Playing Offstage
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Playing Offstage

The Theater as a Presence or Factor in the Real World
Sofort lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Sofort lieferbar I
ISBN-13:
9781498549752
Veröffentl:
2017
Seiten:
216
Autor:
Sidney Homan
Serie:
Transforming Literary Studies
eBook Typ:
EPUB
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

What happens when a theatrical production moves both literally and aesthetically off the stage and into the world surround the playhouse? Fourteen scholars and theater professionals address an issue that has aesthetic, philosophical, historical, psychological, social, and political implications for all those interested in the theater.
Fourteen scholars who work on campus or in the theater address this issue of what it means to play offstage. With their individual definition of what “offstage” could mean, the results were, predictably, varied. They employed a variety of critical approaches to the question of what happens when the play moves into the audience or beyond the physical playhouse itself? What are the social, cultural, and political ramifications? Questions of “how” and “why” actors play offstage admit the larger “role” their production has for the world outside the theater, and hence this collection’s sub-title: “The Theater As a Presence or Factor in the Real World.”

Among the various topics, the essays include: breaking the “fourth wall” and thereby making the audience part of the performance; the theater of political protest (one contributor staged Waiting for Godot in Zuccotti Park as part of the Occupy Wall Street protests); “landscape” or “town” theater using citizens as actors or trekking theater where the production moves among various locations in the community; the way principles of the theater can inform corporate management; the genre of semi-scripted comedy and quasi-impromptu spectacle (such as reality TV or flash mobs); digitalized performances of Shakespeare; the role of Greek Theater in the midst of the country’s current economic and political crisis; how the area outside the theater became part of the performance inside Shakespeare’s Globe; Timothy Leary’s Psychedelic Celebrations designed to reproduce the offstage experience of LSD; WilliamVollmann’s use of Noh theater to fashion a personal model and process of life-transformation; liminal theater which erases the line between onstage and off. The collection thus complements through actual performance criticism those studies that see the theater as a commentary on issues—social, political, economic; and it reverses the Editor’s own earlier collection TheAudience As Player, which examined interactive theater where the spectator comes onstage.
Introduction, “What It Can Mean to Play Offstage—and Why,” Sidney Homan
Section 1: “What Fourth Wall?”

  1. “Looking from Either Side of Glass,” Elizabeth Sakellaridou
  2. “Sticking It to the Audience,” Sidney Homan
  3. “‘To Be a Public Spectacle to All’: Hidden Cameras, Flash Mobs and the Potential for Revolutionary Theater,” Horacio Sierra
  4. “‘Bard on Demand’: Shakespeare on Screen[s] in the Twenty-First Century,” Joe Falocco
Section 2: The Theater of Everyday Life
  1. “Town vs. Landscape: Citizen’s Theater and the Re-envisioning of Actor and Stage” Uli Jäckle and Brian Rhinehart
  2. “Directing and Leadership: Endorsing the Stage to Generate Collaboration and Creativity within Corporate Contexts,” Avra Sidiropoulou
  3. “Taking the Performance Off the Stage of Reality: Timothy Leary's Off-Broadway Performances of 1966–1967,” James Penner
  4. “Making Noh Real Life: Transforming Anxiety in William T. Vollmann's Kissing the Mask,”Gina MacKenzie and Daniel T. O’Hara
Section 3: Presence and Factor—and Force
  1. “The Theater, Inside Out, 1575–1630,” S. E. Cerasano
  2. “Ruptured Stages: Neoliberalism and the Dramaturgies of Debt and Time,” Gigi Argyropoulou
  3. “Articulating the Farewell – Performance and the City,” Natascha Siouzouli
  4. “The Road Free to All: Staging Waiting for Godot during the Occupy Wall Street Protests,” Lance Duerfahrd

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