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Contemporary theatrical productions as diverse in form as
experimental performance, new writing, West End drama, musicals and
live art demonstrate a recurring fascination with adapting existing
works by other artists, writers, filmmakers and stage
practitioners. Featuring seventeen interviews with
internationally-renowned theatre and performance artists, "Theatre
and Adaptation" provides an exceptionally rich study of the variety
of work developed in recent years. First-hand accounts illuminate a
diverse range of approaches to stage adaptation, ranging from
playwriting to directing, Javanese puppetry to British children's
theatre, and feminist performance to Japanese Noh. The transition
of an existing source to the stage is not a smooth one: this
collection examines the practices and the complex set of
negotiations each work of transition and appropriation involves.
Including interviews with Societas Raffaello Sanzio, Handspring
Puppet Company, Katie Mitchell, Rimini Protokoll, Elevator Repair
Service, Simon Stephens, Ong Keng Sen and Toneelgroep Amsterdam,
the volume reveals performance's enduring desire to return, rewrite
and repeat.
European, Popular Culture, Theatre, Performance, Continental
Europe, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese
Why do revivals and adaptations of Greek tragedy still abound in
European national theatres, fringe stages and international
festivals in the twenty-first century? Taking as its starting point
the concepts of myth developed by Jean-Luc Nancy and Roland Barthes
and the notion of the 'classical' outlined by Salvatore Settis,
this book analyses discourses around community, democracy, origin
and Western identity in stage adaptations of Greek tragedy on
contemporary European stages. The author addresses the ways in
which the theatre produces and perpetuates the myth of 'classical'
Greece as the origin of Europe and how this narrative raises issues
concerning the possibility of a transnational European community.
Each chapter explores a pivotal problem in modern appropriations of
Greek tragedy, including the performance of the chorus, the concept
of the 'obscene' and the audience as the demos of democracy. Modern
versions of Women of Troy, Hippolytus and Persians performed in
Britain, France, Spain, Germany, Italy, Poland and Greece are
analysed through a series of comparative case studies. By engaging
with the work of prominent theatre-makers such as Mark Ravenhill,
Michel Vinaver, Katie Mitchell, Sarah Kane, Krzysztof Warlikowski,
Romeo Castellucci, Calixto Bieito and Rimini Protokoll, this volume
offers a critique of contemporary democratic Europe and the way it
represents itself onstage.
Contemporary theatrical productions as diverse in form as
experimental performance, new writing, West End drama, musicals and
live art demonstrate a recurring fascination with adapting existing
works by other artists, writers, filmmakers and stage
practitioners. Featuring seventeen interviews with
internationally-renowned theatre and performance artists, "Theatre
and Adaptation" provides an exceptionally rich study of the variety
of work developed in recent years. First-hand accounts illuminate a
diverse range of approaches to stage adaptation, ranging from
playwriting to directing, Javanese puppetry to British children's
theatre, and feminist performance to Japanese Noh. The transition
of an existing source to the stage is not a smooth one: this
collection examines the practices and the complex set of
negotiations each work of transition and appropriation involves.
Including interviews with Societas Raffaello Sanzio, Handspring
Puppet Company, Katie Mitchell, Rimini Protokoll, Elevator Repair
Service, Simon Stephens, Ong Keng Sen and Toneelgroep Amsterdam,
the volume reveals performance's enduring desire to return, rewrite
and repeat.
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