The Theatrical Gamut

The Theatrical Gamut
Author: Enoch Brater
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 334
Release: 1995
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780472105830

Seventeen prominent critics reconsider the "modern" in drama

Self and Space in the Theater of Susan Glaspell

Self and Space in the Theater of Susan Glaspell
Author: Noelia Hernando-Real
Publisher: McFarland
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2011-10-10
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 0786488328

Founding member of the Provincetown Players, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, best-selling novelist and short story writer Susan Glaspell (1876-1948) was a great contributor to American literature. An exploration of eleven plays written between the years 1915 and 1943, this critical study focuses on one of Glaspell's central themes, the interplay between place and identity. This study examines the means Glaspell employs to engage her characters in proxemical and verbal dialectics with the forces of place that turn them into victims of location. Of particular interest are her characters' attempts to escape the influence of territoriality and shape identities of their own.

World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theatre

World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theatre
Author: Irving Brown (Consulting Bibliographer)
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 1344
Release: 2013-10-11
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 1136119086

An annotated world theatre bibliography documenting significant theatre materials published world wide since 1945, plus an index to key names throughout the six volumes of the series.

John Guare’s Theatre

John Guare’s Theatre
Author: Robert J. Andreach
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2009-01-14
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 144380391X

From the 1960s to the present day, John Guare’s plays have ranged from one-act to cyclic, realistic to surrealistic, naturalistic to experimental, and tragic to comic dramas. This study’s approach to the cornucopia the playwright himself provided when in an interview he gave a fundamental aesthetic principle of his craft. Like a person—and Guare’s plays develop the personal as well as the artistic self—a play must be grounded in reality; only then can it soar. The ground is traditional theatre with characters, no matter how larger than life they can be, and plot, no matter how illogical it can be. The soaring is in interrupting the action with monological narratives and musical interludes, bringing characters back from the dead, and having the action take hairpin turns into a mixture of genres and styles, modes and tones. In verbal and visual images, the flight invokes works by authors as varied as Aeschylus and Whitman, Dante and Feydeau, Verdi and Romberg. Soaring from ground to new ground, the theatre creates the transmission of the American heritage in Lake Hollywood, an idealism corrupted by a fraudulent American Dream in Lydie Breeze, and the recovery of the past in A Few Stout Individuals. As Guare said about his plays: they “interconnect.”