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OverviewCo-authored by the resident dramaturg at Shakespeare Theatre Company and a long-time scholarly consultant, this book chronicles how a small repertory troupe at the Folger Theatre on Capitol Hill became an internationally renowned company performing in a lavish, multi-venue performing arts centre in downtown Washington, D.C. The artistic vision and business acumen of Michael Kahn, the founding Artistic Director, largely catalyzed this transformation, but so too did the forces of neoliberalism and, more recently, globalization and new media. Accordingly, Shakespeare in the Theatre: Shakespeare Theatre Company not only examines directorial decision-making but also 3 decades of social and economic change in the nation’s capital, from the complexities of gentrification to the arts policies of successive administrations. In addition to discussions of directorial practice, this book examines the ambivalence of American theatre artists toward their British cultural inheritance. Analyses of representative productions and interviews with Kahn and his British successor, Simon Godwin, illuminate this complex relationship: one that aspires to a cosmopolitan Anglophilia while positioning classically trained American actors as worthy rivals to their counterparts at the RSC and the National Theatre of Great Britain. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Deborah C. Payne (American University, USA) , Drew Lichtenberg (Theatre artist, Shakespeare Theatre Company, USA) , Dr. Farah Karim Cooper (Shakespeare's Globe, London, UK) , Peter Holland (University of Notre Dame, USA)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: The Arden Shakespeare ISBN: 9781350352681ISBN 10: 1350352683 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 05 September 2024 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsThis is a timely and valuable study, for the story of Shakespeare in America is inseparable from that of the nation’s capital. It was in its theaters that President Lincoln went to see, time and again, the greatest Shakespeare actors of his day (and where his assassin knew where to find him). It is there that the Folger Shakespeare Library, the most important hub in the world for early modern scholars, now stands. And it is there that a tradition of staging plays animated by their proximity to power, law-making, and protest, has informed decades of productions, some groundbreaking, others forgettable, at the Folger’s theater and then the Shakespeare Theatre Company, under the leadership of Michael Kahn and his successor, Simon Godwin (both interviewed at length). It’s a fascinating history, with many twists and turns, and Drew Lichtenberg and Deborah C. Payne do a superb job of bringing it to life. * James Shapiro, Professor of English, Columbia University, USA, and author of Shakespeare in a Divided America. * Author InformationDrew Lichtenberg has been resident dramaturg at the Shakespeare Theatre Company, USA, since 2011. He has worked as a dramaturg, literary manager and translator-adaptor with the Royal National Theatre, Public Theater, Roundabout, La Mama, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, McCarter Theatre Center, Yale Rep and Baltimore Center Stage. As an educator, he has taught courses at Catholic University of America, David Geffen School of Drama at Yale University and Eugene Lang College at the New School. His publications include The Piscatorbühne Century (2021). Deborah C. Payne is Professor of Literature at American University, USA. She was the Humanities Research Consultant at the Shakespeare Theatre Company from 2000 – 2009, and she has dramaturged for Studio Theatre, Arena Stage, the Kennedy Center, and the Bach Sinfonia. Publications include The Business of English Restoration Theatre, 1660 – 1700 (2023), Revisiting Shakespeare’s Lost Play (2016), Four Restoration Libertine Plays (2005), The Cambridge Companion to English Restoration Theatre (2000) and Cultural Readings of Restoration and Eighteenth-Century English Theatre (1995). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |