Love's Labour's LostManchester University Press, 1993 - Počet stran: 137 Though Love's Labour's Lost was performed throughout Shakespeare's active career, the play then disappeared from the British stage for almost two hundred years. Today, however, its popularity is high, both with theatre critics and audiences. In this study, Miriam Gilbert focuses primarily on six productions: on the Elizabethan stage, on the Victorian Stage, the Peter Brooke and John Barton productions at Stratford-upon-Avon, Michael Kahn's 1968 staging in America and the 1984 BBC television version. The relationships between the productions receive special attention. Over the years, productions have stressed the darker side of the play, as actors, directors and critics have found Love's Labour's Lost a more subtle and complex play than early commentators might suggest. |
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Strana vi
... possible interpretations of the play in hand . We hope that students and theatregoers , by reading these accounts of Shake- speare in performance , may enlarge their understanding of the text and be- gin , too , to appreciate some of ...
... possible interpretations of the play in hand . We hope that students and theatregoers , by reading these accounts of Shake- speare in performance , may enlarge their understanding of the text and be- gin , too , to appreciate some of ...
Strana 9
... possible but necessary . The scene with the four lords as Muscovites requires only that the four couples betake themselves to different parts of the stage to create the sense of four private wooings . The Worthies might set up a stage ...
... possible but necessary . The scene with the four lords as Muscovites requires only that the four couples betake themselves to different parts of the stage to create the sense of four private wooings . The Worthies might set up a stage ...
Strana 82
... possible to argue that the inconsistency is really eclecticism , and that , as in Brook's production and in Brook's theoretical statements , the text offers variety which can well be expressed through ' inconsistency ' . In creating his ...
... possible to argue that the inconsistency is really eclecticism , and that , as in Brook's production and in Brook's theoretical statements , the text offers variety which can well be expressed through ' inconsistency ' . In creating his ...
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