Theatre, Culture and Society: Essays, Addresses and LecturesRyburn Pub., Keele University Press, 1994 - 311 sider A book about Sir Henry Irving. |
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Side 32
... spirit , " says Diderot , " made actors slip on the sock or the buskin ; ” and to the libertine spirit he frankly confesses when speaking of his own early desire to enter the theatrical profession . " The stage is a resource , never a ...
... spirit , " says Diderot , " made actors slip on the sock or the buskin ; ” and to the libertine spirit he frankly confesses when speaking of his own early desire to enter the theatrical profession . " The stage is a resource , never a ...
Side 238
... spirit as well as the suits and trappings of another , he is conscious of an intellectual transmigration not wholly contemptible . When I am about to resume a part which I have not played for some time , I often sit in my dressing ...
... spirit as well as the suits and trappings of another , he is conscious of an intellectual transmigration not wholly contemptible . When I am about to resume a part which I have not played for some time , I often sit in my dressing ...
Side 298
... spirit of our dramatic ideals . " This was sometime a paradox , but now the time gives it proof . ” Thousands who flock to - day to see a Shakespeare representation , which is the product of much reverent study of the poet , are not ...
... spirit of our dramatic ideals . " This was sometime a paradox , but now the time gives it proof . ” Thousands who flock to - day to see a Shakespeare representation , which is the product of much reverent study of the poet , are not ...
Indhold
The Value of Individuality | 10 |
THEATRE | 107 |
The American Audience | 116 |
Copyright | |
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actor actor's art actress admirable amongst amusement art of acting artist audience Bacon beauty Ben Jonson Betterton Bram Stoker calling century character Charles Kean Cheers Coquelin criticism drama dramatic art dramatist Edmund Kean effort Ellen Terry emotion English evil expression eyes feel Frank Marshall Garrick genius gentlemen give Goethe greatest Hamlet heart Henry Irving honour human idea imagination inspiration intellectual interest interpretation Irving's J. L. Toole King labour Laurence Irving literary lives London Lord Lyceum Macbeth Macready manager means memory Mephistopheles Merchant of Venice mind Molière moral municipal murder nature never noble Ophelia Othello painting passion performance perhaps play players playgoers pleasure poet poetry popular profession scene sensibility Shakespeare Shylock society speak speech spirit stage success suggestion sympathy taste theatre theatrical things thought to-day Victorian words write