'Other' Spanish Theatres: Erasure and Inscription on the Twentieth-Century Spanish Stage

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title 'Other' Spanish Theatres: Erasure and Inscription on the Twentieth-Century Spanish Stage
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Maria M. Delgado
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:352
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 156
Category/GenreDrama
ISBN/Barcode 9780719059766
ClassificationsDewey:792.09460904
Audience
Undergraduate
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Professional & Vocational

Publishing Details

Publisher Manchester University Press
Imprint Manchester University Press
Publication Date 21 August 2003
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

This title challenges established opinions on modern Iberian theatre in considering the roles of contrasting figures and companies who have impacted upon both the practice and the perception of Spanish and European stages. In questioning the primacy of the dramatist, this pioneering study offers a new interpretation of a nation's theatrical culture that has been viewed primarily through the prisms of a select number of playwrights. Accordingly many of the conclusions reached are new ones, and the case for acknowledging the wide influence of Spanish practitioners on theatre in Europe and the Americas is made in persuasive terms. Through a bold documentation and interrogation of key productions and their reception both at home and abroad, this work focuses on the doing of performance, asking provocative questions around how performances are tested against the texts that remain. In a broad and detailed study Delgado selects six case studies which map out alternative readings of a nation's theatrical innovation through the 20th century. The first , Margarita Xirgu (1888-1969), was both muse and mentor to Garcia Lorca; actress, director, pedagogue and activist, she has languished in the shadow of her more famous European contemporaries, Eleanora Duse and Sarah Bernhardt. The second, Enrique Rambal (1889-1956), was an ambitious theatrical polymath and miracle-worker, much admired by Orson Welles, whose influence is still being calibrated. The third, tragedienne Maria Casares (1922-96) feted by Gordon Craig, Genet, Camus, Cocteau, and Koltes, is re-appropriated from the French theatre in which she is habitually viewed through the vectors of exile. The fourth, Nuria Espert (b.1935), recognised as the most celebrated Iberian actress of the second half of the century, by contrast, remained in Spain, reawakening international interest in Spanish theatre through her extraordinary collaborations with Victor Garc a and Jorge Lavelli. Espert's work was to inspire future generations of practitioners, including the book"s fifth case study Lluis Pasqual (b.1 951), the Catalan co-founder of Barcelona"s Teatre Lliure who was to consolidate the place of "director's theatre" within Spain while bringing an international outlook to the Spanish stage. Barcelona is also the backdrop for the final chapter's protagonists, La Cubana, the company whose trajectory from street theatre to mainstream commercial success offers an insight into the sparkling dynamics of a vibrant post-Franco Catalan performance tradition.

Author Biography

Maria M. Delgado is Reader in Drama and Theatre Arts at Queen Mary, University of London -- .

Reviews

"This book is really important: Anyone who is interested in theatre should have a knowledge of what's happening in Spain, because their theatre is currently dynamic, innovative and exciting. and Maria Delgado's "'Other' Spanish Theatres" is as good an account as it is possible to get."--Brian McMaster, Director of the Edinburgh International Festival ""'Other' Spanish Theatres" is a must for specialists in the modern Spanish stage. However, its range--dealing with cinema, opera and cultural and sexual politics--makes it a fascinating read for anyone interested in Spanish culture and for those readers whose interest in theatre and performance stretches beyond the borders of Spain."--David George, University of Wales, author of "The Theatre in Madrid and Barcelona: 1892-1936""This book is really important: Anyone who is interested in theatre should have a knowledge of what's happening in Spain, because their theatre is currently dynamic, innovative and exciting. and Maria Delgado's 'Other' Spanish theatres is as good an account as it is possible to get."--Brian McMaster, Director of the Edinburgh International Festival ''Other' Spanish Theatres is a must for specialists in the modern Spanish stage. However, its range--dealing with cinema, opera and cultural and sexual politics--make it a fascinating read for anyone interested in Spanish culture and for those readers whose interest in theatre and performance stretches beyond the borders of Spain."--David George, University of Wales, author of The Theatre in Madrid and Barcelona: 1892-1936