Pina Bausch, queen of the German avant-garde and inventor of a whole new form of dance theatre has, albeit posthumously, entered the mainstream
A setting from Meyerhold's production of "The Dawn", c.1920, Vladimir Dmitriev, set design, Meyerhold Theatre (RSFSR First Theatre), Mosc...
Andrew Keenan-Bolger as Jesse Tuck, Sarah Charles Lewis as Winnie Foster & Terrence Mann as Man in the Yellow Suit
The designer talks authenticity and modern classics
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Giclee signed fine art print illustrated by Abi Overland. Escape the world and dive into the surreal Dreamscape. With inspirations drawn from ornate botanical wall murals, surrealism and theatre set designs. All prints come unframed.
We ended the last lecture with the birth of opera, in which there was an emphasis on spectacle. It seems appropriate after that to transition into theatre spaces and design in the Italian Renaissance. Theatre architecture, design and staging were revolutionized in the Renaissance, and are even more important to the history of theatre than is the new style of written drama. In the physical elements of production, as well as in the dramatic writing, the Renaissance attempted to re-create the stages of Greece and Rome. You’ll remember Vitruvius from ancient Rome. His monumental work, De Architectura, was rediscovered in 1414 and printed in 1486 by the Roman Academy, and one of the books in this work dealt with theatre. From Vitruvius Renaissance theatre practitioners gleaned vital information on the shape of the Roman theatre building. Vitruvius’ writing left enough room for interpretation, however, that from the Roman scaenae frons was created at first vistas in perspective, and finally a proscenium arch. The Roman Academy staged plays by Terence as early as 1486 and then published them. In the books there are drawings of what have become known as Terence stages. Usually these consist of several curtained openings in front of a wall, which is vaguely reminiscent of the Roman scaenae frons. But the Renaissance placed great importance on the ancient concept of perspective, so to picture the Renaissance idea for a Roman stage, you have to think scaenae frons PLUS perspective. Perspective is a technique that offers the illusion of depth on flat canvases, as well as in architecture and ultimately on stage. There were several attempts to create perspective on stage, but the best representations were drawn by Sebastiano Serlio (1475-1554), published in his book Architettura in 1545, based on Vitruvius. In the section on theatre Serlio discussed and drew plans for fitting a smaller version of the outdoor Roman theatre into a rectangular Renaissance hall. He set up stadium seating around an orchestra, in the center of only the duke or prince sat. The stage is at eye level of the duke, who has the perfect view of the spectacle, and raked, to increase the illusion of depth via perspective. Serlio thus framed the stage picture, then designed three all purpose settings to place in the picture frame, one for tragedy, one for comedy, and one for pastorals, re-invented from satyr plays. Each of these scenes required four sets or “nests” of angled wings plus a backdrop or shutter. On the wings and drop were carefully painted parts of the total view and the audience would get, on a relatively shallow stage, the illusion of a good deal of depth. Serlio’s sets did not need to be changed, so the wings were “fixed” into position. In case you're having trouble "reading" this,picture the audience at the bottom of the slide. On the left you see periaktoi in one position, on the right in another, with lines to determine proper perspective drawn as well, with the vanishing point at the top of each side of the slide. Intermezzi and early operas featured several different settings, so it soon became necessary to shift scenery within a performance. Several experiments in changing scenes began, the earliest reaching back to the ancient Greek system of triangular periaktoi. Again picture the audience at the bottom of the slide Next, angled wings were utilized. You could “nest” more of such wings than you could move periaktoi, as the latter were confined to three sides. So angled wings offered more scene changes than periaktoi could provide. Moving these angled wings, however, proved clumsy in the execution. By the early seventeenth century, flat wings replaced angled wings. How did they stand if they were flat? They were placed in grooves attached to the stage floor at bottom and another set of grooves at the top. Like the angled wings they were nested one behind the other. At the signal (usually a whistle) to change a scene, a man stationed at each nest pulled one wing out of sight, revealing the wing behind it, with of course another scene painted on it--Voila! Scene 2, the forest! The so-called wing and groove (or wing and shutter) system was a vast improvement on early methods, and was employed universally for a short time. England, Holland and America made use of w ings and grooves into the 19th century. Then, in the 1640s, designer Giacomo Torelli. aka il gran stregone (the great sorcerer, for his brilliant abilities in design) lived up to his nickname with a clever variation on the wing and groove scheme. At the Teatro Novissimo, one of the new public opera houses in Venice, he cut slots through the stage floor so that upright supports, or poles, could pass through and under the stage to the floor below it. On this lower level he placed wagons, or chariots, to which the poles were attached. Picture long poles attached to the rear of flat wings, at the stage level supporting the wings, at the level below attached to the chariots. The chariots Picture the audience seated behind the rectangle at center (a temporary proscenium) were all hooked up on a system of pulleys to a large winch at center. By merely cranking the winch, one man could change an entire scene, and this new “chariot and pole” change could occur much more smoothly than with the wing and groove method. Soon other winches began to be employed for cloud machines and other scenic devices, and scene changes became some of the most exciting aspects of an evening at the theatre. They were accomplished in plain view of the audiences, whose breaths were taken away by what became known as “a vista” scene shifts. Now that you know how these changes occurred, let’s talk about what it meant for design. As you start to invent machinery that can move scenery quickly and effectively, and as you create a hunger for it in the audiences, you begin to need people capable of painting these changes, accurately, beautifully, and in perspective – designers. We start to read names of designers in the seventeenth century, for nearly the first time in theatre history. Well before the advent of even wing and groove sets, intermezzi had moved dazzlingly from scene to scene. I’ve already identified Bernardo Buontalenti as one of the designers for Medici intermezzi, active as early as 1586. In fact famous painters of the day often worked on these courtly entertainments. For example, Baldessare Peruzzi and Giorgio Vasari (a fine painter in his own right, but more famous on the biographical sketches he wrote of many famous Italian Renaissance painters and sculptors) both worked for the Medici family in Florence. Even Leonardo da Vinci designed costumes, scenes and machines for the Sforza family, rulers of Milan. Buontalenti’s pupil Giulio Parigi (c 1570-1635) and his family carried on his master’s work, and also disseminated it throughout Europe, showing, among others, Joseph Furttenbach from Germany and Inigo Jones from England, how to create the marvelous changes, and how to paint them. Along with painted, changeable scenery, many special effects began to be created: flying, trapdoors, wave-machines, and so on. Nicola Sabbattini published with a detailed manual on these effects and how to accomplish them, complete with drawings, in 1638. Here are just a few chapter titles from Sabbattini’s book (illustrated in the next four visuals: Chapter XXXIX: How to Arrange the Lights on the Stage Chapter XLI: How to Light the Lamps Chapter V: How to change Scenery Chapter VI: How to Change Scenery by Another Method Chapter VII: The Third method of Changing Scenery Chapter XXXIV: How to Make Dolphins and Other Sea Monsters Appear to Spout Water While Swimming Chapter XXXV: How to Produce a Constantly Flowing River Chapter XXXVII: How to Divide the Sky into Sections Chapter XXXVIII: How Gradually to Cover Part of the Sky with Clouds Chapter XLII: How to Cover Part of the Sky, Beginning with a Small Cloud that Becomes Larger and Larger and Continually Changes its Color Chapter XLIII: How to Make a Cloud descend Perpendicularly with Persons in It Chapter XLV: How to Make a Cloud Descend So That It Will Gradually Move from the Extreme End of the Stage to the Middle of the Stage, a Cloud, Moreover, with Persons in It As theatre moved indoors, artificial light also became a necessity. Candlelight was used in the auditorium – it smoked less and smelled better than oil – and oil lamps and candles were used on stage. The auditorium remained lit by huge multi-candled chandeliers throughout the performance. At the beginning of the evening these chandeliers could be seen on the auditorium floor. Then all the candles were lit, and just before the play began the chandeliers were hoisted up towards the ceiling – possibly the origin of the phrase, “lights up!” The practice of a lit auditorium continued, by the way, into the mid-19th century. Oil lamps were often used for footlights; and on the sides and overhead on stage, candles or oil lamps were masked by scenic elements – the scene could be made darker by extinguishing some candles, or by the clever device of a sort of light tree which could be turned away from the stage to dim the scene. In theatre architecture, the Roman theatre was reinvented, as we’ve already seen to an extent with Serlio’s plans and drawings of scenes. Two theatres still standing (and easily visited, by the way) will serve as models. The first is the Teatro Olimpico, in Compare this with the Roman theatre above Vicenza, a city very near Venice. Most of the town was designed by Andrea Palladio, one of the great architects of the Italian Renaissance, whose style is actually named after him – Palladian. One of Palladio’s architectural undertakings at Vicenza was a theatre, built between 1580 and 1584. Like Serlio’s plan, Palladio’s consisted of a semicircular auditorium backed by stadium seating. The stage is very like an ancient Roman stage, a long thin platform backed by an elaborate scaenae frons, with three major openings (along with a door on each side of the stage); the central opening is quite large. So far, so good. note the alleyways in perspective inside the three openings BUT! Palladio died before the building was complete, and his associate, Vicenzo Scamozzi, finished the plan, adding, in true Renaissance style, alleyways in perspective from each of the three openings on the scaenae frons. The effect is of a city square with a number of streets approaching it. In fact some argue that Scamozzi was attempting to present the center of ancient Thebes, specifically for the inaugural production of Oedipus Rex. Theatre historian Bamber Gascoigne described the streets in Scamozzi’s alleyways. They were: “extremely steep with a very rapid shortening of the houses along them, and this makes them useless for acting in -- an actor walking the few steps from the far end to the front would start level with the roof tops, and then rapidly shrink to the height of a door.” (Gascoigne, World Theatre: An Illustrated History) The scaenae frons and alleyways are built of wood, painted to look like stone and marble. The Teatro Olimpico is a final tribute to ancient theatres, but with a sort of Renaissance teaser (the perspective alleyways) built in. A more revolutionary move occurred in Parma in 1618, when Giovan Battista Aleotti (who has also been credited with inventing wing and groove scene changes) finished the Teatro Farnese. In effect, Aleotti opened up the central door (like the one on the scaenae frons of the Olimpico) to make it the frame for the entire stage. The Farnese is the oldest remaining theatre with a permanent proscenium arch. It’s hardly the first use of a proscenium. As we’ve seen, temporary proscenia have been put up for intermezzi and for plays since the mid sixteenth century. But the Farnese is purpose-built with the proscenium arch as the permanent central feature of the stage, framing the picture and at the same time hiding the machinery that allowed for scene changes and special spectacular tricks. As such, it is the historic model for theatres for the next four centuries and probably well into the future. My photo of the auditorium from the stage When we talk about the performances at the academies, and at intermezzi commissioned by the Medici, and at evenings in the Olimpico or the Farnese, it must be noted that these entertainments were seen by the courtiers and upper crust only. None of these special effects and spectacular scene changes was being seen by the common people. At least, not until Venice began to build pit (the standing area on the floor), box, (the five levels on the sides of the theatre), and gallery - stadium style seating - the artist who drew this would be sitting in that section) PUBLIC opera houses, in 1637 (we mentioned these earlier). The San Cassiano came first, but in four short years, by 1641, three other Venetian theatres had been built to compete with it, and by 1700 there were at least ten opera houses in Venice! Each of these theatres featured permanent proscenium arches, elaborate machinery, and perspective sets. Their auditoriums were built in a style that continued down to the late nineteenth century, in the pit, box and gallery system. The pit was what we call the orchestra (and the Brits call the stalls); the pit was not considered the best seat. In fact at first there WERE no seats – everyone in the pit stood. Along the sides and back of the pit were anywhere from three to five levels of seating. Usually the first two levels were for the wealthiest and were divided into small boxes (the most expensive seats) and the upper levels were undivided galleries with stadium-like seating. Two different scenes at apublic opera house (both designed by il gran stregone, Torelli) note that these are drawings, and that the real thing might not have looked so perfect, but it gives an idea of what settings looked like. Commedia dell’Arte The middle classes began to attend the public opera houses, which quickly spread through Europe, but the lower classes stood in town squares and watched groups of traveling players. These troupes improvised the most popular theatre of the era – the commedia dell’arte. This Italian term means plays (the word commedia included plays serious or light) by artists, performances given by professionals. It’s contrasted with the commedia d’erudita (plays by intellectuals – the learned drama, done for and by academies, courts, rich families. Scholars are divided (aren’t they always?) on the origins of this tremendously popular and long-lived form, but commedia’s “roots” come most probably from the tradition of traveling players doing whatever it took to sing for their suppers. Commedia’s characteristics are easily described: it is improvised, highly physical, it features low comedy, and makes extensive use My role model of stock characters. They are “stock” in that there are three major groups repeated over and over in every commedia piece: young lovers, older, blocking characters, and servants; stock also in that they were not often complex, but exhibited a single, clearly recognizable trait that the audience could “get” and laugh at. Notice the resemblance? The written parts of commedias were the scenarios, or soggetti -- paragraphs of basic plot lines tacked up backstage. The actors would read these, and because they always had pretty much the same function from soggetto to soggetto, they’d know what they had to do for a given performance. Seven hundred soggetti survive, many collected by Flaminio Scala, a commedia performer from the I Confidenti troupe. To help them move from point to point in the soggetto, the actors made regular use of concetti and lazzi. Concetti were stock speeches, lazzi were stock physical bits. Each actor had at his or her disposale lazzi and concetti carefully honed through practice. Lazzi So if the soggetto read, “Capitano enters, makes his ego concetto, then hears a noise and does the sword lazzi,” the actor who always played that braggart soldier entered, talked on and on about his amazing strength and courage eclipsed only by his good looks – then he’d suddenly hear a noise and immediately he’d cringe and race around the stage trying to draw his sword, getting it and himself tangled in his cape, until the sword sticks pathetically out between his legs as he cowers in fear. Another commedia term, zanni, is a generic name for clowns, and usually refers to comic servants. Troupes of the commedia dell’arte were found as early as 1570 and they remained popular for nearly 200 years, although by the 18th century they’d softened and sentimentalized their original rough and sexy bits. These troupes traveled through Europe, even up into England, and some of them became famous. I Confidenti I already mentioned, known largely through the popularity and the saved soggetti of Flaminio Scala. I Fideli was another well-known group, but the most famous was unquestionably I Gelosi! The troupe was headed by a married couple, Isabella and Francesco Andreini. He started out as a young lover, but moved later in his career into Capitano roles. She was the most renowned Innamorata of her day, beloved everywhere the troupe went. She was well educated and wrote poetry as well, and even tried her hand at crafting soggetti. She died young and it is said that her funeral was huge, attracting nobles as well as common folk. Here’s a brief look at the names and descriptions of several of these stock characters. The innamorati were the male and female lovers, and were usually the only commedia characters who played unmasked. Next a few blocking characters: Pantalone, a merchant (frequently from Venice) with a large hooked nose mask, a black coat and red pantaloons – the father of one of the lovers, often, or a suitor to one of the young women – unsuccessful, of course. His companion was Dottore, perhaps the father of the other lover. Either a scholar from Bologna, or a man with some knowledge of medicine, Dottore dressed in black academic robe and usually babbled incoherently in pigeon-Latin, or made grotesque diagnoses and treatments of patients. Capitano, sometimes called Scaramuccia, Rinocerente, or Spavento da Vall’Inferno --was the Braggart Soldier Plautus had created, who usually turns out to be a hopeless, cringing coward. Capitano has survived, as have many other of the characters, through the ages: “Have I not in my time heard lions roar?” Petruchio in The Taming of the Shrew is a variation on the braggart soldier “I, Miles Gloriosus, I slaughterer of thousands,” Stephen Sondheim’s braggart in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, is taken right out of ancient Roman comedy, one of the most probable sources for commedia. The servants were the most varied of the characters. The favorite was Arlecchino, or Harlequin. He was usually the faithful servant of one of the male lovers, and was very clever and resourceful at making sure his young master got what he wanted, which was usually the innamorata. He wore a dog-like mask, and a bright, multicolored suit of diamond patches. Columbina, sometimes Corallina, was the young female lover’s servant --feisty and clever, she was often the object of Harlequin’s hopeless affection. She is also the only character other than the innamorati who usually played unmasked. Pulcinella was from Naples, a mixture of foolishness and shrewdness. He wore a hooked nose, a humpback, dressed in white and sported a long pointed cap, more mean-spirited and nasty than Arlecchino. Like Pulcinella, Scapino and Brighella were servants who were heavy on tricks, and these guys could get very nasty at times! Commedia stages were very similar to the booth or trestle stages of the Medieval era, but became more elaborate in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. The players traveled constantly and played outside more often than in, but on many occasions might be invited to play in the house of a rich person. Most importantly, commedia remained popular for two centuries, much longer than most theatrical genres, and remains with us in many famous plays. Its stock characters are alive and well today, at times in the theatre, but the form is most at home in TV sitcoms. The Young Vic adapted this play from commedia sketches, and it proved very popular back in the 1970s You can see Commedia daily in Copenhagen, at Tivoli Gardens - alum Julie Starr sent me this photo A musical based on the form - it moved to Lincoln Center, but never got to Broadway Next time...Elizabethan theatre!
I didn’t have time to be anyone’s muse… I was too busy rebelling against my family and learning to be an artist. ~ Leonora Carrington She did not want to be a debutante. She did not
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I've had the privilege of teaching a wide range of age groups. I had two classes as my time as a teaching assistant beforehand, 4-6 year olds and 7-12 year olds, and I loved them all so much, they were such a lively bunch and always made my week so entertaining. It was usually my job to warm up my
Listen.... When one has nothing left make ceremonies out of the air and breathe upon them. Week 46. Four more weeks! It may actually end up being closer to six. I ended up scrapping two or three of the earlier shoots and I am 99% sure I am going to leave those buried for eternity. I dont know if this is a good or bad thing but it is what I want to do. I made the house out of the stuff "For Sale" signs are made out of. It is this extremely cheap plastic sheeting that I found when looking for materials one night. Its probably 1/4 of the price of wood so hellllllll yeah. I used the frame of the house in this picture and just built onto it. It took around three nights? All I know is I watched all of Band of Brothers and it was totally worth it. The mini-series is/was incredible. When shooting this I suspended the house from the roof of the barn using ratchet straps. They are a billion times easier to use then rope because you can make micro-adjustments to the height without untying anything. Seriously recommend getting some! Then I put a flash in the house and had a friend hold a flash across from my other friend sitting down and yeah! On a side note: I am taking a road trip to Denver, CO and Lander, WY next week so hopefully I find some awesome locations!
Blood Wedding - Frederico Garcia Lorca Photo: Chris Harris University of Illinois at Chicago - October 1977 Director: Chet Long Scene Designer: Chris Harris Costume Designer: Nanalee Raphael Lighting Designer: Chris Harris Actors: Company
Westchester Broadway Theatre presents A Standing Ovation Studio Production, OLIVER!, with Book, Music & Lyrics by Lionel Bart, direction by John Fanelli, choreographed by Carrie Silvernail, with musical direction by Kurt Kelley. The show opened last night, August 15 and runs through September 8, 2013. BroadwayWorld has a first look at the cast in action below!
The iconic open-air Théâtre de Verdure, nestled within the picturesque landscape of Montreal's La Fontaine Park, has undergone a stunning transformation at
Feed me all your cheap felt costumes and terrible puppetheads, Seymour!
Should you go see u201cShe Kills Monstersu201d by the Naples Players at the Sugden Community Theatre? Hell if I know. In all my decades of reviewing shows, Iu2019ve rarely felt as uncertain and as stymied by a play.echo adrotate_group(4); Did I like it? Yes. Did I dislike it? Yes. Would I recommend you go see it? That depends. If you […]
Jean-Baptiste Thierrée and Victoria Chaplin’s Le Cirque Invisible is now showing at Queen Elizabeth Hall. Here are some photos of their delightful antics from the opening night. The show only runs until 25 August – book your tickets now! www.southbankcentre.co.uk/lecirque Jean-Baptiste Thierrée and Victoria Chaplin’s Le Cirque Invisible is now showing at Queen Elizabeth Hall. Here are some photos of their delightful antics from the opening night. The show only runs until 25 August – book your tickets now! www.southbankcentre.co.uk/lecirque
Rosemary Waugh reviews The Crucible at Bristol Old Vic
Fiddler on the Roof Written by Joseph Stein (book), Jerry Bock (music) and Sheldon Harnick (lyrics) Directed by Jim Corti at Paramount Theatre, Aurora (map) thru March 24 | tickets: $35-$47 | more info Check for half-price ti
“Nothing happens, nobody comes, nobody goes, it’s awful.” - Samuel Beckett : Waiting for Godot (34) Waiting for Godot, a paragon of existe...
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Austria, Bregenz, lake stage festival theatre, summer festival 2011, “André Chénier”, opera by Umberto Giordano during the French revolution. Lake Constance as bath tub, director Keith Warner & set designer David Fielding have chosen “The Death of Marat”, an iconic painting by the revolutionary artist Jacques-Louis David, as the symbol & inspiration for their staging of “André Chénier”. It is the first time that a historical painting has served as the basis for a Bregenz stage set, which towers 24 metres high above Lake Constance. Set against the background of the French Revolution, the opera “André Chénier”, which premiered at “La Scala Milan” in 1896, is a historical drama of sharp perceptivity & a human tragedy of devastating intensity; appealing both as a passionate love story & as a historical thriller. ...Danke, Xièxie 谢谢, Thanks, Gracias, Merci, Grazie, Obrigado, Arigatô, Dhanyavad, Chokrane to you for over 5,7 million visits in my photostream with countless motivating comments