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Dialogue: The Role of the Editor New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2025-01-10
Philippa Burt, Maria ShevtsovaWorld-renowned New Theatre Quarterly celebrates its fifty years of publication and its 200th issue, this being the last under the editorship of Maria Shevtsova. Simon Trussler, founder of Theatre Quarterly in 1971 (which closed for lack of funding in 1981) always considered New Theatre Quarterly, established with Cambridge University Press in 1985 – and with Clive Barker as co-editor – to be simply
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Shakespeare’s Polar Bears New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2025-01-10
Nick de SomogyiThis is the third in a trilogy of articles for NTQ addressed to the ‘noises off’ supplied by Shakespeare’s earliest co-stars: the baited bears that competed for trade, fame, and patronage for the duration of his career as an actor-playwright. ‘Shakespeare and the Three Bears’ (NTQ 106, May 2011) sketched this context, exposing as a canard, via a mistakenly omitted comma, that there ever was a bear
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Edward Gordon Craig as Teacher-Dictator New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2025-01-10
Philippa BurtEdward Gordon Craig was a controversial and iconoclastic figure in the early twentieth-century British theatre. Underpinning his work as a director, designer, and essayist was a desire to secure obedience and loyalty from the people with whom he worked and to ensure that he was the unquestioned authority. Nowhere was this ambition clearer than in his School for the Art of the Theatre, which he ran
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Bergson and the Mechanics of the Bedroom Farce New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2025-01-10
Laurence SenelickWhereas the earliest farces deal with human appetites on the most basic level, by the mid-nineteenth century these had been sublimated and incorporated into a newly mechanical format. Inaugurated by Eugène Labiche, and perfected by Alfred Hennequin and Georges Feydeau, these masterpieces of clockwork ingenuity would appear to be the inspiration for Henri Bergson’s theory of comedy. This article explores
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Kunqu in Europe New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2025-01-10
Chengzhou He, Ting YangThis overview presents kunqu’s historical journey, suggesting its future trends on European stages. Over the decades, kunqu has grown from traditional performances to avant-garde adaptations, including notable versions of The Peony Pavilion by Peter Sellars and also Chen Shizheng, which fostered intercultural dialogue. Key performances by troupes and artists have modernized kunqu, as exemplified by
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Burning Hope: Staging Queer Ecology in a Time of Wildfire New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2025-01-10
Kari BarclayThis article analyzes three contemporary plays by trans and gender-non-conforming artists from the United States that engage with forest fires and queer ecology. These three plays – MJ Kaufman’s Sagittarius Ponderosa, Agnes Borinsky’s The Trees, and Kari Barclay’s How to Live in a House on Fire – tie wildfire to colonial histories of fire suppression and imagine a just climate transition as linked
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Interview with Laween Palestinian Cooperative: Theatre in the Time of Genocide New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2025-01-10
Mousa Nazzal, Hamza Al-Bakri, Dia BarghoutiLaween is among several Palestinian theatre cooperatives established over the last decade, which have not received sufficient attention from theatre scholars. Born out of the struggle of living under Israeli apartheid, the repression of the Palestinian Authority, and alienation from NGO theatres, whose work has been depoliticized by reliance on foreign funding, the emergence of these theatre cooperatives
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Hi and Mighty: On the Czech Theatre Showcases New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2025-01-10
Mark BrownThe Hi PerformanCZ visitor programmes, hosted regularly by the Czech Arts and Theatre Institute since 2018, have invited international theatre professionals, from directors and promoters to critics, to immerse themselves in the variety of theatre on the contemporary Czech stage. Showcased performances, themed in programmes dedicated to theatre for children and young people, puppet theatre, and text-based
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The Craiova International Shakespeare Festival Celebrates Thirty Years New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2025-01-10
Maria ShevtsovaEmil Boroghină founded the Shakespeare Festival in Craiova in 1994 with the longer-term intention of making it an international festival of significant, indeed world, standing. This article, written in honour of Boroghină and dedicated to him, offers an overview of the Festival’s programming and related details from its triennial period to its present biennial existence. It draws particular attention
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Documentary and Community Theatre with Young People in Madrid: The Creative Process of Mundo Quinta New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-10
Luisa García-MansoMundo Quinta is a documentary theatre creation programme for adolescents in Madrid, launched by Espacio Abierto Quinta de los Molinos and directed by the theatre company Cross Border Project. This publicly funded programme started in 2018 and is currently celebrating its sixth season. Each season takes place during the academic year and culminates in the premiere of a new play. This article combines
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Not Billington, not Zoella, and Definitely not a ‘Fangirl’: Social Distinction within Communities of Amateur Theatre Critics New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-10
Megan VaughanIn theatre criticism, the lines between professional and amateur have softened considerably since the turn of the twenty-first century, with much attention – academic and journalistic – given to the impact of amateur theatre criticism on theatre-making and marketing, on newspapers, and on theatre scholarship. So far, however, the voices and perspectives of amateur critics themselves have largely been
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Embodied Gestures of Human Rights: Remorse, Sentiment, and Sympathy in Romantic Regency Drama New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-10
Eva UrbanThis article demonstrates how the Enlightenment model of sentiment and sympathy is performed in embodied gestures of affective empathy-building, cross-cultural fraternity, and concern for human rights in three Romantic Regency tragedies: Pizarro (1799) by the Romantic dramatist August von Kotzebue, adapted from the German by the Irish dramatist Richard Brinsley Sheridan; Remorse (1813) by the English
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British Theatre from Agitprop to ‘Primark Playwriting’ New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-10
David Edgar, Hakan GültekinIn this interview, which took place in Birmingham on 16 February 2023, Hakan Gültekin talks to playwright David Edgar about his theatre universe and the current state of British theatre. Edgar has long championed the social and economic rights of playwrights, and here suggests that the lack of long-term and sustained support from British theatres has created what he calls ‘Primark playwrights’. His
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Mysticism as Transgression in Chista Yasrebi’s Rahil New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-10
Narges Montakhabi BakhtvarAs a prominent figure in the contemporary Iranian theatre scene, Chista Yasrebi uses her plays to call for female liberation in the country while navigating the existing political constraints, including censorship. Her 1996 play Rahil, for example, acts as a political allegory through its narrative of the titular woman’s desire for transcendence within the patriarchal realm of Persian mysticism. In
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Othello: A Moor Rorschach Test New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-10
Akaela Michels-GualtieriThe evolution of the colour of Othello’s skin-tone is a surprisingly accurate cultural barometer of attitudes towards race in the eyes of scholars. A significant portion of the critical literature is focused upon the Moor’s complexion as one of the main variables within the play. Yet the fact that the script has itself become a variable, and not a constant, has been neglected. This text’s transformation
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What is ISTA (International School of Theatre Anthropology)? New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-04-29
Julia VarleyEugenio Barba first defined ‘theatre anthropology’ as the study of the human being in an organized performance situation in a lecture in Warsaw in May 1980. The first session of ISTA (International School of Theatre Anthropology) was held in October 1980 and the last to date in 2023. This article gives a personal account of ISTA’s history from its origins, rooted in Eugenio Barba’s interest in Asian
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Feminist Rereading of Shabih’khani in Iran New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-04-29
Milad AzarmThis article examines Shabih’khani, a traditional ritual performance in Iran also known as Ta’ziyeh, in the context of the ‘Woman, Life, Freedom’ movement. It includes the historical challenges faced by Iranian women in a patriarchal society dominated by politics and religion, augmenting existing research on women’s Shabih’khani through recently discovered documents that show the erasure of feminine
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Stanislavsky’s Legacy: From Vasily Toporkov to Oleg Yefremov and Oleg Tabakov New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-04-29
Viktoria VolkovaThis article discusses the continuity of Konstantin Stanislavsky’s pedagogy directly to his disciple Vasily Toporkov, and from him to his students Oleg Yefremov and Oleg Tabakov. Toporkov joined the Moscow Art Theatre (MAT) as an actor eleven years before Stanislavsky’s death, which allowed him to participate in the final phase of Stanislavsky’s life’s work and his development of the method of psychophysical
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Embodied Voice Valery Nikolayevich Galendeyev 12.5.1946 – 24.1.2024 New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-04-29
Maria ShevtsovaValery Galendeyev seemed immortal, so steady was his demeanour, so light his ample frame. We knew that he had had serious Covid early in the pandemic but his habitual warmth and gentle irony belied his health’s decline as he continued to work as if it would never stop. He understood, though, that, sooner rather than later, his growing ill heath, which he discreetly set aside, would stop him.
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Contemporary Censorship Debates in Germany New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-04-29
Marvin CarlsonDuring the past five years the cultural world in Germany has been shaken and divided by a series of controversies involving contemporary works of art charged with being anti-Semitic. Obviously, with the Holocaust continuing to occupy a major position in modern German consciousness and history, sensitivity to anti-Semitic expressions is particularly keen here. This sensitivity has been increased by
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‘… parents unknown … unheard of …’: Not I and the ‘Mother and Baby Homes Report’ New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-04-29
Shane O’NeillThis article re-reads Beckett’s play Not I (1972) in the light of the ‘Mother and Baby Homes Report’, published in January 2021. Beckett interrogates what James Smith, Clair Wills, and others have referred to as Ireland’s ‘architecture of containment’. Mouth, ‘brought up … with the other waifs’ in a mother and baby home, absorbed religious notions of sin and punishment. Through a close reading of selected
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The Hegemonic Ashkenaziness of Hebrew Theatre New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-04-29
Naphtaly Shem-TovThis article argues that Hebrew theatre is defined by a hegemonic Ashkenaziness that has been present from its beginning and which continues today. It identifies four main components of this hegemony, each of which is examined in turn. The first two components, Hebrew culture and Eurocentrism, are analyzed in relation to the repertoire of plays presented at such theatres as Habima, Ohel, and Cameri
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Creating Earthquakes New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-13
Eugenio BarbaEugenio Barba has honoured NTQ by entrusting to its pages his very personal introduction to his most recent book, Le Mie vite nel terzo teatro: Diffrenza, mestiere, rivolta (My Lives in the Third Theatre: Difference, Craft, Revolt), which has here been specially translated into English by Judy Barba, the co-dedicatee, along with Julia Varley and Vera Gaeta, of his book: the ‘origins and accomplices
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NGOs and the Neo-Liberalization of Political Theatre in Pakistan: Ajoka’s Surrender to the Politics of Rights New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-13
Qaisar AbbasThe neoliberal enterprise of NGOs has transformed the left-leaning politics of the political theatre movement in the Punjab region of Pakistan. Commencing in the 1980s, this theatre acted as a vibrant movement of the Left, challenging the brutal military dictatorship of General Zia. At a later stage, its politics changed to the neoliberal politics of NGOs, giving way to economics and the agenda of
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SITI Training: Viewpoints and the Suzuki Method for Cross-Cultural Collaboration New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-13
Lorenzo MontaniniThe training that the Saratoga International Theater Institute (SITI) perfected during its thirty years of existence is its most relevant heritage. SITI believed that training was a crucial part of a performer’s education and ethos. Its constitutive elements – Viewpoints and the Suzuki Method for actor training – are here put in a dialectical opposition that nurtures hybridization. This article investigates
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Beckett’s Wasted Breath New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-13
Matthew Wilson SmithAbject breath, running over with its own refuse and yet refusing to stop breathing, forms a gasping undertone to Beckett’s oeuvre. To give a sense of the longevity and development of Beckettian respiration, this article examines passages across the range of his career, paying attention to several prose works – the short story ‘Dante and the Lobster’ (1934) and the novels Murphy (1938) and Molloy (1951/55)
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The Ageing Self through Dramaturgies of Memory Loss and Love: Tristan Bernays’ Old Fools and Nick Payne’s Elegy New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-13
Inesa Shevchenko-Hotsuliak, Núria Casado-GualThis comparative study of Tristan Bernays’ Old Fools (2018) and Nick Payne’s Elegy (2016) concerns two contemporary plays in which love manifested in middle-age and older adulthood is a determinant factor in the reconceptualization of the ageing self, particularly when afflicted by memory loss or cognitive failure. Positioned within the framework of theatre and ageing studies, and drawing from their
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Post Scriptum Budapest: The Tenth International Meeting of Theatre (MITEM) New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-13
Maria ShevtsovaMITEM (Mádach International Theatre Meeting) celebrated its tenth anniversary in October 2023, somewhat out of sync and out of time because of the festival’s cancellation due to Covid in 2020. It was absorbed into the Theatre Olympics (as discussed in New Theatre Quarterly, XXXIX, No. 4 (November 2023) [NTQ 156], p. 377–86), but its most recent edition was something of a replacement for the cancelled
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In Conversation in Apocalyptic Times New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-11-08
Yury Butusov, Maria ShevtsovaUndoubtedly one of the most prominent and most important Russian directors of the past two decades, Yury Butusov here refers to several landmarks of his artistic trajectory, gradually revealing a sense of oeuvre, of a body of work connected by a distinctive worldview. Not all of his productions of exceptional significance are cited here, and Flight (2015), at the Vakhtangov Theatre in Moscow, not having
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Performing Northern Ireland after Brexit: Stephen Rea in David Ireland’s Cyprus Avenue and Clare Dwyer Hogg’s Hard Border New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-11-08
Hannah SimpsonIf all national identity is performative, the Northern Irish national identity offers a particularly pronounced model of this performative instability. Such precarity was emphasized when the 2016 UK EU ‘Brexit’ referendum raised contentious questions over Northern Irish citizenship. This article explores how two recent Northern Irish performance pieces, David Ireland’s Cyprus Avenue (2016) and Clare
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Teiji Furuhashi’s Lovers: Digital Resuscitations of the Moving Body in Tokyo and New York New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-11-08
Stephen BarberThis article examines the solo work Lovers (1994) by Teiji Furuhashi, a prominent member of the influential Dumb Type group in Japan’s theatre and dance scene from the 1980s onwards. Lovers was Furuhashi’s only solo work; he died shortly after its installation at a Tokyo art centre in 1994. The essay examines the work in the context of themes of mobility, migration, and shifting corporealities in Japan
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Documenting Crisis: Artistic Innovation and Institutional Transformations in the German-Speaking Countries and the UK New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-11-08
Thomas Fabian Eder, James RowsonThe unprecedented suspension of cultural events across Europe in March 2020 had a profound impact on the performing arts. Alongside the proliferation of digital and hybrid modes of theatre-making, the Covid-19 pandemic has also precipitated a substantive shift in how theatres operate at both institutional and organizational levels in an attempt to respond to the volatile economic impact of the pandemic
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The 2023 Theatre Olympics in Budapest New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-11-08
Maria ShevtsovaThe account here is in the spirit of the short pieces that periodically used to appear under the rubric ‘Reports and Announcements’ at the back of New Theatre Quarterly. Its purpose is to invite the journal’s readers from all over the world – and they are truly from across our whole planet – to be aware of the very existence of a major theatre event of socio-historical and artistic significance to
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‘Generational Drag’: All-Child Performances in the Seventeenth and Nineteenth Centuries in Britain New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-07-28
Katie KnowlesSeparated by almost three hundred years and by significant developments in the construction of childhood as an identity distinct from adulthood, the early seventeenth and late nineteenth centuries stand out as periods of intense and popular activity by child actors, and specifically by companies of child actors who played adult roles and deliberately juxtaposed the age categories of performer and character
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City Women: Managers and Leading Ladies at the City of London Theatre, 1837–1848 New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-07-28
Stephen RidgwellIn the 1830s and 1840s, the female management of London theatres, conducted singly or in partnership, was surprisingly common. Charismatic actress-managers such as Madame Vestris and Mrs Keeley have long been familiar to students of British theatre, as too the establishments they managed. Much less well known is the City of London Theatre in Norton Folgate, one of several minor playhouses then active
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Stanislavsky’s Failed Bildungsroman New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-07-28
Tomasz KubikowskiDisabled for the last nine years of his life, Konstantin Stanislavsky struggled to verbalize his artistic experience and record it in writing. This experience mostly concerned acting, itself extremely hard to conceptualize and explain, and, to his mind, the core of human existence. Stanislavsky looked for the proper literary vehicle to contain this abundance. Initially, he hoped he had found adequate
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Shimella Community Theatre of Israeli-Ethiopian Jews New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-07-28
Naphtaly Shem-TovShimella (‘stork’ in Amharic) is an Israeli community theatre of Ethiopian Jews residing in Netanya and directed by Chen Elia. Shimella was founded in 2010, and has produced four different performances focusing on the Ethiopian Jewish community in Israel. Ethiopian Jews suffer from racism and discrimination in all areas of life, including housing, employment, education, and healthcare. These issues
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Risky Hitchhiking, and Other Stories about the Theatre of the Eighth Day New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-07-28
Juliusz TyszkaTeatr Ósmego Dnia (the Theatre of the Eighth Day), established in Poznań in 1964, was a part of Polish student theatre. Between 1976 and 1981, it became one of the most important companies in the history of the Polish theatre, producing several masterpieces. It also became a legendary grouping of democratic, anti-communist opposition. The persecution it was subjected to was caused by censorship, the
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Artaud’s Civil War: ‘Theatre and the Plague’ in the Time of Covid-19 New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-07-28
Sam HaddowThis article examines Antonin Artaud’s ‘Theatre and the Plague’ in the light of the Covid-19 pandemic and through the Ancient Greek term stasis, which describes a civil war between domestic and public spaces. Once initiated, it was believed that this conflict would spread from household to household like a contagion; city states thus implemented draconian measures in the name of preventing stasis.
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‘Everything Now is Lost’: Stanislavsky’s Last Class at the Opera-Dramatic Studio New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-05-05
Diego MoschkovichOn 22 May 1938, Stanislavsky gathered his group of eleven assistant-pedagogues at the Opera-Dramatic Studio for a last collective class. The Studio was already free for the summer vacation after the tumultuous first show of Chekhov’s Three Sisters, opened only to a small number of guests a week before. Mikhail Kedrov had rehearsed the performance with the students for the preceding three years, and
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Kokyu Studio in Wrocław: A Place of Practice New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-05-05
Anna DudaThis article attempts to outline the most important assumptions of the work of Kokyu Studio led by Przemysław Błaszczak and Joanna Kurzyńska and based at the Grotowski Institute in Wrocław in Poland. The Studio’s educational and artistic programme is founded on the idea of a ‘place of practice’, which captures the philosophical, practical, aesthetic, and ethical horizon of the activities common to
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Who Saw Her Die? Unfixing the Danse sacrale in Le Sacre du printemps New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-05-05
Mark NichollsThis article focuses on the last moments of Le Sacre du printemps, which opened in Paris on 29 May 1913 at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées. Concentrating on the discourse of the creative practice that brought these moments into being, it seeks to add to our understanding of Le Sacre from the evidence of those most intimately involved with this first production. Analysis of Le Sacre demonstrates the
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SoloSIRENs Collective’s Cessair: Feminist Performed Ethnography New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-05-05
Courtney Helen GrileThe SoloSIRENs Collective’s production Cessair, staged in South Dublin in the summer of 2021, represents the second production of this burgeoning company. The Collective is a community-based theatre group comprised of an all-female ensemble that has been creating together since 2019. For this production, it used the Irish myth of Cessair as a starting point to consider the female experience, and invited
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The Rock Musical: From Creation to Curation (2015–2020) New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-05-05
Duncan WheelerIn a post-#Me-Too/Black Lives Matter landscape, the gender- and race-politics of the Golden Age of rock have increasingly come under interrogation. Hip-hop challenging rock’s long-standing hegemony constitutes a sociological as well as a musical shift, with a production such as Andrew Lloyd Webber’s School of Rock (2015) perhaps seeming hopelessly old-fashioned in comparison with Lin-Manuel Miranda’s
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The Translation of Protest: The Worldwide Readings Project of Andrei Kureichyk’s Insulted. Belarus New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-30
Bryan BrownOn 9 August 2020, Belarus erupted in protest over the falsified election results promoted and endorsed by existing president Aliaksandar Lukashenka. Playwright, director, and member of the Coordination Council for the peaceful transfer of power in Belarus, Andrei Kureichyk was one of the thousands on the streets that month. In early September he finished a new play depicting the events leading up to
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LIFT and the London 2012 Olympics: Spectacular Experiences New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-30
Phoebe Patey-FergusonIn 2012, London staged the Olympic Games and the associated Cultural Olympiad, which produced the ‘London 2012’ Festival, funding a wide series of events including many productions by the London International Festival of Theatre (LIFT). A decade on, this article considers the impact of these overlapping events during a period of unprecedented austerity in the United Kingdom, and how arts events might
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Critical Disengagement: The Epistemic and White Supremacist Violence of Theatre Criticism in Canada and the USA New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-30
Signy Lynch, Michelle MacArthurThis article examines recent controversies sparked by the critical reception of work by Global Majority theatre artists in Canada and the USA, including Yolanda Bonnell, Yvette Nolan, and Antoinette Nwandu. It argues that, when faced with works that fall outside of their presumed expertise and experience, critics commonly resort to a strategy of critical disengagement, which displaces the focus from
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Relations between Theatre and Power: The Iranian Quarterly Faslnameh Teatr (1977—) New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-30
Fahimeh NajmiThe quarterly journal Faslnameh Teatr has been published in the Iranian capital of Tehran since 1977, although with some interruptions. In a country where, since the Islamic Revolution, systematic efforts have been made to erase any trace of past monarchies, the continued publication of this journal proves to be an extremely rare, if not unique, occurrence. Of course, the prominence of the Ta’zieh
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In Interview: Key Features of Contemporary British Drama New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-30
Aleks Sierz, Mesut GünençIn this interview on 22 March 2022 in London, Mesut Gunenc talks to theatre critic and historian Aleks Sierz about how his work has influenced contemporary British drama, why he chose the name ‘in-yer-face theatre’ for 1990s avant-garde plays, and why some writers have rejected the label. They also discuss the differences between experiential and experimental theatre, especially focusing on the work
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Seeing it Feelingly: On Affect and Bodyworld in Performance New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-30
Frank CamilleriIn this article, the performing body is considered via a three-pronged approach involving affect theory and affective science, a scene from King Lear, and long-distance running. Inspired by the chiaroscuro of painting, this variety and mix of sources act as a methodological device to shed unfamiliar light (and shade) on the elusive topic of affect. While ‘body’ is viewed from the perspective of ‘bodyworld’
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The Ecological Resonance of Imogen’s Journey in Montana’s Parks New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2022-10-18
Gretchen E. Minton, Mikey GrayIn this article Gretchen Minton and Mikey Gray discuss an adaptation of Shakespeare’s tragicomedy Cymbeline that toured Montana and surrounding states in the summer of 2021. Minton’s sections describe the eco-feminist aims of this production, which was part of an international project called ‘Cymbeline in the Anthropocene’, showing how the costumes, set design, and especially the emphasis upon the
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‘Droughts and Flooding Rains’: Ecology and Australian Theatre in the 1950s New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2022-10-18
Denise VarneyThis article uses historical-ecological insights for a re-reading of two little-known mid-twentieth-century Australian plays, Oriel Gray’s The Torrents and Eunice Hanger’s Flood, which highlight developments relevant to the environmental disasters of today. In particular, the article focuses on the significance of key cultural assumptions embedded in the texts – and a revival of The Torrents in 2019
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Unspoken Indigenous History on the Stage: The Postcolonial Plays of Jack Davis New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2022-10-18
Jacqueline M. BrownLiterary scholars and linguists have argued extensively that language is not simply a purely representational vehicle of thought but its determining medium, whose ordering powers not only shape cognizance of reality but are also actively involved in processes of imperialism and cultural erasure. It is the determinative yet slippery quality of language, prompting the loss of meaning in attempts at translation
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Playwriting Manuals, 1888–1925: Jerome K. Jerome, Alfred Hennequin, Agnes Platt, and Moses Malevinsky New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2022-10-18
Karen MorashSince the 1990s, there has been a large number of ‘how-to’ manuals published in English for aspiring playwrights. By and large, these texts treat the pedagogy of playwriting as a recent phenomenon. However, a series of relatively unknown books from the mid-nineteenth century were written with the purpose of teaching the craft of dramatic writing, emphasizing the importance of a hands-on understanding
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A Private Honesty: Torture and Interiority in the Theatre of Sarah Kane New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2022-10-18
Jeremy ColangeloThis article analyzes the role of pain and torture in the construction and destruction of subjectivity by way of a comparison of the depictions of torture in the theatre of Sarah Kane and Elaine’s Scarry’s highly influential The Body in Pain: On the Making and Unmaking of the World. The essay uses Kane in conjunction with the phenomenology of Emmanuel Levinas, as well as relevant work on the history
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‘A Single Purpose: The Conquest of the Foreign Art Markets’: Theatre and Cultural Diplomacy in Mussolini’s Italy (1919–1927) New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2022-07-19
Matteo PaolettiThis article explores the role of theatre in the strategies of cultural diplomacy that developed in Italy between the last years of the liberal state (1919–22) and the rise of Benito Mussolini. It covers the period until 1927, when the establishment of the Istituti Italiani di Cultura (Italian Cultural Institutes) and the approval of a new regulatory framework for migration marked a new era for fascist
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Cross-Cultural Dialogue and the German Theatre in St Petersburg New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2022-07-19
Svetlana MelnikovaThis article explores the history of the German theatre in St Petersburg in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a subject forgotten for a hundred years due to historical reasons. Svetlana Melnikova uses cross-cultural research methods, which, as she has discovered, appeared in Russian criticism concerning the arts as early as the nineteenth century. The ideas of Russian scholars turned out to
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In Interview: On the Development of Video in the Theatre New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2022-07-19
Jan Speckenbach, Thomas IrmerGerman film artist Jan Speckenbach ingeniously contributed to the development of live video on the stage, and this discussion focuses on his education, as well his as experimental collaborations with director Frank Castorf at the Volksbühne Berlin, starting in 2000. Speckenbach’s background in film and media studies facilitated his explorations of uncharted territory in the theatre, going from a set
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The Sense of an Ending: Contemporary Visions of Medea New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2022-07-19
Carol Fisher SorgenfreiThe story of Medea’s murder of her own children to gain revenge against their faithless father has been tackled from many angles by playwrights and directors from Euripides’ time to the present. In recent years, due to highly sensationalized, real-life cases of mothers murdering their children, it has become fodder for sociologists, criminologists, psychologists, and feminists. Many recent productions
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‘The Best Thing I Ever Did on the Stage’: Edward Gordon Craig and the Purcell Operatic Society New Theatre Quarterly (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2022-07-19
Philippa BurtAlthough lasting only two and a half years, Edward Gordon Craig’s engagement with the Purcell Operatic Society was his most consistent and productive period of work on the stage. This article re-examines this time during Craig’s life in order to ascertain why he saw it to be the zenith of his career. In particular, it analyzes his work with the amateur group to argue that it was foundational in the