Shakespeare and the Modern Stage: With Other EssaysConstable, 1906 - 251 Seiten |
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Seite 5
... society , the stage presentation necessarily relies to a very large extent for its success on the realism of the scenic appliances . In plays which , dealing with the universal and less familiar conditions of life , appeal to the ...
... society , the stage presentation necessarily relies to a very large extent for its success on the realism of the scenic appliances . In plays which , dealing with the universal and less familiar conditions of life , appeal to the ...
Seite 13
... Society endeavoured to produce , with a simplicity which erred on the side of severity , many plays of Shakespeare and other literary dramas . No scenery was employed , and the performers were dressed in Elizabethan costume . The Society's ...
... Society endeavoured to produce , with a simplicity which erred on the side of severity , many plays of Shakespeare and other literary dramas . No scenery was employed , and the performers were dressed in Elizabethan costume . The Society's ...
Seite 19
... society -but to the superior imaginative faculty of adult Elizabethan or Jacobean playgoers , in whom , as in Garrick's time , the needful dramatic illusion was far more easily evoked than it is nowadays . This is no exhilarating ...
... society -but to the superior imaginative faculty of adult Elizabethan or Jacobean playgoers , in whom , as in Garrick's time , the needful dramatic illusion was far more easily evoked than it is nowadays . This is no exhilarating ...
Seite 32
... society then , as now , befriended the theatre . Cul- tivated noblemen offered their patronage to promis- ing writers for the stage , and Shakespeare soon gained the ear of the young Earl of Southampton , one of the most accomplished ...
... society then , as now , befriended the theatre . Cul- tivated noblemen offered their patronage to promis- ing writers for the stage , and Shakespeare soon gained the ear of the young Earl of Southampton , one of the most accomplished ...
Seite 52
... society of those who had come to close quarters with literary heroes of the past generation . Of that generation his own life just touched the fringe , he being eight years old when Shakespeare died . Fuller described the dramatist as a ...
... society of those who had come to close quarters with literary heroes of the past generation . Of that generation his own life just touched the fringe , he being eight years old when Shakespeare died . Fuller described the dramatist as a ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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