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Brecht on Performance: Messingkauf and Modelbooks [Pehme köide]

Edited by (St Hugh's College, Oxford University, UK), Translated by (St Hugh's College, Oxford University, UK), Edited by (University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA), Translated by , Edited by (University of Nottingham, UK), Translated by , Translated by , Translated by (University of Nottingham, UK),
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 312 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 216x138x24 mm, kaal: 380 g, 50 bw illus
  • Sari: Performance Books
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Nov-2014
  • Kirjastus: Methuen Drama
  • ISBN-10: 1408154552
  • ISBN-13: 9781408154557
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 312 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 216x138x24 mm, kaal: 380 g, 50 bw illus
  • Sari: Performance Books
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Nov-2014
  • Kirjastus: Methuen Drama
  • ISBN-10: 1408154552
  • ISBN-13: 9781408154557
Teised raamatud teemal:

Brecht on Performance: Messingkauf and Modelbooks presents a selection of Brecht's principal writings for directors and theatre practitioners, and is suitable for acting schools, directors, actors, students and teachers of Theatre Studies. Through these texts Brecht provides a general practical approach to acting and to realising texts for the stage that crystallises and makes concrete many of the more theoretical aspects of his other writing.

The volume is in two parts. The first features an entirely new commentated edition of Brecht's dialogues and essays about the practice of theatre, known as theMessingkauf, or Buying Brass, including the 'Practice Pieces' for actors (rehearsal scenes for classics by Shakespeare and Schiller). The second contains rehearsal and production records from Brecht's work on productions of Life of Galileo,Antigone, Mother Courage and others.

Edited by an international team of Brecht scholars and including an essay by director and teacher Di Trevis examining the practical application of these texts for theatres and actors today,Brecht on Performance is a wonderfully rich resource. The text is illustrated with over 30 photographs from theModelbooks.

Arvustused

Brecht on Performance is a companion volume and has two parts. The first is an overhaul of what Willett previously called the Messingkauf Dialogues. Buying Brass the more literal translation of Messingkauf assembles more of the fragmentary material and includes Brechts Practice Pieces for Actors, revealing that the dialogues were only one, albeit major, element in the overall project. The editing of the fragments is exemplary The second part includes writings and images from three of Brechts modelbooks, as well as essays from the Berliner Ensembles documentation Theatre Work and the Katzgraben Notes. Taken together, the extracts presented here form a rich collection that includes significant work from when Brecht returned to theatre-making in 1948. These two volumes represent an excellent extension of Brechts writings in English. The editors draw on contemporary scholarship, apply high editorial standards, and offer a readability that opens up Brechts theories and practices for a new generation. -- David Barnett * New Theatre Quarterly * An excellent complement to Brecht in Practice. These theoretical essays concern the practice of theatre (known as Messingkauf, or buying brass) and explore the way actors should interpret and perform a text. -- Nathaniel Nesmith * American Theatre * Combined with Brecht in Practice, [ Brecht on Performance] makes a compelling contribution to the anglophone understanding of Brecht and may indeed breathe new life into how we do theatre in the twenty-first century. -- Michael Wood, University of Edinburgh, UK * Modern Language Review * Brecht in Performance is the ideal and long-awaited companion to the much loved, but now greatly improved Brecht on Theatre. Essential reading for students, theatre practitioners and anyone interested in this hugely important figure. -- Stephen Unwin This is a book at least as essential as Brecht on Theatre, not least because it restores to print a carefully reconstructed version of Brechts major theoretical work The Messingkauf Dialogues (first released in English by Willett in 1965), with many variant texts absent from the first publication of that treatise. It is unnecessary to qualify my praise for the other major element of Brecht on Performance, and that is a fresh, lushly illustrated translation of three of Brechts modelbooks, created for the Berliner Ensemble during the brief period that Brecht was at its helm. * Brecht on Performance * Brecht on Performance is a vital aid to English speakers in understanding Brecht as a theatre practitioner as well as what constitutes Brechtian performance. For the first time, a full edition of the unfinished Messingkauf translated as Buying Brass is available in English. [ This book] will allow Anglophone scholars and performance practitioners to revisit Brechts influence as a writer, theoretician, and theatre maker specifically, but also more generally the relationship between political thought and aesthetics, and between the theory and the practice of making art. * TDR: The Drama Review *

Muu info

Brecht on Performance: Messingkauf and Modelbooks presents a selection of Brecht's principal writings for directors and theatre practitioners, including an entirely new commentated edition of Brechts dialogues and essays about the practice of theatre, known as the Messingkauf, or Buying Brass, as well as rehearsal and production records from Brecht's work on productions of Life of Galileo, Antigone, Mother Courage and others.
Picture Credits ix
General Introduction x
Part One Messingkauf, or Buying Brass
Introduction 1(12)
Preamble
11(2)
The First Night
(i) Setting the Scene
13(16)
(ii) Naturalism, Realism, Empathy
29(6)
(iii) Tragedy; Learning, Science, Marxism
35(8)
The Second Night
(i) Intoxication, Empathy, V-effect
43(4)
(ii) Acting, Performance
47(3)
(iii) Science, Social Class, Learning
50(5)
(iv) Elizabethan Theatre, Shakespeare
55(4)
(v) The Augsburger, Piscator
59(4)
The Third Night
(i) The Fourth Wall, Emotion; V-effect, Acting
63(6)
(ii) The Augsburger, Piscator, Weigel
69(6)
(iii) Social Science and Art
75(3)
(iv) `Extreme Situations'
78(3)
Fourth Night
(i) The Nature of Art
81(3)
(ii) Emotion, Critique, Representation
84(4)
(iii) The Augsburger
88(1)
(iv) Shakespeare
89(4)
(v) Finale
93(4)
Miscellaneous Texts
(i) Illusionism, Realism, Naturalism; Social Function of Theatre; Empathy
97(5)
(ii) Acting
102(5)
(iii) Thaeter, Piscator, Neher
107(12)
Plans and Appendices
(i) Plans
119(2)
(ii) Appendices
121(6)
Practice Pieces for Actors
(i) Parallel Scenes
127(8)
The Murder in the Porter's Lodge (Parallel Scene to Shakespeare's Macbeth, Act 2, Scene 2)
127(3)
The Fishwives' Quarrel (Parallel to Schiller's Maria Stuart, Act 3)
130(5)
(ii) Intercalary Scenes
135(6)
Ferry Scene (To be played between Scenes 3 and 4, Act 4 of Shakespeare's Hamlet)
135(2)
The Servants (To be played between Scenes 1 and 2, Act 2 of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet)
137(4)
(iii) Circular Poems
141(2)
Part Two Modelbooks
Introduction
143(8)
On Life of Galileo (1947-8) from Constructing a Role: Laughton's Galileo
151(12)
Foreword
153(6)
A Sequence from Scene 1: Rotation of the Earth and Rotation of the Brain
159(2)
Background to the Performance
161(2)
On The Antigone of Sophocles (1947-8) from Antigone Model 1948
163(18)
Foreword
165(6)
Ruth Berlau's Prefatory Note
171(1)
Prelude and Bridge to Scene 1
172(8)
Neher's Second Design for the Antigone Stage
180(1)
On Mother Courage and Her Children (1949-51) from Courage Model 1949
181(42)
Opening Remarks
183(5)
Notes and Scene-Photos for the Prologue, Scenes 1 and 2
188(19)
Details from Scene 3
207(7)
Variations in Berlin and Munich
214(4)
Concluding Texts from the Model: Scene 12
218(5)
From Theatre Work (1952)
223(26)
Some Remarks on My Discipline
225(1)
Bertolt Brecht's Stage Direction
226(4)
Phases of a Stage Direction
230(2)
Five Notes on Acting
232(2)
The Berliner Ensemble Models
234(2)
Theatre Photography
236(2)
Does Use of the Model Restrict Artistic Freedom?
238(4)
How Erich Engel Uses the Model
242(1)
How the Director Brecht Uses His Own Model
243(1)
From the Correspondence of the Berliner Ensemble about the Model
244(2)
Creative Evaluation of Models
246(3)
From the Katzgraben Notes 1953
249(28)
Epic Theatre
251(1)
Rehearsal Methods
252(1)
Scenery
253(1)
Crises and Conflicts
254(1)
Politics in the Theatre
255(1)
III, 2 Constructing a Hero
256(1)
Is Katzgraben a Proselytizing Play?
257(1)
The Verse Form
258(1)
Verfremdung
258(3)
II, 3 Revelation and Justification
261(1)
Empathy
261(2)
The New Farmer, the Medium Farmer, the Big Farmer
263(1)
What Are Our Actors Actually Doing?
264(3)
The Positive Hero
267(1)
Second Dress Rehearsal
268(1)
Criticism of Elli and Criticism of Elli 2
269(1)
New Content -- New Form
270(7)
`Acting is Not Theoretical'
277(10)
Di Trevis
Select Bibliography 287(2)
Index 289
Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956) is acknowledged as one of the great dramatists whose plays, work with the Berliner Ensemble and writing have had a considerable influence on the theatre. His landmark plays include The Threepenny Opera and, while exiled from Germany and living in the USA, such masterpieces as The Life of Galileo, Mother Courage and The Caucasian Chalk Circle.