complex. Over six hundred manuscripts containing some or all of Terence's six comedies have survived, but only one codex and three small fragments date from antiquity. All the rest were copied in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance when Terence was very popular. Recently scholars have been devoting considerable study to the role of his works and the commentaries on them in the cultural and intellectual development of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. However, little attention has been given to an examination and re-examination of the manuscripts in order to determine which are the most useful for establishing a reliable text of the plays.In this study John N. Grant examines afresh the manuscript tradition of the comedies, looking in particular at a branch of the medieval manuscripts which has been neglected in the past. He establishes the primacy of one manuscript,
£23.39
University of Toronto Press Marivaux
Book SynopsisThe last thirty years have seen a renewed interest in the novels, plays, and essays of Marivaux. Each year more of his work is made available to the public in partial editions. More and better studies have appeared, superseding the old and, in the last thirty years, almost all of his plays have been performed. Today no corder of his work remains unexplored: our knowledge of his life, which had been until recently a tissue of fancy and anecdote, has been enhanced by the discovery of a few facts.This critical study of the entire body of Marviaux's writings sets out to tell whether this attention represents a securely established place for Marivaux among the great French writers, or simply a vogue. It consists of a careful analysis of the individual works, in chronological order rather than in systematic groups, as is customary, showing the development of Marivaux's thinking, and the intimate relationship among the plays, novels, and essays of any given period. A history of the
£29.70
Trafford Publishing Theatre and Encounter
Book Synopsis
£12.42
iUniverse Dorothy Parker
£22.95
Human Kinetics Publishers Interdisciplinary Arts
Book SynopsisInterdisciplinary Arts helps students explore their capacities for creativity and cross-disciplinary thinking by drawing from the fields of theatre, dance, and visual arts. They will learn how to transfer the skills they gain from the book to any endeavor or career they undertake.Table of ContentsChapter 1. Introduction to Interdisciplinary ArtsInterdisciplinary MovementBartenieff: Six Developmental StagesAlexander TechniqueYogaConclusionChapter 2. TheatreGetting Started: Connecting to the TextPreparing a SceneBody: The Actor’s InstrumentStage AwarenessProps and CostumesCollaborative TeamChapter 3. Dance and MovementLaban: Still FormsCentering the Body: 12 Principles of Bartenieff FundamentalsPreparing for the WorkThe Creative ImpulseIntent: Moving With PurposeLaban’s Effort FactorsMise en scèneCollaborative TeamChapter 4. Visual ArtsVisual ArtsInspirationFormColorValue and ContrastRhythmShapeLineTextureSpaceChapter 5. Dance and TheatreIntegrating Dance and Theatre: Poem Performance Using Laban’s EffortsOverview of the ProcessThe Process in DetailAssimilation of Feedback, Development, and RehearsalConclusionChapter 6. Visual Arts and DanceIntegrating Visual Arts With Dance: Wearable or Scenic ArtOverview of the ProcessOverview of the Concepts Used in the ProjectConclusionChapter 7. Theatre and Visual ArtsIntegrating Theatre and Visual Arts: In/Out MasksOverview of the ProcessOverview of the Concepts Used in the ProjectArts-Based ResearchDevelopment: Creating Your In/Out MaskDeveloping the MonologueChapter 8. All Three Art FormsMaking Art Using the Human IntelligencesMultiple Intelligences Synthesis AssignmentChapter 9. Make Art, but Also, Go See Art!Theatre CriticismVisual Art CriticismDance and Movement CriticismConclusion: Interdisciplinary Arts as a Way of Life
£48.60
Globe Pequot Press Arizona on Stage
Book Synopsis
£14.24
Globe Pequot Press Ever After
Book SynopsisNarrated by Barry Singerone of contemporary musical theater's most authoritative chroniclersEver After was originally published in 2003 as a history of the previous twenty-five years in musical theater, on and off Broadway. This new, second edition extends the narrative, taking readers from 2004 to the present. The book revisits every new musical that has opened since the last edition, with Barry Singer once again as guide.Before Ever After appeared in 2003, no book had addressed the recent past in musical theater historyan era Singer describes as ever after musical theater's many golden ages. Derived significantly from Singer's writings about musical theater for the New York Times, New York magazine, and the New Yorker, Ever After captured that era in its entirety, from the opening of The Act on Broadway in October 1977 to the opening of Avenue Q Off-Broadway in March 2003. This new edition brings Ever After up to date, from Wicked through The Book of Mormon to Hamilton and beyond. On
£25.50