Meyerhold at Work

Meyerhold at Work

Meyerhold at Work

Meyerhold at Work

Paperback

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Overview

“Not a mirror but a magnifying glass”—such, in the poet Mayakovsky’s words, was the theater of Vsevolod Meyerhold. The first to insist on the primacy of the director’s role, indeed the first to conceive of it as a role, this passionately dedicated Russian director tore down the fourth wall and forced the actors and audience together into one inescapable community of experience.

Yet Meyerhold recorded few of his theories in writing, and the intensity and brilliance of his work must be recaptured through the actors and artists who helped create the performances. Focusing on Meyerhold’s postrevolutionary career, Paul Schmidt has assembled in this book journals, letters, reminiscences, and, of special interest, actual rehearsal notes that build a fascinating, intimate picture of Meyerhold as a theorist and as a man.

Included are Meyerhold’s frantic notes to his teacher, friend, and bête noire Stanislavsky; detailed descriptions of how he trained his actors in “biomechanics”; and memories by such students as Eisenstein and such friends as Pasternak and Ehrenburg. One chapter deals with Meyerhold’s never-realized conception of Boris Godunov, while another describes his direction of Camille, which starred Zinaida Raikh, his wife, and which played its 725th and last performance on the day Stalin’s government liquidated Meyerhold’s theater. Paul Schmidt’s introduction and headnotes enhance our understanding of Meyerhold as a pioneer of modern theater.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781477307113
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 12/01/1980
Series: University of Texas Press Slavic Series , #2
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Paul Schmidt (1934–1999) was a translator and playwright. He received his PhD in Slavic literature from Harvard University.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • A Brief Chronology of Meyerhold’s Life and Major Productions
  • I. “… These Past Generations of Theater”
  • II. Working with Actors
  • III. Shaping the October Revolution in Theater
  • IV. Meyerhold and Pushkin
  • V. Meyerhold and Music
  • VI. Zinaida Raikh and Camille
  • VII. The Lost Theater
  • VIII. Epilogue
  • Glossary of Names
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