The Simple Stage: Its Origins in the Modern American Theater

The Simple Stage: Its Origins in the Modern American Theater

by Arthur Feinsod
The Simple Stage: Its Origins in the Modern American Theater

The Simple Stage: Its Origins in the Modern American Theater

by Arthur Feinsod

Hardcover

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Overview

This book is about leaders of the modern American theater who resisted the temptation to fill the stage, preferring instead the evocations of a simple stage. Their work initially raised controversy, being applauded as visionary and poetic by some, drab and monotonous by others. And yet today the simplified stage is a well-established part of American theater practice. Feinsod begins his examination of these leading theater artists with a look at the precedents and influences of the modern simple stage. Drawing from diverse historic and cultural traditions, the first American simplifiers defied customs of elaborate spectacle and detailed naturalism in favor of self-imposed aesthetic restraint and a reduction to bare stage essentials.

Among the leaders in simplifying the modern American mise-en-scene, Feinsod delves into the theories and practices of director Maurice Browne and designer Raymond Jonson of the Chicago Little Theater; George Cram Cook, founder of the Provincetown Players; Lyman Gale and Livingston Platt of the Boston Toy Theater; as well as Sam Hume of the Arts and Crafts Theater in Detroit; director Arthur Hopkins; designers Robert Edmond Jones and Lee Simonson; and playwright Thornton Wilder. Influential foreigners, especially English designer Edward Gordon Craig and French director Jacques Copeau, are also discussed. Throughout the text, numerous design reproductions and performance photographs visually demonstrate the effectiveness of the simple stage.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313257155
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 06/30/1992
Series: Contributions in Drama and Theatre Studies , #38
Pages: 268
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.62(d)
Lexile: 1520L (what's this?)

About the Author

ARTHUR FEINSOD is Director of Theater in the Theater and Dance Department at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut. He has written essays and reviews appearing in The Drama Review and Theatre Jourbanal and co-edited a book of plays by his playwriting students, Strawberries, Potatoes and Other Fantasies, with an introduction by Edward Albee. Recently he has been the recipient of a National Endowment for the Humanities grant. Feinsod is also a playwright and director.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Precedents and Influences
The Greek and Elizabethan Revival
New Simple Stages from Europe
The Chinese and Japanese Precedent
Leaders of the New Simple Stage
Maurice Browne, Raymond Jonson and the Chicago Little Theater
Browne's Legacy: Contributions From Other Little Theaters
Robert Edmond Jones and Arthur Hopkins
Lee Simonson, Theodore Komisarjevsky, and The Tidings Brought to Mary
Thornton Wilder and the Playwright's Initiative
Bibliography
Index

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