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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Alistair FairPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Edition: New edition Weight: 0.740kg ISBN: 9781472416520ISBN 10: 147241652 Pages: 270 Publication Date: 17 July 2015 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsAbout the Editor; Introduction, Alistair Fair; Chapter 1 Fifty Years of Theatre-making, Iain Mackintosh; Chapter 2 The German Reform Theatre, Gerald Adler; Chapter 3 The Westernisation of the Japanese Performance Venue between 1870 and 1970, Neil Jackson; Chapter 4 The Malmö Stadsteater, Max Gelibter; Chapter 5 Theatres in West Germany, 1945–70, Elain Harwood; Chapter 6 ‘A London Architect Who Has Specialised’, Alistair Fair; Chapter 7 The Limits of 1960s Radicalism, Barnabas Calder; Chapter 8 Ideal Theatres, Arnold Aronson; Chapter 9 Stage and City, Richard William Hayes; Chapter 10 The Friedrichstadt Palace in East Berlin, Florian Urban; Chapter 11 Encore, Iain Mackintosh;Reviews’This valuable collection on theatre architecture of the twentieth century discloses the tight practice of modernism within making, designing, and performing theatre. The volume beautifully fills an absence in the scholarship of modern theatre architecture with chapters that range from delightful recollections, deep research and original scholarship through historic overviews and focused studies of iconic and lesser-known theatres. Each succeeds in revealing how modernism became embedded within changing practices and theories of performance, detailing reciprocal relationships between designers, architects, directors, as well as political, social, and cultural bodies. The book describes, in great detail, struggles to build and perform in new forms of theatre that instil inventive, avant-garde practice within modern technology. In Japan, Germany, Sweden, London, and New York City, we become entangled and ensnared by the complex stories that make up each theatre, more so telling here, where performance and theatre are ultimately for and about storytelling.’ Marcia Feuerstein, Virginia Tech, USA ’Joe Papp, champion of free public theatre in New York, viewed theatre as an important poetic and political force. By probing the relationship between theatre buildings, national culture and the civic realm, this collection shows how this was so, and convincingly demonstrates the enduring significance of theatre and the space of performance in the cinema and television age. Wide-ranging and thoughtful, this book offers fresh and stimulating perspectives on the links between architecture, community, actor and audience in the twentieth century.’ Louise Campbell, University of Warwick, UK 'This valuable collection on theatre architecture of the twentieth century discloses the tight practice of modernism within making, designing, and performing theatre. The volume beautifully fills an absence in the scholarship of modern theatre architecture with chapters that range from delightful recollections, deep research and original scholarship through historic overviews and focused studies of iconic and lesser-known theatres. Each succeeds in revealing how modernism became embedded within changing practices and theories of performance, detailing reciprocal relationships between designers, architects, directors, as well as political, social, and cultural bodies. The book describes, in great detail, struggles to build and perform in new forms of theatre that instil inventive, avant-garde practice within modern technology. In Japan, Germany, Sweden, London, and New York City, we become entangled and ensnared by the complex stories that make up each theatre, more so telling here, where performance and theatre are ultimately for and about storytelling.' Marcia Feuerstein, Virginia Tech, USA 'Joe Papp, champion of free public theatre in New York, viewed theatre as an important poetic and political force . By probing the relationship between theatre buildings, national culture and the civic realm, this collection shows how this was so, and convincingly demonstrates the enduring significance of theatre and the space of performance in the cinema and television age. Wide-ranging and thoughtful, this book offers fresh and stimulating perspectives on the links between architecture, community, actor and audience in the twentieth century.' Louise Campbell, University of Warwick, UK Author InformationDr Alistair Fair is a historian of twentieth-century architecture with a particular interest in public and institutional buildings. After studying at Oxford, the Courtauld Institute of Art, and Cambridge, he worked in architectural conservation before returning to Cambridge as a Research Associate and then a Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellow. He joined the University of Edinburgh in autumn 2013 as a Chancellor’s Fellow. He has published widely on aspects of university, hospital and theatre architecture, including co-authorship with Alan Short and Peter Barrett of Geometry and Atmosphere: Theatre Buildings from Vision to Reality (Ashgate, 2011). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |