Theatre for Shakespeare

Fiction & Literature, Literary Theory & Criticism, British, Nonfiction, Entertainment, Theatre, Performing Arts
Cover of the book Theatre for Shakespeare by Alfred Harbage, University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Alfred Harbage ISBN: 9781487589714
Publisher: University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division Publication: December 15, 1955
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Alfred Harbage
ISBN: 9781487589714
Publisher: University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division
Publication: December 15, 1955
Imprint:
Language: English

Here is a book to hearten playgoers, stimulate young actors, lead theatrical executives to reconsider methods of management, and encourage benefactors to open their wallets. In this new book (containing the Alexander Lectures for 1954-55), Mr. Harbage, distinguished critic and scholar, advocates a movement to give Shakespeare back to the audiences. He complains that, in greater or less degree, Shakespearean audiences are in constant danger of being bored, or more precisely of being "reverently unreceptive," of being gratified that they have come to the play and gratified that they then may go. In his opinion there is no theatre in the world today that can present Shakespeare with full adequacy.

Mr. Harbage feels that Shakespearean production is at present lacking in a sense of direction, and needs some form of exemplary leadership. Counsels of perfection are required. There should be at least one company to set a standard, one not dependent upon immediate financial success, and one committed only to realizing artistic ideals worthy of the plays. The wholesome tendency to return to the original methods of production for guidance would be more effectual if a distinction were made between what is still applicable in those original methods and what is not.

The author's argument is provocative and amusing throughout; it begins with detailed complaints and ends with detailed remedies. A generous amount of information about Elizabethan precedents and traditions is included.

Alfred Harbage has published numerous books which have become cornerstones in Shakespearean scholarship: Annals of English Drama, 975-1700; Shakespeare's Audience; As They Liked It; and Shakespeare and the Rival Traditions. He has prepared new editions of The Tempest and As You Like it, is General Editor of the American Pelican Shakespeare, had published articles in learned journals, and has held editorial and advisory posts.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Here is a book to hearten playgoers, stimulate young actors, lead theatrical executives to reconsider methods of management, and encourage benefactors to open their wallets. In this new book (containing the Alexander Lectures for 1954-55), Mr. Harbage, distinguished critic and scholar, advocates a movement to give Shakespeare back to the audiences. He complains that, in greater or less degree, Shakespearean audiences are in constant danger of being bored, or more precisely of being "reverently unreceptive," of being gratified that they have come to the play and gratified that they then may go. In his opinion there is no theatre in the world today that can present Shakespeare with full adequacy.

Mr. Harbage feels that Shakespearean production is at present lacking in a sense of direction, and needs some form of exemplary leadership. Counsels of perfection are required. There should be at least one company to set a standard, one not dependent upon immediate financial success, and one committed only to realizing artistic ideals worthy of the plays. The wholesome tendency to return to the original methods of production for guidance would be more effectual if a distinction were made between what is still applicable in those original methods and what is not.

The author's argument is provocative and amusing throughout; it begins with detailed complaints and ends with detailed remedies. A generous amount of information about Elizabethan precedents and traditions is included.

Alfred Harbage has published numerous books which have become cornerstones in Shakespearean scholarship: Annals of English Drama, 975-1700; Shakespeare's Audience; As They Liked It; and Shakespeare and the Rival Traditions. He has prepared new editions of The Tempest and As You Like it, is General Editor of the American Pelican Shakespeare, had published articles in learned journals, and has held editorial and advisory posts.

More books from University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division

Cover of the book The Public intellectual in Canada by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book Publicity and the Canadian State by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book Why Delinquency? by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book The Last Day, The Last Hour by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book The Natural History of Canadian Mammals by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book The Moral Economy of Cities by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book Direct Foreign Investment in Asia and the Pacific by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book Theatre of Urban by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book Contemporary Canadian Federalism by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book Studies in the Eighteenth Century by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book English Enterprise in Newfoundland 1577-1660 by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book Working in a Multicultural World by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book Corporate Character by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book Anne's World by Alfred Harbage
Cover of the book Discourses of Tolerance & Intolerance in the European Enlightenment by Alfred Harbage
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy