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The subject of this book is theatre directing in four
internationally famous instances. The four directors-Konstantin
Stanislavsky, Bertolt Brecht, Elia Kazan, and Peter Brook-all were
monarchs of the profession in their time. Without their work,
theatre in the twentieth century-so often called "the century of
the director" -would have a radically different shape and meaning.
The four men are also among the dozen or so modern directors whose
theatrical achievements have become culture phenomena. In
histories, theories, hagiographies, and polemics, these directors
are conferred classic stature, as are the four plays on which they
worked. Chekhov's The Seagull, Brecht's Mother Courage and Her
Children, and Williams's A Streetcar Named Desire have long been
recognized, in the theatre and in the study, as masterpieces. They
are anthologized, quoted, taught, parodied, read, and produced
constantly and globally. The culturally conservative might question
the presence of MaratiSade in such august company, but Peter
Weiss's play stands every chance of figuring in Western
repertories, classroom study, and theatrical histories until well
into the twenty-first century. In their quite different ways, these
are all classics of that Western drama which is part of our
immediate heritage.
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