An edition of The Theatre (1931)

The theatre

New ed. rev.
The theatre
J. W. Marriott, J. W. Marriott
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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 11, 2022 | History
An edition of The Theatre (1931)

The theatre

New ed. rev.

This book about English Drama was first published in 1931 but since the world of theatre changes and evolves constantly, Marriott decided to revise and edit The Theatre so that it fits the current time. Marriott takes a look at the history of drama and theatre (he stated that the chapters about the past remained mostly unchanged from the first publication), without limiting himself to English drama. Occasionally the topics are illustrated by pictures and photographs in between the writing. It goes without saying that William Shakespeare is often mentioned and he has about 2 chapters devoted to him and his friends. Then there are 2 chapters about the dramatists of the author's time, as well as a chapter about various plays and playwrights from all over Europe.

Though it's not quite right to add this person as a second author, I would like to add that a certain Gabrielle Enthoven was credited by the publishers to have helped them with the selection of illustrations for this book.

Publish Date
Publisher
Harrap
Language
English
Pages
224

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Edition Availability
Cover of: The theatre
The theatre
1948, Harrap
in English - New ed. rev.
Cover of: The theatre.
The theatre.
1945, Harrap
in English - New ed., rev.
Cover of: The theatre
The theatre
1931, G. G. Harrap & Co., Ltd.
in English
Cover of: The theatre.
The theatre.
1931, Harrap
in English
Cover of: The theatre
The theatre
1931, Harrap
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Published in
London

Classifications

Library of Congress
PN2581 .M36 1948

The Physical Object

Pagination
224 p.
Number of pages
224

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL38619067M
OCLC/WorldCat
8722758

Source records

marc_uic MARC record

Excerpts

When a man says that he never goes to a theatre because real life is full of drama he is talking nonesense. The events of real life may be dramatic, but they lack that sense of form which is necessary for our artistic satisfaction. It is thrilling to see an acrobat walking a tight-rope, a fireman rescuing a child from the top of a burning building, or the Flying Squad chasing the jewel-thieves who have made off in a stolen car. The newspapers supply us with "Dramatic Discoveries" almost daily, and, in war-time especially, the B.B.C gives us vivid eyewitness accounts of deeds of superlative heroism. But none of these sensational real life stories satisfies us in the same way that a good novel or a good play does. They have no unity or continuity; they are unfinished, and have too many loose ends; they have no climax, or if there is a climax there is nothing else. G.K. Chesterton once said that life was like a dozen detective stories mixed up with a spoon.
added by Bayz2393.

Chapter 1 "Drama in Real Life", second paragraph

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July 11, 2022 Created by MARC Bot Imported from marc_uic MARC record