Britain’s Sir Peter Hall is considered by many the most important director in his generation. As the artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, the National Theatre and the Old Vic, he has directed the greatest actors of our time in numerous seminal interpretations of Shakespeare and the Classics.
In his latest work, Sir Peter Hall ranges over the extraordinary history of world drama to find the common experiences that are able to create the theatrical form. This series of 4 lectures were delivered at Trinity College in Cambridge as part of the famed Clark lectures which began in the nineteenth century.
The argument of the lectures is that theatre is only created when emotions are contained by a form. That very form paradoxically gives freedom of expression. Thus the Greek mask enables the actor to express hysteria. The mask, whether it may be the actual physical mask on the face, or the form of the drama itself, makes expression possible. Shakespeare’s verse is his mask. Mozart’s sonata is his. And Beckett and Pinter (by the metaphors of their plays) have brought poetry back to the theatre. Without form there can be no freedom.
Peter Hall is currently in Denver, Colorado, in rehearsals for the world premiere production of Tantalus, a 15 hour, 10 play cycle based on Greek tragedy to open at the Denver Center Theatre in October 2000.
Exposed by the Mask: Form and Language in Drama (Playwrights Canada Press)
📄 Viewing lite version
Full site ›
Book Details
Author(s)Peter Hall
PublisherTheatre Communications Group
ISBN / ASIN1559361905
ISBN-139781559361903
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank941,978
CategoryPerforming Arts
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description ▲
More Books in Performing Arts
Voice and the Actor
View
A Primer for Film Making: A Complete Guide to 16 Mm an…
View
Scarlett, Rhett, and a cast of thousands: The filming …
View
Respect for Acting
View
Writing Great Screenplays AFI (Writing Great Screenpla…
View
The Film Director: Updated for Today's Filmmaker, the …
View
Schirmer Encyclopedia of Film
View
Getting the Show on: The Complete Guidebook for Produc…
View
How to Shoot a Feature Film for Under $10,000 (And Not…
View