An Outline of Theatre History: Asian Theatre, then 18th century thru the "Modern" Era

Asian Theatre

Roots in Hindu, Buddhist, Confucian and Islamic Rituals
   
highly systematized
   
highly traditional
   
music, dance, drama linked
   
emphasis on the performer


Theatre in India       

Shiva Nataraja

Natyasastra (The Art of the Theatre) - attributed to Bharata (2nd c. A.D.)
   

Epics as sources
       
Mahabharata (final form c. 250 B.C.)
       
Ramayana (final form c. 250 B.C.)


Golden Age 120 -- 500 A.D.
       
Sanscrit drama

                                    elements
                       
rasa
                       
bhava
   
Sanskrit Plays
           
King Sudraka, The Little Clay Cart (4th -- 8th c.)
           
Kalidasa. Sakuntala (late 4th -- early 5th c.)
   
Kathakali dance drama (18th century)
   

Rabindrinath Tagore (1861 -- 1941)

Chitra (1894); The Cycle of Spring (1917)

wins Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913

            Girish Karnad (1938-  ) 
                        Hayavadana (1971)

Theatre in China

            Tang Dynasty (618 -- 904) - "students of the pear garden"

            Song Dynasty (960 -- 1279) - storytellers

            Yuan Dynasty dramatists (1279 -- 1368) - Li Xingdao, The Story of the Chalk Circle
   

Beijing Opera (19th c. forward)
       
civil plays
       
military plays
acting roles: male, female, painted face, comic
       
Mei Lan Fang (1894 -- 1961)
                       

Communist control in China, 1949
           
                        the Cultural Revolution, 1966
   
The Peony Pavilion


Theatre in Japan
   
Noh theatre (begins late 14th c.)
       
Kan'ami (1333 –- 1384) and Zeami (1363 -- 1443)

Sotoba Komachi (by Zan’ami
       
hashigakari
       
kyogen
   

Bunraku (begins 17th c.)

Chikematsu Monzaemon (1653 -- 1724) - The Double Suicide at Sonezaki (1703)
       
Takedo Izumi (1691 -- 1756) - Chushingura (1748)

action accompanied by samisen

Kabuki
       
Okuni invents the form
                                   
more spectacle than other Japanese forms

hanamichi

mie
   

            Modern Japanese Theatre

European-style Free Theatre, founded 1909
                       
Kobo Abe (1924 -- 1993)

Yukio Mishima (1925 -- 1970)

Butoh (movement begins circa 1960) - Kazuo Ohno (1906 -- )

Tadashi Suzuki  (1939 -- ) and his company at Toga
                                   
synthesis of eastern and western styles

works with Anne Bogart and SITI
       
The Trojan Women, The Bacchae, others

Shakespeare in Japan


Eighteenth Century English Theatre

Social and historical background

an age of Reason

            the rise of the middle class     
           
            political changes

                        German kings from Hanover

                        a “prime” minister takes charge


Plays and Playwrights

sentimental comedy

Colley Cibber (1671 -- 1757) - The Careless Husband (1704)
   
George Farquhar (1678 -- 1707)
       
The Beaux' Stratagem (1707)

The Recruiting Officer (1705)

                        Sir Richard Steele (1672 -- 1729)
       
The Conscious Lovers (1722)

                                               "a joy too exquisite for laughter"

pathetic tragedy
   
Nicholas Rowe (1674 – 1718) The Ambitious Stepmother (1701)

Ambrose Phillips (1674 – 1749) The Distrest Mother (1712)

domestic tragedy
   
George Lillo (1693 -- 1739) - The London Merchant (1731)

other kinds of entertainment
   
grand opera
   
George Frederick Handel (1685 -- 1759)
       
arrives in London in 1710

creates a vogue for Italian opera
       
Rinaldo (1711)

Rodelinda (1725)
       
writes for the castrato

                                                            Farinelli (1705 -- 1782)

ballad opera   John Gay (1685 -- 1732) The Beggar's Opera (1728)

satirical burlesque
   
Henry Fielding (1707 – 1754

Tom Thumb, or the Tragedy of Tragedies (1730)

The Historical Register of 1736 (1737)

the Licensing Act of 1737
   
limits London to 2 legitimate theatres
   
forces all plays to be licensed


minor forms

pantomime
   
John Rich (1692 -- 1761), aka “Lun”
       
Amadis, or the Loves of Harlequin and Columbine (1718)

comic opera - Thomas Arne and Isaac Bickerstaffe, Love in a Village, 1762


"laughing" comedy

Oliver Goldsmith (1730 -- 1774)
       
wrote the manifesto in his “Essay on Theatre”

used Shakespeare as model
       
She Stoops to Conquer (1773)
   
Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751 -- 1816)

used Restoration comedy as model
       
The Rivals (1775)

The School for Scandal (1777)

Revivals - Shakespeare “improved” again


Theatre Architecture, Design and Staging
   
theatres:
       
Drury Lane continues as performance space
       
Covent Garden (opens 1732)

                        King's Theatre for opera (opens 1705, named King’s in 1714)

Haymarket (built 1720)
   
pit, box, gallery system
   
forestage lessens
   
                        wing and groove scene changes
   
1762--stage seating abolished
   
trends in theatre architecture:
       
to larger houses
       
to increasing spectacle
       
to specific settings
   
Philippe Jacques de Loutherbourg (1740 -- 1812)

                        unifies design
       
introduces local color

emphasizes historical accuracy

            lighting moves from candle to oil

costumes: habit à la Romaine


The Actors:

Colley Cibber (1671 -- 1757) - adapts and pads Richard III
   
James Quin (1693 -- 1766) - bombastic
   
            Charles Macklin (c. 1699 – 1797) - sympathetic, “natural” Shylock

David Garrick (1719 -- 1779)

                        Garrick as manager

Garrick as director

Garrick as writer
           
Miss in Her Teens (1747)

The Clandestine Marriage (1766)

Garrick - greatest actor of the era


Peg Woffington (c. 1714 -- 1760)
   
George Ann Bellamy (1731 -- 1788)

writes Apology for the Life of George Ann Bellamy (6 vols, 1785)

Susannah Cibber (1714 – 1766)
Spranger Barry (1719 – 1777)

Kitty Clive (1711 – 1785)

Mary Robinson (1758 – 1800)

The “Business” of the Theatre

            detailed records kept   

lines of business
       
stars, leading players, supporting players,
“walking ladies and gentlemen, & ‘fifth business”

theatre grows as a commercial enterprise

Eighteenth Century French Theatre

Social and Historical Background

            Paris as cultural capital

            Social and political change

                        Rousseau and the philosophers of the Enlightenment

                        The French Revolution


Plays and Playwrights

Voltaire (1694 -- 1778)
       
Zaire (1732)

Alzire (1736)

                        his plays feature exotic locales

                        and offer new subjects for tragedy
Candide (1759) satirical novella


tearful comedy and le drame

La Chaussée (1692 -- 1754) - writes comédie larmoyante such as False Antipathy (1733)

Marivaux (1688-1763)

                        Game of Love and Chance (1730)

                        Triumph of Love (1722)
                                   
Denis Diderot (1713 -- 1784) – creates le drame, drama to teach moral lessons

                        The Natural Son (1757)

                        “fourth wall”

                        moves towards the Revolution

laughing comedy

            Beaumarchais (1732 -- 1799)

                        Barber of Seville (1775)

                        Marriage of Figaro (1783)
                                    more moves towards the Revolution
Minor forms

            theatre at fairs
           
opéra comique

            the Italian troupe


Theatre spaces

Two licensed spaces: l'Opéra and Comédie Française

pit, box, gallery

as in England, increasingly less forestage

            1759 -- stage seating abolished

            1782 -- seats placed in the parterre

            curved and widened auditorium


Scene design and costumes

            move towards greater spectacle and illusion

            focus on specific locales

Giovanni Nicolo Servandoni (1695 -- 1766)

introduces scena per angolo to Parisian theatres

Costumes                   

contemporary dress

habit à la Romaine for the classics


Actors and acting
   
Michel Baron returns to the stage
   
Adrienne Lecouvreur (1692 -- 1730)
   
Mlle Dumesnil (1713 -- 1803)

Mlle Clairon (1723 -- 1803)
   
Henri-Louis Cain (Lekain) (1729 -- 1778)

François-Joseph Talma (1763 -- 1826)


Eighteenth Century Italian Theatre

Social and Historical Background

            several countries rule different sections of Italy

            Italian culture exported through Europe


Plays and Playwrights
                       
opera dominates
                       
Venice as center of theatrical activity

Carlo Gozzi (1720 -- 1806)

retains improvisation, masks from commedia dell’arte in his plays

                        fiabe –fairy tales with a purpose

                        The King Stag (1762)

                        The Love of Three Oranges (1761)


Carlo Goldoni             (1707 -- 1793)

                        “The Comic Theatre” (treatise, 1750)

                        moves towards realistic comedies, sentimentalism

                        The Servant of Two Masters (1745)

                        The Mistress of the Inn (1753)

            Vittorio Alfieri (1749 -- 1803)

                        serious drama

                        politically motivated plays

Innovations in Italian scenic design
            the Bibiena family, among them:

                        Ferdinando Galli Bibiena (1656 – 1743); his three sons also designers

                        Francesco Galli Bibiena (1659 – 1739); Ferdinando’s brother

                        Carlo Galli Bibiena 1728 – 1727); Ferdinando’s grandson


Bibienas introduce scena per angolo (approx. 1703)

                                                more than one vanishing point

                                                monumental effect, settings seem to reach beyond the proscenium

                        Bibiena family members spread out through Europe

Filippo Juvarra (1678 -- 1737) - creates a curvilinear use of angled scenery

            Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720 --1778)

                                    paints mood onto settings through light and shadow (chiaroscuro)

                       
            domestic & rural settings require increasing “local color” & realistic touches


Theatre throughout the Rest of Europe during the Eighteenth Century

Social and historical background

Hapsburg Empire

local kings and dukes (electors) vote on the emperor

Europe looks to Italy and France as cultural models

Influence of the opera

Middle class, sentimental dramas

Causes for the proliferation of theatre through the Germanic states

            Jesuit theatre

English touring companies

“Hanswurst” – best performed by Joseph Stranitzky (1676 -- 1726)


Plays and Playwrights

Neoclassicism

Johann Christoph Gottsched (1700 -- 1766) - The Dying Cato (1731)

Carolina Neuber (1697 -- 1760)

                                    creates theatrical reform with Gottsched

                                    builds a disciplined theatre company

Johann Friedrich Schönemann (1704 -- 1782) - Neuber’s actor, form own troupe


the Hamburg National Theatre (opened 1767)

            German Sentimental drama

                        Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729 -- 1781)

                                    Miss Sara Sampson (1755)

                                    Minna von Barnhelm (1767)

                                    Nathan the Wise (1779

the Sturm und Drang movement

                        F.M. Klinger (1752 -- 1831) Sturm und Drang (1776)

                        Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 -- 1832)

                                    Goetz von Berlichingen (1773)

Friedrich Schiller (1759 -- 1805)

                                    The Robbers (1782)

Weimar Classicism – Goethe and Schiller as primary writers

focuses on beauty, “truth” over realism

            duchy as arts colony

                        Goethe appointed theatre director in 1791

                                    Iphigenia in Tauris (1787)

                                    Faust (1808, part 1; 1831, part 2)

Schiller

Don Carlos (1787)

                                    Maria Stuart (1800)

                                    Wilhelm Tell (1804)

Melodrama

August Friedrich von Kotzebue (1761 -- 1819)

Misanthropy and Repentance (1787)


theatre at Weimar taken over by Caroline Jagermann, 1817 - actress and duke’s mistress

advocate of “dog” drama and other melodramatic forms

The Romantic Era

Social and Historical Background

            Romantics reject reason for higher truth

            Rousseau advocates return to nature

            Political rebellions throughout Europe

Romanticism and the Theatre

            Neoclassical rules rejected
   
tenets of Romanticism include

                        search for higher truth

to find higher truth, look to nature
   
body-soul duality
       
thru art we can transcend
   
artist/“genius” helps us transcend

Shakespeare as model


The Birth of Romanticism in Germany

            August Wilhelm Schlegel (1767 -- 1845), critic and translator

                        contrasts “Romantic” with “Classic” in his criticism

                        translates Shakespeare
           
Plays and Playwrights in the Germanic States

            Franz Grillparzer (1791 -- 1872) King Ottakar’s Rise and Fall (1824)

Johann Ludwig Tieck (1773 -- 1853) Puss in Boots, 1844)

Johann Nestroy (1801 -- 1862) Out for a Lark (1842)

Heinrich von Kleist (1777 -- 1811)

                        The Prince of Homburg (1811)

Georg Buchner (1813 -- 1837)

                        Danton's Death (1835)

                        Woyzeck (1836)


Romanticism in England

            S.T. Coleridge (1772 -- 1834) & William Wordsworth (1770 -- 1850)
       
preface to The Lyrical Ballads (1798) as Romantic manifesto
       
                        Coleridge: "willing suspension of disbelief"

Romantic drama
   
P.B. Shelley (1792 -- 1822) - The Cenci (1819)
   
                        Lord Byron (1788 -- 1824) - Sardanapalus (1821)

melodrama
   
Matthew Gregory "Monk" Lewis (1775 -- 1818) - gothic melodrama
       
Ambrosio, or The Monk (1795)
   
Douglas Jerrold (1803 -- 1857) - nautical melodrama
       
Black-Eyed Susan (1829)
   
James Sheridan Knowles (1784 -- 1862) – classical melodrama
     
Virginius (1820)


social melodrama

J.S. Knowles again, The Factory Girl

F.S. Hill, Six Degrees of Crime


The Romantic Movement in France
   
from the revolution to Napoleon
   
boulevard theatres

mélodrame

Rene Charles Guilbert de Pixérécourt (1773 -- 1844)
       
Victor, or The Child of the Forest (1798)

The Forest of Bondy; or, The Dog of Montargis  (1814)
       
"I write for those who cannot read”

background to the Romantic movement

French writers favor Shakespeare over Neoclassic

Mme de Stael writes “On Germany”

Jean François Ducis adapts Shakespeare in neoclassic form

Stendhal compares Shakespeare with Racine

British acting troupes perform Shakespeare in Paris

            Charles Kemble’s Hamlet (1827)
                       
            Harriet Smithson’s Ophelia


            The Romantic Explosion in Paris

Victor Hugo (1802 -- 1885)

Preface to Cromwell (1827) as manifesto
       
Hernani (1830)
   
Alfred de Musset (1810 -- 1857)

                                    Les Caprices du Marianne (1833)

                                    No Trifling with Love (1834) (1833)

                                                           
Theatre Architecture, Staging & Acting in the Romantic Era
   
moves towards greater spectacle

height of historical accuracy


German Romantics
   
            Ludwig Tieck (1773 -- 1853)
       
returns to open stage

stages Antigone in 1841
       
produces A Midsummer Night's Dream 1843 (music by Mendelssohn)


Theatre Spaces in France
                       
under Napoleon (to 1815) theatre limited to:

four subsidized state theatres

four legal “minor” theatres


                        by 1855 there are 28 theatres in Paris

early attempts at directing
       
Pixérécourt -- coordinates entire production
       
Hugo -- creates stage pictures

acting
   
François-Joseph Talma (1763 -- 1826)

Mlle Mars 1779 – 1847

Mlle Duchenois (c.1777 – 1835) vs Mlle George (1787 – 1867)

Jean-Baptiste Déburau (1796 -- 1846)
           
Frédérick LeMaître (1800 -- 1876)
   
Rachel (1821 -- 1858)

Louis-Jacques Daguerre (1787 -- 1851) & technical advances
   
works with panorama
   
invents the diorama

“Midnight Mass at St Etienne du Mont”


at the Opéra

Pierre Luc Charles Ciceri (1782 -- 1868), primary designer

A new building completed, 1822

lighting by gas
   
                                    carbon arc & limelight, 1840s

                                    new machinery for waterfalls, volcanoes



Theatre Spaces and Performance in England
   
country feels effects of the industrial revolution
   
London population doubles between 1800 & 1843

            2 subsidized theatres – Drury Lane & Covent Garden


            growth of minor forms

                        continuing panto and comic opera
   
burletta

            The Theatre Regulation Act of 1843

                        repeals the part of the Licensing Act of 1737 that limits theatres to two

                        many new theatres open in the wake of the Theatre Regulation Act
                       
melodrama proliferates
   
hippodrama at Astley's Theatre - The Battle of Waterloo (1824)

dog drama - Pixérécourt, The Dog of Montargis (1814)
           
aquadrama at Sadler's Wells - The Siege of Gibralter (1804)

Neoclassical actors
   
                        John Philip Kemble (1757 -- 1823)

as actor
                                   
                                    as manager

Sarah (Kemble) Siddons (1755 -- 1831)

Charles Kemble (1775 -- 1854)
       
James Robinson Planché (1796 -- 1880)

C. Kemble’s designer/playwright

writes A History of British Costume 1834
   

            Romantic actors

George Frederick Cooke (1756 --1812)

Edmund Kean (1787 -- 1833) – greatest of the Romantics

Master (William Henry West) Betty (1791 -- 1874)

            Transitional actor/managers – from Romantic to realistic

W.C. Macready (1793 – 1873) - Macbeth in kilts

Madame Vestris ((1797 --1856)

                                    breeches roles
uses a box set             

early female actor/manager


American Theatre to the Civil War

Social and Historical Background

            the first settlers in the American Colonies

            basic needs trump entertainment

                       
The First Theatricals

            Spanish and French settlements

“Ye Bare and Ye Cubbe”  (1665)

Williamsburg VA, first theatre, 1716

theatre in colleges

Gustavus Vasa at Harvard College

                        William & Mary College

Early acting companies
   
Murray and Keane Co., 1749 – 1752, establishes a circuit, little else known about them
   
the Hallam troupe, 1752

first long-standing company

regularly tours a circuit of cities along the eastern seaboard
       
Mrs. Hallam (? -- 1774)
       
Lewis Hallam Jr. (c.1740 -- 1808)

                        returns from Jamaica, re-names itself The American Company

                        David Douglass builds theatres

                                    Southwark, Philadelphia, 1766

                                                The Prince of Parthia, Thomas Godfrey (1767)

                                    John Street, New York, 176

An expansion of theatre after the Revolution

Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, 1794
   
Park Theatre, New York, 1798

Three Early American Playwrights

            Royall Tyler (1757 -- 1826) - The Contrast (1787)

            William Dunlap (1766 -- 1839)

                        André (1798)
                                               
                        writes the first history of American theatre

            John Howard Payne (1791 -- 1852) - Brutus (1818), Clari (1823)   

Two Early American Actors
                                   
Anne Brunton Merry (1768 -- 1808)
           
Thomas Abthorpe Cooper (1776 -- 1849)

Design in early American theatre - standard designs on simple roll drops

The Westward Movement
           
art vs. business
   
Samuel Drake (1769 -- 1854)
   
Noah Ludlow (1795 -- 1886)
   
Sol Smith (1801 -- 1869)
   
showboats

transportation revolution – the railroad


New York becomes the theatrical center of the U.S.

Larger more sophisticated theatres

Lafayette Theatre (1826)

The Bowery Theatre, seats 4,000 in 1845

British Touring stars
   
G.F. Cooke
   
Edmund Kean
   
Junius Brutus Booth (1796 -- 1852)

American talent
   
Edwin Forrest (1806 – 1872), The “American” Tragedian

Astor Place Riots -- May, 1849

Forrest vs British star W.C. Macready

riots fomented by anti-British politicos

at least 22 killed; more than 150 injured

Charlotte Cushman (1816 -- 1876)

Anna Cora Mowatt (Ritchie) (1819 -- 1870)

writes as well as performs

Fashion (1849)

Melodrama and Comedy American-style

            Hippodrama

                        Mazeppa; or, The Wild Horse of Tartary

Ada Isaacs Mencken

Temperance plays - William H. Smith, The Drunkard (1844)

Indian plays - John Augustus Stone (1801 – 1834) Metamora (1829)

Yankee Plays

Jonathan in The Contrast as progenitor

character morphs from bumkin to clever Yankee trader
   
Samuel Woodworth (1785 -- 1842)
       
The Forest Rose (1825) introduces Jonathan Ploughboy
   
                                    The People’s Lawyer (1839)              

Two Yankee delineators

James Henry Hackett (1800 -- 1871)

            George Handel (Yankee) Hill (1809 -- 1849)



Plays about the City B’hoy

A Glance at New York (1848)

Mose, the Bowery B’hoy

            Performed by Frank Chanfrau (1824 -- 1884)

Caricatures of immigrants

                        Irish and German “types”

The Minstrel Show
   
T.D. Rice “Jim Crow” c. 1828
   
Virginia Minstrels (1843)


The African Company, established c. 1821

William Brown, leader of the company
       
writes King Shotaway (1823) first known African American play
   
James Hewlett (1778 – 1836)  the star of the company

plays Richard III among other roles
   
Ira Aldridge (1807 -- 1867)  - “the celebrated African Roscius”

                        successful European, British tours


after mid-century Uncle Tom’s Cabin most popular play in America

                        played by whites “blacked up”


Realism and Naturalism

In France
   
the well-made play invented by Eugène Scribe (1791 -- 1861)
       
plot-centered

logical progression of events

each scene builds to a climax

play culminates in a grand climax, followed by a clear denouement

strong emphasis on suspense, often via withheld information

A Glass of Water (1840)

Adrienne Lecouvreur (1849)
   
Victorien Sardou (1831 -- 1908)

Scribe’s successor, continues the well-made play tradition
       
A Scrap of Paper (1860)
       
Tosca (1887), vehicle for Sarah Bernhardt
   
the “thesis” play

Alexandre Dumas fils (1824 -- 1895) - La Dame Camélias (aka Camille) (1852)

            Emile Augier (1820 -- 1889) - Olympia's Marriage (1855)

French naturalist drama
   
un tranche de vie - a "slice of life”

Emile Zola (1840 -- 1902) - founds the naturalist movement; writes manifesto
       
Thérèse Raquin (1873)
   
Théâtre Libre (founded 1887)
       
run by Andre Antoine (1858 -- 1943) who stages the new naturalist plays

Opulence at the new Paris Opera

Opéra Garnier, completed in 1874
           
much enlarged social space outside the auditorium; grand foyer and staircase

French Realist Actors
   
François Delsarte (1811 -- 1871) - the "science" of acting
   
                        systematic gestures & movements indicate inner emotional state

Constant-Benoit Coquelin (1841 -- 1909)

Sarah Bernhardt (1844 -- 1923)

In Italy
   
the Italian Shakespeareans - Adelaide Ristori, Ernesto Rossi, Tommaso Salvini

feature the old style of acting

            Eleonora Duse (1859-1924) moves toward a new, more subtle acting style

                        major rival of Sarah Bernhardt


In America
   
Dion Boucicault (1822 -- 1890)

born in Ireland, popular on both sides of the Atlantic
       
writes realistic melodrama

The Poor of New York (1857)
           
The Octoroon (1859)
       
champion of writer's rights; royalties
       
starts a trend toward the long run

   
“combination” companies supersede stock companies

Actors
   
Edwin Booth (1833 -- 1893)

finest actor after Civil War

                                    advocate of “art” theatre

scenic innovations – free plantation
   
Laura Keene (1820 -- 1873)

successful female actor/manager

Our American Cousin

Directors

Augustin Daly (1836 -- 1899)

writes Under the Gaslight (1867), others
       
leads ensemble company, includes Ada Rehan, John Drew, Clara Morris
   

 David Belasco (1854 -- 1931)

writes Madame Butterfly (1900), others
       
favors naturalistic staging

features stars: Blanche Bates, David Warfield
   

Steele Mackaye (1842 -- 1894)
   
                                    writes (Hazel Kirke, Paul Kauvar, others), also a performer, inventor

                                    invents an early form of air conditioning for auditoriums

                                    invents an elevator system for fast scene changes

                                    attempts to build the Spectatorium, for sound and light shows


The birth of the American musical
       
The Black Crook (1866) features dancing girls and spectacle

Evangeline (1874) features a dancing cow

burlesque & vaudeville as contributors

Actors
   
William Gillette (1855 -- 1937)
       
Sherlock Holmes (1899)

                                    “the illusion of the first time”   

James O'Neill (1847 -- 1920)
       
            The Count of Monte Cristo
   
Richard Mansfield (1854 -- 1907)

The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1887)

introduces George Bernard Shaw’s plays to the U.S.


In England
   
Henry Irving (1838 -- 1905), finest actor of the era
       
manages the Lyceum
       
first British knighthood
   
Ellen Terry (1847-1928), finest actress, often partners with Irving

Gilbert (1836-1911) and Sullivan (1842-1900)
           
HMS Pinafore (1878), Pirates of Penzance (1879), The Mikado (1885)

Herbert Beerbohm-Tree (1853-1917) actor/manager known for scenic realism


Trends in theatre at the end of the century

moves toward more intimate theatres

orchestra/balcony versus pit, box & gallery in the auditorium

mainstream realism versus anti-realist experiments


The Modern Era

Social and Historical Background

major cultural changes

experimental art movements through Europe

World War I

Plays and Playwrights

Henrik Ibsen (1828 -- 1906), the “father” of modern drama
   
three phases of writing:
       
romantic verse drama - Brand (1866), Peer Gynt (1867)

                        realism - A Doll House (1879), Ghosts (1881), Hedda Gabler (1890)

                        symbolism - The Wild Duck (1884), The Master Builder (1892)

August Strindberg (1849 -- 1912)
       
naturalist writings - The Father (1887), Miss Julie (1888)

                        Strindberg writes himself

later "dream" plays anticipate expressionism

                                    The Dream Play (1902)

                                    The Ghost Sonata (1907)

George Bernard Shaw (1856 – 1950) writes "useful" plays via comedies of ideas
   
Arms and the Man (1894)
           
The Devil's Disciple (1897)

                        Pygmalion (1913)
   
Heartbreak House (1914-19)
   
Saint Joan (1923)

Oscar Wilde (1854 -- 1900), writes "art for art's sake"

An Ideal Husband (1894)
   
The Importance of Being Earnest (1895)

A Brief History of Russian Theatre

skomorokhi
   
Alexander Griboyedov (1795 -- 1829), neoclassical - Woe from Wit (1822 -- 25)
   
Alexander Pushkin (1799 -- 1837). romantic - Boris Godunov (1825)

Nikolai Gogol (1809 -- 1852), realist - The Inspector General (1836)

Ivan Turgenev (1818 -- 1883) - A Month in the Country (1850)  

Alexander Ostrovsky ((1823 -- 1886) - The Thunderstorm (1859)

Lev Tolstoy (1828 – 1910), The Power of Darkness (1866)
   
The Bolshoi Theatre
   
The Maly Theatre

Russian ballet

Marius Petipa (1822 -- 1910)
   
Anton Chekhov (1860 – 1904)

The Seagull (1896)
       
Uncle Vanya (1899)
       
The Three Sisters (1901
       
The Cherry Orchard (1904)

Maxim Gorky (1868 -- 1936)
       
The Lower Depths (1902)

 The Independent Theatre Movement
   
Théâtre Libre -- Paris, 1887 - Andre Antoine (1858 -- 1943), director
   
Freie Bühne -- Berlin, 1889) Otto Brahm (1856 -- 1912), director
opens with Ghosts

Gerhardt Hauptmann (1862 -- 1946), its only German writer of note
           
The Weavers (1892)

            The Independent Theatre -- London, 1891 - J.T. Grein (1862 -- 1935), director
       
opens with Ghosts

                        stages first of Shaw’s plays

The Court Theatre (1904 -- 1907) - Harley Granville-Barker (1877 -- 1946), director
   
                        writes Prefaces to Shakespeare

writes plays - The Madras House (1910), Waste (1906-07)
   
                        creates modernist, anti-realistic stagings of Shakespeare

The Moscow Art Theatre (1898)
   
Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko (1858 -- 1943)
   
Konstantin Stanislavsky (1863 -- 1938)

(for more independent theatres, e.g. Théâtre de L'Oeuvre, The Abbey Theatre,
others, see below)

The rise of Modernism in Directing and Design
   
Richard Wagner (1813 --1883)
       
gesamtkunstwerk

theatre at Bayreuth (1872 -- 76)
           
                                    "classless" auditorium
           
mystic chasm

The Meiningen Players (1866)
           
Georg II, the Duke of Saxe Meiningen (1826 -- 1914)
           
Ludwig Chronegk, Ellen Franz
           
features ensemble acting
           
tours through Europe (1874-1910)
   
Adolphe Appia (1862 -- 1928), designer

Wagner’s operas as catalyst for his new ideas
       
“suggestion” vs pictorial realism & historical accurcy in design
       
importance and centrality of light in design

primarily a theorist, designs few productions

Gordon Craig (1872 -- 1966) designer

designs practical applications of Appia’s theory

spurns the “literal” in design
       
focuses on the director as central
      
 actor as übermarionette


Modernist Experiments with Anti-realist Work

In France

symbolism

                        Maurice Maeterlinck (1862 -- 1949) - Pelléas et Mélisande (1892)

                        Aurélion-Marie Lugné-Poe (1869 -- 1940) manages Théâtre de L'Oeuvre

Alfred Jarry (1873 -- 1907) - King Ubu (Ubu Roi, 1896)

Cabarets - Le Chat Noir, Paris (1881) is the first

followed by Els Quatre Gats (Barcelona 1897), Die Elf Scharfrichter (Munich 1901), Schall und Rauch (Berlin 1901), Die Fledermaus (Vienna 1907), the Lukomorye and Crooked Mirror (St Petersburg, both opened 1908)

                        cabarets are centers for avant-garde experiments in performing arts

In German-speaking countries
   
Frank Wedekind (1864 -- 1918) influences expressionism

Spring’s Awakening (1891)
       
the Lulu plays (Earth Spirit, 1895; Pandora’s Box, 1903)

Arthur Schnitzler (1862 -- 1931) - Reigen (1900)   

Max Reinhardt (1873 -- 1943), quintessential early professional director

at ease in several styles

fits the play to an appropriate space

In England
   
William Poel (1852 -- 1934) re-thinks Shakespearean staging


In Ireland
           
The Abbey Theatre (1904)

W.B. Yeats (1865 -- 1939) Cathleen ni Houlihan (1902)
       
Lady Gregory (1863 -- 1935) Spreading the News (1904)
       
                        John Millington Synge (1871 -- 1909)

                                    Riders to the Sea (1904)
           
Playboy of the Western World (1907)

Anti-realist Theatre in Russia

Sergei Diaghilev (1872 -- 1929) creates The Ballets Russes
       
The Rite of Spring (Stravinsky, 1913)

major choreographers, dancers, artists as designers
   
Vsevelod Meyerhold (1874-1940)

experiments with symbolism, cabaret in St Petersburg
       
use of circus, commedia techniques


The "Business" of American theatre
   
The Theatrical Syndicate (1895 – 1915) monopolizes the “road”
   
            David Belasco holds out against Syndicate

Minnie Maddern Fiske (1865 -- 1932) opposes the Syndicate, acts Ibsen in America
       
The Shuberts (1916 forward) oppose, then outdo the syndicate
       
Lee, Sam and J.J., “the boys from Syracuse”

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