Stage Designers in Early Twentieth Century America

Stage Designers in Early Twentieth Century America
Author: E. Essin
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2012-12-23
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9781137108395

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By casting designers as authors, cultural critics, activists, entrepreneurs, and global cartographers, Essin tells a story about scenic images on the page, stage, and beyond that helped American audiences see the everyday landscapes and exotic destinations from a modern perspective.

American Scenic Design and Freelance Professionalism

American Scenic Design and Freelance Professionalism
Author: David Bisaha
Publsiher: SIU Press
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2022-11-29
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9780809338757

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An inclusive history of the professionalization of American scenic design The figure of the American theatrical scenic designer first emerged in the early twentieth century. As productions moved away from standardized, painted scenery and toward individualized scenic design, the demand for talented new designers grew. Within decades, scenic designers reinvented themselves as professional artists. They ran their own studios, proudly displayed their names on Broadway playbills, and even appeared in magazine and television profiles. American Scenic Design and Freelance Professionalism tells the history of the field through the figures, institutions, and movements that helped create and shape the profession. Taking a unique sociological approach, theatre scholar David Bisaha examines the work that designers performed outside of theatrical productions. He shows how figures such as Lee Simonson, Norman Bel Geddes, Jo Mielziner, and Donald Oenslager constructed a freelance, professional identity for scenic designers by working within their labor union (United Scenic Artists Local 829), generating self-promotional press, building university curricula, and volunteering in wartime service. However, while new institutions provided autonomy and intellectual property rights for many, women, queer, and Black designers were not always welcome to join the organizations that protected freelance designers’ interests. Among others, Aline Bernstein, Emeline Roche, Perry Watkins, Peggy Clark, and James Reynolds were excluded from professional groups because of their identities. They nonetheless established themselves among the most successful designers of their time. Their stories expand the history of American scenic design by showing how professionalism won designers substantial benefits, yet also created legacies of exclusion with which American theatre is still reckoning.

The Revolutions of Stage Design in the 20th Century

The Revolutions of Stage Design in the 20th Century
Author: Denis Bablet
Publsiher: Leon Amiel
Total Pages: 400
Release: 1977
Genre: Theaters
ISBN: UOM:39015020686682

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This book is aiming to grasp the evolution of stage design in an entirely international spirit from the end of illusionary realism till present day. It reveals the work of designers and painters who are trying to create a world of stage design, to define space, fill it with forms, sings, color and lighting which will speak to each and every one of us.

The Group Theatre

The Group Theatre
Author: Helen Krich Chinoy
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 283
Release: 2013-11-06
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9781137294609

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The Group Theatre , a groundbreaking ensemble collective, started the careers of many top American theatre artists of the twentieth century and founded what became known as Method Acting. This book is the definitive history, based on over thirty years of research and interviews by the foremost theatre scholar of the time period, Helen Chinoy.

Performance Reconstruction and Spanish Golden Age Drama

Performance Reconstruction and Spanish Golden Age Drama
Author: L. Vidler
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 187
Release: 2016-11-09
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9781137437075

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Spanish Golden Age drama has resurfaced in recent years, however scholarly analysis has not kept pace with its popularity. This book problematizes and analyzes the approaches to staging reconstruction taken over the past few decades, including historical, semiotic, anthropological, cultural, structural, cognitive and phenomenological methods.

America s First Regional Theatre

America   s First Regional Theatre
Author: J. Ullom
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 433
Release: 2014-05-14
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9781137394354

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The Cleveland Play House has mirrored the achievements and struggles of both the city of Cleveland and the American theatre over the past one hundred years. This book challenges the established history (often put forward by the theatre itself) and long-held assumptions concerning the creation of the institution and its legacy.

The Education of a Circus Clown

The Education of a Circus Clown
Author: David Carlyon
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 219
Release: 2016-01-28
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9781137547439

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2017 Freedley Award Finalist, Theatre Library Association 2016 Best Circus Book of the Year, Stuart Thayer Prize, Circus Historical Society The 1960s American hippie-clown boom fostered many creative impulses, including neo-vaudeville and Ringling's Clown College. However, the origin of that impulse, clowning with a circus, has largely gone unexamined. David Carlyon, through an autoethnographic examination of his own experiences in clowning, offers a close reading of the education of a professional circus clown, woven through an eye-opening, sometimes funny, occasionally poignant look at circus life. Layering critical reflections of personal experience with connections to wider scholarship, Carlyon focuses on the work of clowning while interrogating what clowns actually do, rather than using them as stand-ins for conceptual ideas or as sentimental figures.

Uncle Tom s Cabin on the American Stage and Screen

Uncle Tom s Cabin on the American Stage and Screen
Author: John W. Frick
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 308
Release: 2016-04-30
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9781137566454

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No play in the history of the American Stage has been as ubiquitous and as widely viewed as Uncle Tom's Cabin . This book traces the major dramatizations of Stowe's classic from its inception in 1852 through modern versions on film. Frick introduce the reader to the artists who created the plays and productions that created theatre history.