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Theatre and Society in Israel
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 January 2009
Extract
In Why We Need Broadway, the American scholar and critic Stanley Kaufmann depicts the theatre auditorium as the last remaining public meeting place for the lonely souls who together constitute Western society, a place where the concept of a public still exists, a place which attracts individuals who have paid out of their own pockets for a ticket which entitles them to share a personal experience with the strangers seated beside them in the dark, and with whom, for one evening, they become a community – or at least the closest thing to a community possible in the Western city of today.
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- Copyright © International Federation for Theatre Research 1988
References
Notes
1. Kaufmann, S., ‘Why We Need Broadway’, Performing Art Journal, no. 26/27, 1986, pp. 193–9.Google Scholar
2. Weitz, S. and Rahav, G., The Emergence of New Theatre Audience in Israel Tel-Aviv: Assaph no. 1, 1984.Google Scholar
3. N. Zemach is quoted in Levy, E., The National Theatre – Habima, (Hebrew) (Tel-Aviv; Eked Pub. 1981). p. 37.Google Scholar
4. A. Hameiri is quoted in Kohanski, M., The Hebrew Theatre, (Hebrew) (Jerusalem: Weidenfeld & Nicholson, 1974), p. 106.Google Scholar
5. See: Kohanski, M., pp. 104, 105, 174, 184, 198.Google Scholar
6. See: Weitz, S., and Rahav, G., ‘A Survey of Habima's Subscribers’, unpublished report, submitted to the Habima Theatre in June 1986.Google Scholar
7. See: Dvir, I., Sacrifice, presented at Israeli Fringe Festival, Acre 1985.Google Scholar
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11. The oriental cleaning woman Aliza Mizrachi and the oriental newcomer Zalach Shabati were the most popular characters of the commercial theatre of the 1960's.
12. See; Keniuk, Y. ‘Satire-Indeed’, Davar (Hebrew) 03 13, 1969Google Scholar, and Ben-Ami, N., ‘The Talent and the Failure’, Maariv (Hebrew), 03 10, 1969.Google Scholar
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14. See: Bar-Kadma, E., ‘The Rise and Fall of The Queen of the Bathtub’ Yediot Aharonot (Hebrew), 05 20, 1970.Google Scholar
15. Ibid.
16. See: Mittelpunct, H., The ApeGoogle Scholar, and Sobol, J., Jocker.Google Scholar
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18. Ben-Gurion, D., as quoted in Davar (Hebrew) 12, 15, 1951.Google Scholar
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20. Katz, E. and Gurevitch, M., The Secularization of Culture, Culture and Communication in Israel, (London: Faber & Faber 1976), Introduction.Google Scholar
21. See: Lerner, M., KastnerGoogle Scholar, Hasfari, S., KiddushGoogle Scholar, Ben-Yosef, J., PardesGoogle Scholar and Mittelpunet, H., Temporary Separation.Google Scholar