Shakespeare, Man of the Theater: Proceedings of the Second Congress of the International Shakespeare Association, 1981This volume presents a sampling of the more than 250 papers presented at the Congress of the ISA held at Stratford-upon-Avon in August 1981. Most of the papers are concerned with Shakespeare as a writer for the theater. Other essays deal with Shakespeare as a literary, rather than theatrical, writer. Several of the offerings cover subjects usually neglected, and develop fresh insight into his work. |
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Page 4
... production- Congresses . 3. Shakespeare , William , 1564-1616 - Stage history - Congresses . I. Muir , Kenneth . II . Halio , Jay L. III . Palmer , D. J. IV . Title . PR2889.157 1981 ISBN 0-87413-217-7 822.3'3 82-40346 Printed in the ...
... production- Congresses . 3. Shakespeare , William , 1564-1616 - Stage history - Congresses . I. Muir , Kenneth . II . Halio , Jay L. III . Palmer , D. J. IV . Title . PR2889.157 1981 ISBN 0-87413-217-7 822.3'3 82-40346 Printed in the ...
Page 19
... productions that must have been far more enjoyable to per- form than to watch . My father was not musical , and the words of the plays took the place of music for him . He would , in the middle of breakfast , or while taking geranium ...
... productions that must have been far more enjoyable to per- form than to watch . My father was not musical , and the words of the plays took the place of music for him . He would , in the middle of breakfast , or while taking geranium ...
Page 27
... production , where the ghost was reduced to a kind of fit of the collywobbles going on inside Hamlet , the first scene was cut , as though there is anyone alive today who could teach his stage technique to Shakespeare . The essential ...
... production , where the ghost was reduced to a kind of fit of the collywobbles going on inside Hamlet , the first scene was cut , as though there is anyone alive today who could teach his stage technique to Shakespeare . The essential ...
Page 28
... produce great drama . Every writer has had an actor come to him at some stage of a produc- tion to say , " Can you tell me why I say this , exactly . What's the motiva- tion ? " Every writer has been tempted to reply with the truth ...
... produce great drama . Every writer has had an actor come to him at some stage of a produc- tion to say , " Can you tell me why I say this , exactly . What's the motiva- tion ? " Every writer has been tempted to reply with the truth ...
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Contents
15 | |
18 | |
Shakespeare Imagines a Theater | 34 |
Historic and Iconic Time in Late Tudor Drama | 47 |
The Word in the Theater | 55 |
The Players Will Tell All or the Actors Role in Renaissance Drama | 76 |
Iconography and the Theatrical Art of Pericles | 86 |
Some Shakespearean Night Sequences | 98 |
Shakespeare and jonson | 155 |
Beaumont and Fletchers Hamlet | 173 |
Society and the Uses of Authority in Shakespeare | 182 |
Seminar Papers | 201 |
The Stagecraft of the Statue Scene in The Winters Tale | 203 |
Shakespearean Comedy and Some EighteenthCentury Actresses | 212 |
Charles Keans King Lear and the Pageant of History | 231 |
APPENDIXES | 243 |
The Positive Uses of Negative Feedback in Criticism and Performance | 105 |
Some Approaches to Alls Well That Ends Well in Performance | 114 |
Between a sob and a Giggle | 121 |
Characterization through Language in the Early Plays of Shakespeare and His Contemporaries | 128 |
Shakespeare and Kyd | 148 |
Complete List of Lectures and Papers from the Program of the Congress | 245 |
Seminars and Their Chairmen | 247 |
Delegates and Participants | 248 |
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action actor actresses All's audience authority Bartholomew Fair breeches roles Cambridge characterization characters Cibber Clive College comic court critical Cymbeline death dramatic dramatist Elizabethan emblem Evadne experience fact female Garrick ghost Hamlet Hannah Pritchard Helena Henry Hermione iconic imagery imagination John Jonson Julius Caesar Kean Kean's King Lear Lady language Lear's Leontes lines literary London Lyly Macbeth Maid's Tragedy Marina masque murder Othello Oxford Paris passion Paulina performance Pericles play's playwright political Pritchard production Proteus reality Renaissance revenge Richard role Roman Royal Shakespeare Royal Shakespeare Company scene seems sense sequence Shake Shakespeare Association Shakespeare Institute Shakespeare Society Shakespeare's plays Shakespearean comedy Shrew social Society of Japan soliloquy Spanish Tragedy speak speare spectator speech Stratford-upon-Avon suggest theater theatrical things thou tion tradition Twelfth Night University of California University Press verbal visual wife Winter's Tale Woffington women words York
Popular passages
Page 15 - gainst that season comes Wherein our Saviour's birth is celebrated, The bird of dawning singeth all night long...
Page 21 - Yes, trust them not ! for there is an upstart crow, beautified with our feathers, that with his " Tiger's heart wrapped in a player's hide," supposes he is as well able to bombast out a blank verse as the best of you ; and, being an absolute Johannes Factotum, is, in his own conceit, the only Shake-scene in a country.