Nineteenth Century Actor-readers in AmericaUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 1954 - 292 стор. |
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Сторінка 1
Lilly May Shaw. I. INTRODUCTION Theatre history indicates that many actors and ... America , ( 2 ) To review ( a ) the circumstances leading to the appearances ... Stage , New York : Columbia University Press , 1927 , Volumes II - XV ...
Lilly May Shaw. I. INTRODUCTION Theatre history indicates that many actors and ... America , ( 2 ) To review ( a ) the circumstances leading to the appearances ... Stage , New York : Columbia University Press , 1927 , Volumes II - XV ...
Сторінка 2
... stage uses properties and is assisted by others in his performances , the reader is alone . He is giving a solo performance . In dealing with the nineteenth century in America we cannot overlook the word elocution . Although an outdated ...
... stage uses properties and is assisted by others in his performances , the reader is alone . He is giving a solo performance . In dealing with the nineteenth century in America we cannot overlook the word elocution . Although an outdated ...
Сторінка 4
... America Esther Cloudman Dunn writes that in New York in 1791 a gentleman " lately arrived from England " gave readings from Othello and Hamlet . Two years later an actress " of the Theatre Royal in London and Dublin " presented ...
... America Esther Cloudman Dunn writes that in New York in 1791 a gentleman " lately arrived from England " gave readings from Othello and Hamlet . Two years later an actress " of the Theatre Royal in London and Dublin " presented ...
Сторінка 9
... theatre , which is , in fact , the only public amusement of this triste little town ; but they seem to care little about it , either from economy or distaste , it is very poorly attended . Ladies are rarely seen there , and by far the ...
... theatre , which is , in fact , the only public amusement of this triste little town ; but they seem to care little about it , either from economy or distaste , it is very poorly attended . Ladies are rarely seen there , and by far the ...
Сторінка 10
... theatre could not be supported for more than a few weeks at a time . She described the only place of amusement that ... stage , was hailed by many of the audience as an excellent joke ... The spitting was incessant ; and not one in ten ...
... theatre could not be supported for more than a few weeks at a time . She described the only place of amusement that ... stage , was hailed by many of the audience as an excellent joke ... The spitting was incessant ; and not one in ten ...
Загальні терміни та фрази
acting actor actor-reader Actor's Notebook actress Alfred Lord Tennyson American stage amusement Anna Cora Mowatt appearances Art of Elocution art of reading audience beautiful became began Best Loved Poems Boston career character Charlotte Cushman Company debut Dickens Edwin Forrest elocutionary elocutionists emotional England Epes Sargent expression Fanny Kemble feeling felt Forrest's reading Frances Anne Frances Anne Kemble gave George Vandenhoff give Hamlet humorous intellectual interest James Murdoch John Vandenhoff Kemble's Lady Pollock literary Macbeth Macready's reading material Miss Clarendon Miss Cushman's never night nineteenth century Odell Othello Park Theatre Patriotism in Poetry performances Philadelphia play Poetry and Prose poets popularity present profession programs public reading read in public reader's platform readers Romeo and Juliet says scene seemed selections Shakespeare Sister Helen Sleeping Sentinel soldier spoken language star Stebbins success system of elocution theatrical tone tour Trollope verse voice William Charles Macready words York Herald
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Сторінка 35 - Macready had a voice powerful, extensive in compass, capable of delicate modulation in quiet passages (though with a tendency to scream in violent passages), and having tones that thrilled and tones that stirred tears. His declamation was mannered and unmusical; yet his intelligence always made him follow the winding meanings through the involutions of the verse, and never allowed you to feel, as you feel in the declamation of Charles Kean and many other actors, that he was speaking words which he...