Peter Stein : Germany's leading theatre director
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Peter Stein : Germany's leading theatre director
(Directors in perspective)
Cambridge University Press, 1981
- : hbk
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 178-180) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
First published in 1981, Michael Patterson's was the first book in any language to be devoted to the work of Germany's leading theatre director. Peter Stein's thoughtful and critical approach to a variety of dramatic texts - from Irish comedy to German classics, where his reputation largely rests - has resulted in a range of different acting and formal styles and some major textual adaptations. The rehearsing, performance and reception of these are thoroughly and vividly recreated here from interviews and archives and in the first-hand account of the workings of the theatre Stein made his own, the Schaubuhne in West Berlin. Patterson discusses the apparent contradictions between the Schaubuhne's original ideals as a model of socialist theatre and its present situation as one of the most highly subsidizes stages in Western Europe. Many productions are illustrated by photographs and imaginative reconstructions of particular scenes.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Exploring styles - Bond's Saved, Brecht's In the Jungle of Cities and Weiss's Vietnam-Discourse
- 2. The Brechtian approach to the classics - Schiller's Intrigue and Love and Goethe's Torquato Tasso
- 3. Theatre structures old and new - Bond's Early Morning and Middleton and Rowley's The Changeling in Zurich, and the move to the Schaubuhne, Berlin
- 4. Theatre of revolution - Brecht's The Mother, Worker's Theatre and Vishnevsky's Optimistic Tragedy
- 5. The myth of bourgeois individualism - Ibsen's Peer Gynt
- 6. From bourgeois past to bourgeois present - Kleist's Prinz von Homburg, Labishe's Piggy Bank, the Antiquity Project, Gorky's Summerfolk, Handke and Botho Strauss
- 7. Confrontation with Shakespeare - Shakespeare's Memory and As You Like it
- 8. Conclusion - Stein the explorer and the Schaubuhne as model
- Bibliography
- Index.
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