Shakespeare and the Modern Stage: With Other EssaysConstable, 1906 - 251 páginas |
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Página 2
... regards as superfluous and inappropri- ate . An accepted tradition of the modern stage ordains that every revival of a Shakespearean play at a leading theatre shall base some part of its claim to public favour on its spectacular ...
... regards as superfluous and inappropri- ate . An accepted tradition of the modern stage ordains that every revival of a Shakespearean play at a leading theatre shall base some part of its claim to public favour on its spectacular ...
Página 9
... regards conferred incalculable benefits on the theatre - going public and on the theatrical profession . Through- out the last quarter of the last century , Irving gave the spectacular and scenic system in the produc- tion of ...
... regards conferred incalculable benefits on the theatre - going public and on the theatrical profession . Through- out the last quarter of the last century , Irving gave the spectacular and scenic system in the produc- tion of ...
Página 16
... regard it as sacrilege to convert a comedy of Molière into a spectacle . The French people are commonly credited with a love of orna- ment and display to which the English people are assumed to be strangers , but their treatment of ...
... regard it as sacrilege to convert a comedy of Molière into a spectacle . The French people are commonly credited with a love of orna- ment and display to which the English people are assumed to be strangers , but their treatment of ...
Página 53
... regards , because they laboured in narrower fields . Many of them showed a welcome appreciation of a main source of their country's permanent reputation by confining their energies to the production of biographical catalogues , not of ...
... regards , because they laboured in narrower fields . Many of them showed a welcome appreciation of a main source of their country's permanent reputation by confining their energies to the production of biographical catalogues , not of ...
Página 59
... regard for Shakespeare's mem- ory by taking , a generation after the dramatist's death , Charles Hart , Shakespeare's grand - nephew , into his employ as a " boy " or apprentice . Grand- nephew Charles went forth on a prosperous career ...
... regard for Shakespeare's mem- ory by taking , a generation after the dramatist's death , Charles Hart , Shakespeare's grand - nephew , into his employ as a " boy " or apprentice . Grand- nephew Charles went forth on a prosperous career ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acting actor actor-manager actor-manager system actors and actresses artistic audience Ben Jonson Benson's Betterton biography career character Charles comedy contemporary critical Cymbeline D'Avenant D'Avenant's death dramatic art dramatist Drury Lane Dryden Elizabethan Elizabethan playgoer endeavour England English experience French genius gossip Hamlet Henry histrionic honour imagination interests of dramatic Jonson Julius Cæsar King less literary drama literature London London County Council Lowin Macbeth manager memory ment methods Midsummer Night's Dream modern monument moral municipal theatre nation never Nicholas Rowe oral tradition Othello patriotic instinct Pepys's performance Phelps Phelps's philosophy piece playgoing playhouse plays of Shakespeare poet poet's poetic poetry present produced realise rendered reputation Richard II rôles scene scenery scenic sentiment seventeenth century Shake Shakespeare's plays Shakespearean drama speare speare's spearean spectacular speech stage Stratford Stratford-on-Avon Tempest theatrical enterprise tion tragedy Twelfth Night William Beeston William D'Avenant writing wrote