Shakespeare and the Modern Stage with Other EssaysLibrary of Alexandria, 2020 M09 28 |
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... the past andpresent situation, rather than with particular episodes or personalities, thereal valueof which the future has yet to determine. My best thanks aredueto my friend SirJames Knowles, the proprietor and editor of The Nineteenth ...
... the past andpresent situation, rather than with particular episodes or personalities, thereal valueof which the future has yet to determine. My best thanks aredueto my friend SirJames Knowles, the proprietor and editor of The Nineteenth ...
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... the audience that illusion of environment whichthe text invites.Without so much scenery or costume the wordsfail to get home to the audience. In comedies dealingwith concrete conditions of modern society,the stagepresentation ...
... the audience that illusion of environment whichthe text invites.Without so much scenery or costume the wordsfail to get home to the audience. In comedies dealingwith concrete conditions of modern society,the stagepresentation ...
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... the purpose of playing" by exaggeratingfor thespectator the inevitable interval between the visionary andindeterminate limits ofthe scene which the poet imagines,andthe cramped and narrow bounds, whichthe stagerenders practicable. That ...
... the purpose of playing" by exaggeratingfor thespectator the inevitable interval between the visionary andindeterminate limits ofthe scene which the poet imagines,andthe cramped and narrow bounds, whichthe stagerenders practicable. That ...
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Sir Sidney Lee. The deliberate pursuit of scenic realism is antagonistic to the ultimate law of dramatic art. In the case of great plays, the dramatic representation is most successful from the genuinely artistic pointof view—which is ...
Sir Sidney Lee. The deliberate pursuit of scenic realism is antagonistic to the ultimate law of dramatic art. In the case of great plays, the dramatic representation is most successful from the genuinely artistic pointof view—which is ...
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... the imagination. Theordinary person,ifhehad to choose among theenumerated items of Shakespeare's newly discovered manuscripts, would cheerfullygowithout thesix new tragedies andthe one ... the reception accorded II SHAKESPEARE AND THE ...
... the imagination. Theordinary person,ifhehad to choose among theenumerated items of Shakespeare's newly discovered manuscripts, would cheerfullygowithout thesix new tragedies andthe one ... the reception accorded II SHAKESPEARE AND THE ...
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acting actormanager actors admiration andthe artistic atthe audience Bacon Beeston Ben Jonson Benson's Betterton biographer butthe bythe character comedy commemoration contemporary countrymen critical Cymbeline D'Avenant dramatic art dramatist Ducis Elizabethan Elizabethan playgoer endeavour England English experience France French fromthe genius George Peele Hamlet Henry hewas histrionic honour Iago imagination inhis inLondon intelligent inthe isnot isthe Itis itwas Jonson Julius Cæsar King literature London London County Council Love's Labour's Lost Macbeth manager memorial of Shakespeare modern monument municipal theatre never ofhis ofthe oneof onthe oral tradition Othello patriotic instinct Pepys Pepys's performance Phelps's philosophy playhouse poet poet's poetry production realise rendered reputation Richard II rôle scenery scenic sentiment Shakespeare's career Shakespeare's death Shakespeare's plays Shakespearean drama Shoreditch Sir Frederick Bridge spectacular speech stage Stratford StratfordonAvon thatthe theatrical enterprise thegreat thestage tobe today tothe tragedies wasnot whichis whichthe William Beeston witha withthe writing