Book contents
- Frontmatter
- The Open Stage: Elizabethan or Existentialist?
- The Lantern of Taste
- Was there a Typical Elizabethan Stage?
- On Reconstructing a Practicable Elizabethan Public Playhouse
- The Discovery-space in Shakespeare’s Globe
- ‘Passing over the Stage’
- The Actor at the Foot of Shakespeare’s Platform
- Elizabethan Stage-Practice and the Transmutation of Source Material by the Dramatists
- The Maddermarket Theatre and the Playing of Shakespeare
- Actors and Scholars: A View of Shakespeare in the Modern Theatre
- Cleopatra as Isis
- Shakespeare’s Friends: Hathaways and Burmans at Shottery
- Illustrations of Social Life II: A Butcher and some Social Pests
- International Notes
- Shakespeare Productions in the United Kingdom: 1957
- The Whirligig of Time, A Review of Recent Productions
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times and Stage
- 3 Textual Studies
- Books Received
- Index
- Plate Section
Actors and Scholars: A View of Shakespeare in the Modern Theatre
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2007
- Frontmatter
- The Open Stage: Elizabethan or Existentialist?
- The Lantern of Taste
- Was there a Typical Elizabethan Stage?
- On Reconstructing a Practicable Elizabethan Public Playhouse
- The Discovery-space in Shakespeare’s Globe
- ‘Passing over the Stage’
- The Actor at the Foot of Shakespeare’s Platform
- Elizabethan Stage-Practice and the Transmutation of Source Material by the Dramatists
- The Maddermarket Theatre and the Playing of Shakespeare
- Actors and Scholars: A View of Shakespeare in the Modern Theatre
- Cleopatra as Isis
- Shakespeare’s Friends: Hathaways and Burmans at Shottery
- Illustrations of Social Life II: A Butcher and some Social Pests
- International Notes
- Shakespeare Productions in the United Kingdom: 1957
- The Whirligig of Time, A Review of Recent Productions
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times and Stage
- 3 Textual Studies
- Books Received
- Index
- Plate Section
Summary
Here am I presuming to adjudicate between actors and scholars, when I am not an actor and certainly no scholar. My only excuse is the old saying that “the onlooker sees most of the game”; and certainly in the last eight years and more I have been kept busy peeping at it from the touchline. For I have had the job, the very delightful job, of reporting for Shakespeare Survey on current productions. The delight lies in this, that my reporting has not had to be hurried, and I have had full time to browse. The regular critic, poor man, must telephone his notice to his paper as soon as the performance is ended—sometimes, we suspect, well before; and that is that. The Survey reporter, however, can wait to garner in not only the initial, the overall, impression of a production, but later amplifications and modifications of these first reactions. In other words he can go back and back, to see the play at different stages in its run and to concentrate in turn on particular elements in it.
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- Information
- Shakespeare Survey , pp. 76 - 87Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1959
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