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The English Stage tells the story of English drama through its many changes in style and convention from medieval times to the present day. John Styan analyzes the key features of staging, including early street theater and public performance, the evolution of the playhouse and the private space, and the pairing of theory and stagecraft in the works of modern dramatists. Giving a critical performance analysis, the author closely examines a few key plays from each age to demonstrate how they succeed on stage. He also focuses on several major playwrights--Marlowe, Shakespeare, Jonson, and Shaw--and discusses their stagecraft in detail. Styan can be considered among a small number of influential scholars who have helped to develop theater history from its origins in literary studies into an independent and respected field.
Max Reinhardt (1873 1943), one of the major theatre figures of the
twentieth century, was among the first to establish the importance
of the director in modern theatre. His fame outside Germany rests
somewhat unfairly on his distorted image as producer of giant,
Gothic spectacles staged in vast auditoria or cathedral squares. In
this book Professor Styan is concerned to illustrate Reinhardt's
astonishing versatility as director of more than six hundred
productions, which together cover almost all the dramatic genres
and all the major theatrical movements of the time. Professor Styan
explains Reinhardt's place in the history of Austrian and German
culture and world theatrical movements. Using contemporary reviews
and the Regiebuch, or director's promptbook, he describes in detail
the organization, performance and impact of some of the director's
major productions: his symbolist interpretation of Ghosts and
Salome; the expressionist experiment with plays by Wedekind,
Strindberg, Sorge and Buchner; the Shakespeare sequence, including
the classic A Midsummer Night's Dream; productions of Greek
tragedy, Goethe, and the baroque spectacles such as Everyman, which
together cover almost all the dramatic genres and all the major
theatrical movements of the time. Professor Styan explains
Reinhardt's place in the history of Austrian and German culture and
world theatrical movements. Using contemporary reviews and the
Regiebuch, or director's promptbook, he describes in detail the
organization, performance and impact of some of the director's
major productions: his symbolist interpretation of Ghosts and
Salome; the expressionist experiment with plays by Wedekind,
Strindberg, Sorge and Buchner; the Shakespeare sequence, including
the classic A Midsummer Night's Dream; productions of Greek
tragedy, Goethe, and the baroque spectacles such as Everyman.
Plays are, of course, meant to be seen, not read, but many people
find it impossible to visit the theatre regularly and it is for
them that Professor Styan intends this book, originally published
in 1965, to promote better understanding of the dramatist's
intentions and fuller enjoyment of the play. He defines what a play
is and discusses such topics as the development of the theatre -
its different stages, kinds of drama and types of character - the
tone and tempo in which the play is written, the roles of actor and
audience and the structure and interplay of plot and subplot.
Charts of theatrical history, a glossary and reading lists, as well
as drawings and diagrams by David Gentleman, provide further help
for the reader.
This book shows how a play 'works' in the theatre: how it generates
life, meaning and excitement on the stage for the audience. It is
self evident that a play must communicate or it is not a play at
all. Professor Styan argues that, while communication in drama
begins with the script, the value or power of a play must be tested
upon an audience. In the theatre experience, it is not so much the
elements of drama on the stage or the perceptions of the audience
which are important, as the relationships between them. It follows
that the study of drama is the study of how the stage compels its
audience to be involved in its actual processes; it is a study of a
particular social situation. Professor Styan discusses in detail
the particular social situation, conditions of performance and
physical playhouse in which a play thrives. There is a wealth of
examples from all periods of Western drama. He especially deals
with plays which make no pretence to 'realism', and much of the
discussion turns upon the power and success of Shakespeare as a
playwright. This book will appeal to students, actors and directors
of drama, as well as the theatregoers. Professor Styan's insistence
on criticism based on the theatrical experience will make this an
important book for other drama critics.
Outlines the potentialities and limitations of the Elizabethan playhouse and how Shakespeare exploited them, discussing the plays as a sequence of stage effects planned to enrich, modify and reinforce each other.
This is an introduction to the drama, singling out and discussing
its various elements, with detailed and generous quotation from
masterpieces. Styan emphasizes that plays are meant to be judged in
performance, not in the study, and that the play is something
created by a co-operation of author, actor, producer and audience.
The actor is doing something for the author's words; he is making
the play work; and so is the spectator as he responds to the art of
the actor, the producer and the playwright. It is a unique
relationship, and the play in performance must be judged by
'theatrical' standards as well as literary ones. Styan begins with
the elements of a dramatic text and the way they are built
together. For every aspect - words, movement, tempo - and for
larger considerations, such as verse-drama, convention,
'character', and audience-participation, Styan provides close
analyses of excerpts from plays by Shakespeare, Ibsen, Chekhov,
Wilde, Shaw, Strindberg, Pirandello, Synge, Anouilh, Sartre, Eliot
and others. These detailed expositions give an insight into the
aims and techniques of the particular playwrights as well as into
the general themes. This is an ideal introduction to the art of the
theatre for the general reader and the student of literature.
The theories of Wagner and Nietzsche provide the basic principles for this volume, disseminated by the work of Appia and Craig, and affecting the later plays of Ibsen, Maeterlinck, and Lugné-Poe’s Théatre de Le’Oeuvre. Jarry is seen as the precursor of surrealism; later symbolist elements are found in the plays of Claudel, Giraudoux, Yeats, Eliot, Lorca and Pirandello. Artaud’s theatre of cruelty is related to the work of Peter Brook. The theatre of the absurd is illustrated in Sartre, Beckett, Pinter and Ionesco. Recent avant-garde theatre in America and Britain also reveals elements of symbolism.
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