The Stage and the Page
eBook - ePub

The Stage and the Page

London's Whole Show in the Eighteenth-Century Theatre

  1. 262 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Stage and the Page

London's Whole Show in the Eighteenth-Century Theatre

About this book

The Stage and the Page: London’s “Whole Show” in the Eighteenth-Century Theatre edited by Geo. Winchester Stone, Jr. reconceives eighteenth-century drama as a seamless interplay of script and spectacle. Refusing the false choice between literary text and stage event, this collection shows how London audiences experienced an evening as an integrated sequence—overture, prologue, mainpiece, entr’acte song and dance, epilogue, afterpiece, and final music. Essays by leading scholars map the century’s tastes and institutions: Robert D. Hume reclassifies comedy into five performative modes and periodizes shifting fashions; John Loftis reads *Tancred and Sigismunda* against the waning drama of political opposition; Leo Hughes restores the centrality of afterpieces to audience pleasure. Together they model a criticism calibrated to box-office realities, actor personalities, and the rhythms of the patent theatres.

Infrastructure and embodiment receive equal weight. Donald C. Mullin links playhouse architecture to production choices, while Ralph G. Allen’s account of “irrational entertainment” uncovers the sensorium of scenic effects. Four music-centered chapters (Stone, Knapp, Dircks, Lincoln) demonstrate how songs, burlettas, and mythic settings—from The Enchanter to Orpheus—suffused Garrick’s stage with sound, with companion audio illustrations that animate their arguments. Practice-based studies by Charles H. Shattuck (promptbooks), Shirley Wynne (gesture and dance), and Bernard Beckerman (norms for performance-aware criticism) translate ephemeral staging back onto the page. Richly interdisciplinary and methodologically eclectic, The Stage and the Page equips scholars, directors, dramaturgs, and music historians to reconstruct London’s “whole show,” restoring the eighteenth century’s theater as a living art where reading and performance illuminate each other.

This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1981.

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Yes, you can access The Stage and the Page by George Winchester Stone, George Winchester Stone Jr. in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literatur & Literaturkritik im Drama. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. CONTENTS
  5. Preface
  6. INTRODUCTION
  7. COMEDY Editor’s Headnote
  8. 1. The Multifarious Forms of Eighteenth-Century Comedy Robert D. Hume
  9. TRAGEDY Editor’s Headnote
  10. 2. Thomson’s Tancred and Sigismunda and the Demise of the Drama of Political Opposition
  11. FARCE Editor’s Headnote
  12. 3. Afterpieces: Or, That’s Entertainment Leo Hughes
  13. STAGE STRUCTURE Editor’s Headnote
  14. 4. Theatre Structure and Its Effect on Production Donald C. Mullin
  15. SCENE AND DESIGN Editor’s Headnote
  16. 5. Irrational Entertainment in the Age of Reason Ralph G. Allen
  17. ORCHESTRA AND SONG Editor’s Headnote
  18. 6. The Prevalence of Theatrical Music in Garrick’s Time Geo. Winchester Stone, Jr.
  19. 7. English Theatrical Music in Garrick’s Time: The Enchanter (1760) and May Day (1775) J. Merrill Knapp
  20. 8. Garrick’s Fail-Safe Musical Venture, A Peep Behind the Curtain, an English Burletta Phyllis T. Dircks
  21. 9. Barthelemon’s Setting of Garrick’s Orpheus Stoddard Lincoln
  22. THE ACTING COPY AND PROMPTER’S GUIDE Editor’s Headnote
  23. 10. Drama as Promptbook† Charles H. Shattuck
  24. THEATRICAL DANCE Editor’s Headnote
  25. 11. Reviving the Gesture Sign: Bringing the Dance Back Alive Shirley Wynne
  26. CRITICAL NORMS Editor’s Headnote
  27. 12. Schemes of Show: A Search for Critical Norms Bernard Beckerman
  28. Epilogue
  29. Bibliography
  30. Index