Description

Book Synopsis
This collection of essays offers the first comprehensive treatment of British and American films adapted from modern British plays. Offering insights into the mutually profitable relationship between the newest performance medium and the most ancient. With each chapter written by an expert in the field, Modern British Drama on Screen focuses on key playwrights of the period including George Bernard Shaw, Somerset Maugham, Terence Rattigan, Noel Coward and John Osborne and the most significant British drama of the past century from Pygmalion to The Madness of George III. Most chapters are devoted to single plays and the transformations they underwent in the move from stage to screen. Ideally suited for classroom use, this book offers a semester's worth of introductory material for the study of theater and film in modern Britain, widely acknowledged as a world center of dramatic productions for both the stage and screen.

Table of Contents
Introduction R. Barton Palmer and William Robert Bray; 1. 'That filth from which the glamour is not even yet departed': adapting Journey's End Lawrence Napper; 2. Playful banter in Shaw's Pygmalion Douglas McFarland; 3. Knowing your place: David Lean's film adaptation of Noel Coward's This Happy Breed Neil Sinyard; 4. The Browning Version revisited Marcia Landy; 5. Screening for serious people a trivial comedy: Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest Tom Ryall; 6. The British New Wave begins: Richardson's Look Back in Anger Steve Nicholson; 7. The shift from stage to screen: space, performance, and language in The Knack … and How to Get It Christine Geraghty; 8. See-thru desire and the dream of gay marriage: Orton's Entertaining Mr Sloane on stage and screen James Campbell; 9. Sleuth on screen: adapting masculinities Monika Pietrzak-Franger; 10. Educating Rita and the Pygmalion effect: gender, class, and adaptation anxiety Cynthia Lucia; 11. The madness of Susan Traherne: adapting Hare's Plenty Tiffany Gilbert; 12. 'A Tom Stoppard film': agency and adaptation in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead Elizabeth Rivlin; 13. Rewriting history: Alan Bennett's collaboration with Nicholas Hytner on the adaptations of The Madness of George III and The History Boys Joseph H. O'Mealy; Filmography.

Modern British Drama on Screen

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    A Hardback by R. Barton Palmer, William Robert Bray

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      Publisher: Cambridge University Press
      Publication Date: 05/12/2013
      ISBN13: 9781107001015, 978-1107001015
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This collection of essays offers the first comprehensive treatment of British and American films adapted from modern British plays. Offering insights into the mutually profitable relationship between the newest performance medium and the most ancient. With each chapter written by an expert in the field, Modern British Drama on Screen focuses on key playwrights of the period including George Bernard Shaw, Somerset Maugham, Terence Rattigan, Noel Coward and John Osborne and the most significant British drama of the past century from Pygmalion to The Madness of George III. Most chapters are devoted to single plays and the transformations they underwent in the move from stage to screen. Ideally suited for classroom use, this book offers a semester's worth of introductory material for the study of theater and film in modern Britain, widely acknowledged as a world center of dramatic productions for both the stage and screen.

      Table of Contents
      Introduction R. Barton Palmer and William Robert Bray; 1. 'That filth from which the glamour is not even yet departed': adapting Journey's End Lawrence Napper; 2. Playful banter in Shaw's Pygmalion Douglas McFarland; 3. Knowing your place: David Lean's film adaptation of Noel Coward's This Happy Breed Neil Sinyard; 4. The Browning Version revisited Marcia Landy; 5. Screening for serious people a trivial comedy: Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest Tom Ryall; 6. The British New Wave begins: Richardson's Look Back in Anger Steve Nicholson; 7. The shift from stage to screen: space, performance, and language in The Knack … and How to Get It Christine Geraghty; 8. See-thru desire and the dream of gay marriage: Orton's Entertaining Mr Sloane on stage and screen James Campbell; 9. Sleuth on screen: adapting masculinities Monika Pietrzak-Franger; 10. Educating Rita and the Pygmalion effect: gender, class, and adaptation anxiety Cynthia Lucia; 11. The madness of Susan Traherne: adapting Hare's Plenty Tiffany Gilbert; 12. 'A Tom Stoppard film': agency and adaptation in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead Elizabeth Rivlin; 13. Rewriting history: Alan Bennett's collaboration with Nicholas Hytner on the adaptations of The Madness of George III and The History Boys Joseph H. O'Mealy; Filmography.

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