Off-centre stages - Jinnie Schiele

9781902806426

Oops!

Unfortunately it looks like someone took the last one.

Sign up to the musicMagpieStore to be the first to hear about the latest offers, competitions and product information!

Sign up now
Title
Off-centre stages - fringe theatre at the Open Space and the Round House, 1968-1983
Author
Jinnie Schiele
format
Paperback / softback
Publisher
University of Hertfordshire Press
Language
English
UK Publication Date
20040828

English Fringe theatre of the 1960s and 1970s can be defined as being both geographically off-centre and at the edges of theatrical and political convention. In general, fringe theatre has leftwing instincts and tends towards the avant-garde and the offbeat, supporting the marginalised or the revolutionary. This book relates the histories of two important London fringe theatres: the Round House, architecturally unique, vast but difficult to use as a space for performance, and the Open Space, intense, flexible, but so tiny that it had its own inherent problems.;Before 1960 the notion that theatre might happen in any space where people could gather had hardly been explored. Working with Peter Brook, the maverick American playwright/director Charles Marowitz presented the RSC's Theatre of Cruelty season in 1962 and kickstarted the alternative theatre movement, later to be called "the fringe". Marowitz went on to found the Open Space, with the actress and producer Thelma Holt, in the basement of a disused old people's home in Tottenham Court Road. By contrast, the Round House, originally developed as a theatre and arts centre by the political playwright Arnold Wesker, was a disused Victorian engine shed. Thelma Holt played an important role at the Round House too, moving on there when her working relationship with Marowitz ended.;From a detailed appraisal of these two pioneering theatres arise crucial questions about performance space and its influence on the kind of productions that could be successfully presented. And what productions they were: exciting, challenging, sometimes offensive (sometimes deliberately so), this was theatre at its most innovative and dangerous. Here, too, are extraordinary personalities with the flair and vision to create something truly new. This is an important history of a key period in British theatre.

We are Rated Excellent on Trustpilot
Here's what you say about us...
Type
BOOK
Keyword Index
Experimental theater - Great Britain.
Country of Publication
England
Number of Pages
240

FREE Delivery on all Orders!