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The Passion Plays in Tegelen: An investigation into the function of a passion play

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 January 2009

Robert L. Erenstein
Affiliation:
Teaches at the Instituut voor Theaterwetenschap, University of Amsterdam.

Extract

Passion plays in Europe exhibit a great many similarities as far as general content and presentation are concerned. I do not really think it is relevant for the non-Dutch reader, therefore, to delve too deeply into the specifics of content and presentation with regard to the passion plays in Tegelen in Limburg, the southernmost province of the Netherlands. However, a great deal of the external interference surrounding the passion plays in Tegelen, has also been experienced by the organisers of numerous passion plays in Europe. Therefore, rather than discuss their content, it is far more interesting to investigate these passion plays through their development from 1931 when they began. Through this we can gain insight into the manner in which a social and cultural phenomenon such as a passion play can play a role in the maintenance and even the imposition of a particular world view. For the quality of the text and performance of passion plays are less important than the manner in which a community, usually a small one, driven by a communal ideal, expresses religious feelings which tens of thousands of spectators share. In such a performance there is communal activity with a ritual character. Performers are frequently anonymous and spectators and critics set aside any criticism of individual acting or the text because a passion play entails more than merely a large-scale theatrical performance by enthusiastic amateurs.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © International Federation for Theatre Research 1991

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References

Burke, Peter, Historical Anthropology in Early Modern Italy, Cambridge University Press, 1987.Google Scholar
Schillings, Harry. Toneel en theater in Limburg in de 19e and 20e eenw (Theatre and the Stage in Limburg in the nineteenth and twentieth Centuries), Assen, Van Gorcum, 1976.Google Scholar