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Theatrical Clubs of the Nineteenth Century: Tradition Versus Assimilation in the Acting Community
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2010
Extract
One of the more enduring images of actors is that they are a highly sociable, gregarious people. Perhaps less so today, but in the nineteenth century this characterization had solid basis in fact. The origins of this trait are easily understood. It was encouraged by the cooperative aspect of the theatre and the closed nature of the acting fraternity, which resulted from both the constant travel and the social proscription that actors had always faced. It also was based in the acting personality itself which, though varied and incapable of stereotyped description, often contains an extra measure of extroversion and companionability.
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- Copyright © American Society for Theatre Research 1982
References
NOTES
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