Good Nights Out: A History of Popular British Theatre Since the Second World War
Autor Aleks Sierzen Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 ian 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350200913
ISBN-10: 1350200913
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Methuen Drama
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350200913
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Methuen Drama
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Responds to increasing interest in the popular and commercially successful, especially as the arts have had to defend their role within British society
Notă biografică
Aleks Sierz FRSA is a well-known author, broadcaster, journalist and theatre critic whose books include In-Yer-Face Theatre (2001), Rewriting the Nation (Methuen Drama, 2011) and Modern British Playwriting: The 1990s (Methuen Drama, 2012).
Cuprins
Acknowledgements A Note on Sources Introduction Chapter One War: Comic, Tragic and Nostalgic While the Sun Shines (1943) Worm's Eye View (1945) Seagulls Over Sorrento (1950) Reluctant Heroes (1950) War Horse (2007) Chapter Two Crime: Classical, Farcical and Postmodern The Mousetrap (1952) Simple Spymen (1958) Sleuth (1970) The Business of Murder (1981) Chapter Three Sex: Comic, Episodic and Ironic There's a Girl in My Soup (1966) Pyjama Tops (1969) Oh! Calcutta! (1969) No Sex, Please - We're British (1971) Chapter Four Family: Traditional, Redemptive and Fractured 'Sailor, Beware!' (1955) Spring and Port Wine (1965) The Man Most Likely To (1968) The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (2012) Chapter Five Class: Musical, Parodic and Political Charlie Girl (1965) Daisy Pulls It Off (1983) Blood Brothers (1983) Billy Elliot the Musical (2005) Chapter Six History: Gothic, Edwardian and Pastiche The Phantom of the Opera (1986) The Woman in Black (1987) The 39 Steps (2006) One Man, Two Guvnors (2011) Chapter Seven Fantasy: Whimsy, Camp and Sci-fi Salad Days (1954) The Rocky Horror Show (1973) Return to the Forbidden Planet (1989) Matilda the Musical (2010) Conclusion - Dream Life of the British People Appendix 1: List of new shows from 1940 until the end of 2015 with more than 1,000 performances (by run length) Appendix 2: List of new shows from 1940 until the end of 2015 with more than 1,000 performances (by date) Notes Bibliography Index
Recenzii
The book is doing important work in bringing these plays and productions back into view as significant contributions to an expanded notion of what a history of British theatre might look like at one end of the commercial subsidized spectrum . Works as an introductory text that goes some way to changing the aperture on British commercial theatre.
In a terrific new book, Good Nights Out, the critic Aleks Sierz flies the flag for a strand of work he feels has been consistently undervalued despite - or rather because of - its box office success.
This is that rare thing: an absolutely necessary theatre book. Aleks Sierz examines popular theatre seriously but not solemnly, sets it in its historical context and, above all, understands its social significance. An indispensable addition to the bookshelf.
A well-researched, worthwhile and enjoyable read.
[Sierz's] discussion throughout the book is clear and lively . A hugely enjoyable read, one that never talks down to the reader, but which has depth and knowledge to provide an informative context for the relationship between mega-hits and audience tastes.
The great British public just wants to have fun, to enjoy a good night out,' declares Sierz (visiting professor, Rose Bruford College, London, UK) in his fascinating and important study of British popular theater between 1940 and 2015. Subverting the common perception of British theater as a locus for erudite, serious drama in favor of theater that 'people actually want to see,' Sierz focuses on 'mega-hits'-'superlatively successful' shows with more than 1,000 performances that captured the popular imagination and allowed Britons to dream about who they are, how they feel, and what they might become as a society. Sierz organizes his study thematically, examining shows about matters that have preoccupied the British-war, crime, sex, family, class, history, and fantasy-and looking at how they evolved on stage over 75 years. He cites significant crossover shows, such as War Horse and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, which were both mega-hits and critically acclaimed works of art and profiles others heretofore absent from published histories--for example, Worm's Eye View, Pyjama Tops, and Daisy Pulls It Off. His analysis of Agatha Christie's The Mousetrap, which opened in 1952 and is still running (26,000-plus performances), is revelatory. Excellent appendixes and notes. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers.
Aleks Sierz has written a fascinating and highly entertaining book about the shows that packed them in. He brings back to life entire genres that appealed to vast numbers of people but have been more or less forgotten by theatre historians. He asks why these blockbuster successes spoke so vividly to their audiences, and what they say about the world that formed them. It's a book for anyone who has ever worried that they're enjoying themselves too much in the theatre, as well as for those who want to know how central the theatre has been in the formation of popular taste.
An absolute pleasure to read ... I cannot recommend this book enough. I would urge everyone who has the slightest interest in Britain's theatrical history to purchase this book and luxuriate in the wealth of talent, some of which has been long forgotten, that has graced the stages of the West End from the 1940s up to 2015.
Sierz performs a deft, witty telling . [his] great strength . is to take the pulse of British dreaming as manifested in mega-hits.
In a terrific new book, Good Nights Out, the critic Aleks Sierz flies the flag for a strand of work he feels has been consistently undervalued despite - or rather because of - its box office success.
This is that rare thing: an absolutely necessary theatre book. Aleks Sierz examines popular theatre seriously but not solemnly, sets it in its historical context and, above all, understands its social significance. An indispensable addition to the bookshelf.
A well-researched, worthwhile and enjoyable read.
[Sierz's] discussion throughout the book is clear and lively . A hugely enjoyable read, one that never talks down to the reader, but which has depth and knowledge to provide an informative context for the relationship between mega-hits and audience tastes.
The great British public just wants to have fun, to enjoy a good night out,' declares Sierz (visiting professor, Rose Bruford College, London, UK) in his fascinating and important study of British popular theater between 1940 and 2015. Subverting the common perception of British theater as a locus for erudite, serious drama in favor of theater that 'people actually want to see,' Sierz focuses on 'mega-hits'-'superlatively successful' shows with more than 1,000 performances that captured the popular imagination and allowed Britons to dream about who they are, how they feel, and what they might become as a society. Sierz organizes his study thematically, examining shows about matters that have preoccupied the British-war, crime, sex, family, class, history, and fantasy-and looking at how they evolved on stage over 75 years. He cites significant crossover shows, such as War Horse and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, which were both mega-hits and critically acclaimed works of art and profiles others heretofore absent from published histories--for example, Worm's Eye View, Pyjama Tops, and Daisy Pulls It Off. His analysis of Agatha Christie's The Mousetrap, which opened in 1952 and is still running (26,000-plus performances), is revelatory. Excellent appendixes and notes. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers.
Aleks Sierz has written a fascinating and highly entertaining book about the shows that packed them in. He brings back to life entire genres that appealed to vast numbers of people but have been more or less forgotten by theatre historians. He asks why these blockbuster successes spoke so vividly to their audiences, and what they say about the world that formed them. It's a book for anyone who has ever worried that they're enjoying themselves too much in the theatre, as well as for those who want to know how central the theatre has been in the formation of popular taste.
An absolute pleasure to read ... I cannot recommend this book enough. I would urge everyone who has the slightest interest in Britain's theatrical history to purchase this book and luxuriate in the wealth of talent, some of which has been long forgotten, that has graced the stages of the West End from the 1940s up to 2015.
Sierz performs a deft, witty telling . [his] great strength . is to take the pulse of British dreaming as manifested in mega-hits.