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Category Archives: Theatre

Today in Theatre History

08 Tuesday Sep 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Stories, Theatre

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1642, blog, Peter A. Davis, Puritans, theatre, Today in Theatre History

Yes, it has a watermark. I found it on Look and Learn...

Yes, it has a watermark. I found it on Look and Learn…

Not quite today, perhaps – in fact, the day before yesterday: on 6 September 1642, an act of Parliament shut down all English theatres for good…

Well, no – that wasn’t to be, of course (and we may like to think that you can’t just abolish theatre like that) but such was the intention of those kill-joys, the Puritans. Truth be told, they and their fathers and grandfathers had been harping about it all through Elizabeth’s reign, and James’ as well, and Charles’ – plays, players and playhouses being clearly the devil’s work and the source of all kinds of evils. Still, it seems that taking theatre away from the English was not all that easy, and for decades, theatre-wise, Puritans hadn’t managed much more than to make an egregious nuisance of themselves. By 1642 things had changed, they controlled Parliament and were in a position to obtain a complete ban on playing, ostensibly on the grounds of “unseemliness” – of all things. Continue reading →

Running Revisions

25 Tuesday Aug 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Scribbling, Stories, Theatre

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Alexandre Dumas, christopher marlowe, Felice Cavallotti, Friedrich Schiller, playwriting, revisions

playwriting-101-2011I love “backstage” stories of playwrights tinkering with their plays after the first contact with the audience – mostly in response to the audience’s response, but a few times just because they… well, there’s no other way to put it: because they changed their mind. I love the stories almost as much – and in at least one instance even more than – the works they refer to… Continue reading →

A wee bit of magic

20 Thursday Aug 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Theatre

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tib2Remember the other playwright’s staged reading? The one where I was called in at the very last minute to do the lights?

You may or may not have wondered: how did it turn out? Well, let me tell you: surprisingly well. That is, surprisingly, given how things were after the first rehearsal I attended. And then they went surprisingly – period – for other reasons… but more on that later. Continue reading →

Something Rotten! ♫

18 Tuesday Aug 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Theatre

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Brian d'Arcy James, Karey and Wayne Kirkpatrick, musical, Something Rotten!, William Shakespeare

PinI trust that, if I confess that I sort of collect plays about Shakespeare and Marlowe, nobody will die of shock. I even have a Pinterest board to show for it, gathering both things I have seen or read, and things I haven’t yet – but a girl can hope.*

One good thing about collecting plays about Shakespeare and Marlowe is, there always seems to be more: both Kit and Will being endlessly fascinating subjects to playwrights, the happy collector can go ahead and be reasonably certain to find something more, and more, and more… Continue reading →

Call to Arms

11 Tuesday Aug 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Theatre

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lighting design, rehearsals, rivalries, theatre

HowSo, there is this other playwright. She and her husband hate my guts. I mean, he pretends not to see me when we happen to meet, she doesn’t return greetings – plus, they say unkind things about my plays.

This kind of things.

Being a civilized adult, I once stepped in to play two smallish roles in this lady’s play when the company that stages us both happened to be one woman short the day before first night. I did it for the company, not for the author, but still. And I have done lights for it, too. A number of times. Continue reading →

A glimpse of Don Carlos

08 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Theatre

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Boris Christoff, Conrad Veidt, Don Carlos, Friedrich Schiller, Giuseppe Verdi, images, Leyla Gencer, Wilhelm von Kaulbach, William Dieterle

For several reasons I was put in mind of Don Carlos, yesterday – both Schiller’s and Verdi’s. So I thought I’d post a few images…

Let us begin with the frontispiece of the first published version in Der Teutschen Merkur, in 1787.

2005-1_038a_Dom_KarlosThen a highly romanticized view of the eponymous hero in a 1859 engraving by Friedrich Precht.

CatturaAbout the same time, here is an illustration by Wilhelm von Kaulbach:

Kaulbach_9_Bilder_Mueller__500x763_Now Conrad Veidt and William Dieterle as Carlos and Posa in the 1924 silent movie Carlos und Elisabeth:

bp1592And a 1936 Ukrainian production of the play:

pic_F_R_Franko New Drama Theater Schiller Don Carlos (Kyiv 1936) (stage design by A Petrytsky)And the opera? Here a 1963 production at La Scala, in Milan, with Leyla Gencer as Elisabeth:

hqdefaultAnd the great Boris Christoff as King Philip:

ChristoffI find that both play and opera have fascinating histories… maybe we’ll talk about it, eh?

 

King Lear for optimists

30 Thursday Jul 2015

Posted by la Clarina in History, Stories, Theatre

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Charles Macready, David Garrick, Edmund Kean, Happy ending, King Lear, Nahum Tate, Restoration, William Shakespeare

TatePlayImagine you are in England in 1660. Imagine theatres opening again after eighteen years of civil war and general bleakness. Imagine to crave only fun, and music, and gaiety…

And now imagine to find yourself with Shakespeare’s works. And yes, yes – Elizabethan golden age and all that, but it’s been sixty, seventy years, and taste changes. Shakespeare, who was going out of fashion during the last years of his life, by now is mostly the relic of another, cruder era. And mind: the stories are great – if a tad glum – and the poetry has its beauties: if only it weren’t all so desperately old-fashioned, if only it were a little cheerier…But this can be remedied, can’t it? How hard can it be to rewrite the rusty old things? Continue reading →

Magnificent Pageantry and all that

25 Saturday Jul 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Theatre, Things

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Leslie Howard, Norma Shearer, Romeo and Juliet, William Shakespeare

romeo-and-juliet-leslie-howard-norma-shearer-1936Ah, but I do love old movie trailers…

Look at what was supposed to win an audience’s interest for Hollywood’s newest Shakespeare adaptation. The sweethearts of Smilin’ Through (though I have my doubts Romeo and Juliet can be described as smilin’ through much more than a couple of early scenes each…), the magnificent pageantry, the sensation in New York, this girl and this boy, Norma Shearer cooing to a young deer… And let us not forget the limited special popular prices… Continue reading →

The Fourth Wall

16 Thursday Jul 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Theatre

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backstage, david leventi, klaus frahm, theatre

TheatreFrahmAt times I discuss with non-theatre people about the perception of theatre, stage and backstage, about my fascination with the inner workings of the thing… And I realise now – but it’s taken some time – that it’s perfectly possible to not like to have the illusion shattered. Having been the sort of child who did take toys apart to see how they worked, and still being the sort who likes to take stories apart to study them, sometimes I tend to forget it’s not everyone’s cup of tea… Continue reading →

Little Shakespeareans

02 Thursday Jul 2015

Posted by la Clarina in Stories, Theatre

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children, Il Palcoscenico di Carta, shakespeare

BoyHe is nine, going on ten, and brimming with eagerness.

Well, perhaps not quite so eager, the day he landed at Il Palcoscenico di Carta towed by his mother – but this changed soon enough when we gave him a speech or two to read. You could see he loved it from the start: the atmosphere, the reading, the tale, the voices, being part of it, chatting with the real actors… Continue reading →

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