Condee has interviewed hundreds of prominent American and British directors, designers, and actors, and provides photographs and groundplans of major American theatres. Each chapter tackles a different set of problems, offering thoughtful solutions to common obstacles. Theatrical Space is a valuable resource for all directors and designers, both young and experienced. Paperback edition available April 2002.
A historical and comparative study, in which is revealed the changing conventions of the theatrical space as faithful expressions of the changing attitudes to woman and her sexuality.
This book provides a new way of thinking about film's relation to theatre, and challenges old conceptions of how cinema needs to escape the theatrical, or rise above it.
Performance, dramaturgy, and scenography are often explored in isolation, but in Theatrical Reality, Campbell Edinborough describes their connectedness in order to investigate how the experience of reality is constructed and understood ...
This type of social encounter is utopian in daily life, because, in the real world, the children are banished to their camps or homes, with no contact to social life. By declaring itself a site of exception and making this unlikely ...
Applause Books
html_title=&tols_title=M%20BUTTERFLY%20(PLAY)&pdate=19880321&byline=By%20FRANK%20RICH&id=1077011430660 Critics who assert ... 26 Frank Lloyd Wright, Frank Lloyd Wright: An Autobiography (New York: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1932), 168.
Carson, Christie. Celebrity by Association: Tectonic Plates in Glasgow'. Canadian Theatre Review, vol. 74 (1993). 46–50. Carson, Christie. Collaboration, Translation ... Translated by Wanda Romer Taylor. London: Methuen, 1997.
Discusses four types of theatrical landscapes; the deadly theatre, the holy theatre, the rough theatre, and the immediate theatre.
Edmunds's unique approach to Oedipus at Colonus makes this an important book for students and scholars of semiotics, Greek tragedy, and theatrical performance.
Theatrical Space in Ibsen, Chekhov, and Strindberg: Public Forms of Privacy