Producing Beauty Pageants

Producing Beauty Pageants
Author: Anna Stanley
Publisher:
Total Pages: 442
Release: 2016-05-13
Genre:
ISBN: 9780962197239

Anna Stanley, a pageant director (since 1983) and the author of The Crowning Touch: Preparing for Beauty Pageant Competition (1989), also wrote the first edition of Producing Beauty Pageants: A Director's Guide (1989). In the '90s, this first edition was used in the production of The Secret World of... series for The Learning Channel. Twenty-five years later, Anna has written Producing Beauty Pageants: A Director's Guide, 2nd Edition. Nine years in the making, not only does it feature entirely NEW pageant trade information, Producing Beauty Pageants has also been expanded into a series. The Producing Beauty Pageants series includes: A Director's Guide, 2nd Ed. Creating a Synergized National Pageant System Brokering a Pageant through Barter Contestant Handbook Sponsorship Fee Optionals Open Call Directing a Fundraiser Pageant A Guide to Pageant Terminology (FREE e-book) If you want the convenience of interactive hyperlinks to the references in this book, you will need to purchase the e-book version of the same title.

Pamphlets Rec

Pamphlets Rec
Author: Russell Sage Foundation. Dept. of Recreation
Publisher:
Total Pages: 104
Release: 1927
Genre:
ISBN:

Producing Beauty Pageants

Producing Beauty Pageants
Author: Anna Stanley
Publisher: San Diego : Box of Ideas Pub.
Total Pages: 358
Release: 1989-01-01
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 9780962197208

Restaging the Past

Restaging the Past
Author: Angela Bartie
Publisher: UCL Press
Total Pages: 344
Release: 2020-08-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 1787354059

Restaging the Past is the first edited collection devoted to the study of historical pageants in Britain, ranging from their Edwardian origins to the present day. Across Britain in the twentieth century, people succumbed to ‘pageant fever’. Thousands dressed up in historical costumes and performed scenes from the history of the places where they lived, and hundreds of thousands more watched them. These pageants were one of the most significant aspects of popular engagement with the past between the 1900s and the 1970s: they took place in large cities, small towns and tiny villages, and engaged a whole range of different organised groups, including Women’s Institutes, political parties, schools, churches and youth organisations. Pageants were community events, bringing large numbers of people together in a shared celebration and performance of the past; they also involved many prominent novelists, professional historians and other writers, as well as featuring repeatedly in popular and highbrow literature. Although the pageant tradition has largely died out, it deserves to be acknowledged as a key aspect of community history during a period of great social and political change. Indeed, as this book shows, some traces of ‘pageant fever’ remain in evidence today.

Pageant

Pageant
Author: Joan FitzPatrick Dean
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 201
Release: 2021-07-15
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 1350144533

Focusing on examples from medieval theatre, women's suffrage campaigns, and the 2012 Olympics Opening Ceremony, this is the first book to offer a critical overview of pageant as a dramatic form. By enacting highly selective historical episodes, pageants manipulate audiences' sense of the past. Through iconic music, affecting images, and vernacular forms, pageants express and, in turn, shape religious, civic, or political allegiances. Freely appropriating elements of history plays, patriotic celebrations, opera, and film, pageants create spectacles of sensory overload. Impressive recent scholarship recognizes pageants as public history, but this is the first authoritative account of the origins, characteristics, and techniques of pageants as a theatrical idiom. Performed in sporting arenas, the open air, or purpose-built theatres, these paratheatrical events express identity through what Erika Fischer-Lichte calls “the re-theatricalization of theatre.” Pageants are intimately connected with power-they either assert and celebrate it or seek and demand it. Medieval religious pageants were so popular and powerful that they were suppressed and extinguished. The vogue for pageantry that swept through the English-speaking world in the decade before WWI was closely tied to the expansion of the franchise. Many early twentieth century pageants celebrated localities; others subversively advocated for women's suffrage. First performed in 1909, Cicely Hamilton's A Pageant of Great Women depicted historical personages from the near and distant past as well as allegorical figures such as Justice and Prejudice. Today, the Olympic Games mandate an opening ceremony that “details the country's history, culture, and overall importance for the global community.” London delivered just such a pageant in 2012. This book features a wide-ranging introduction that maps the cultural evolution of this enduring theatrical form and covers popular and readily accessible pageants from medieval England, the early twentieth century, and our own day.