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Chapter 8 No.8

Word Count: 2066    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

lly known that we need review them only briefly. A typical Elizabethan play-house, like the Globe or the Blackfriars, stood roofless in the air. The stage was a projecting platform surrounded o

ke a bed or a banqueting board. Above the arras was built an upper room, which might serve as Juliet's balcony or as the speaking-place of a commandant supposed to stand upon a city's walls. No scenery was employed, except some elaborate properties that might be drawn on and off before the eyes of the spectators, like the trellised arbor in The Spanish

ed by act of Parliament, the drama dealt with stately speeches and with high astounding terms. It was played upon a platform, and had to appeal more to the ears of the audience than to their eyes. Spectacular elements it ha

tive of a moonlit evening, and the banished duke in As You Like It discoursed at length upon the pleasures of life in the forest. The stage could not be darkened in Macbeth; but the hero was made to say, "Light thickens, and

n. Jacques reined a comedy to a standstill while he discoursed at length upon the seven ages of man. Soliloquies were common, and formal dialogues prevailed. By convention, all characters, regardless of their education or station in l

f the rear wall. The costumes are elaborate, and the players frequently parade around the stage. Long speeches and set colloquies are common. Only the crudest properties are used. Two candlesticks and a small image on a table are taken to represent a temple; a man seated upon an overturned chair is supposed to be a general on a charger; an

have even struggled on the stage within the nineteenth century. The Virginius of Sheridan Knowles and the Richelieu of Bulwer-Lytton were both framed upon the Elizabethan model, and ca

zabeth Barry. To William Davenant, the manager of the Duke's Theatre, belongs the credit for a still more important innovation. During the eighteen years when public dramatic performances had been prohibited, he had secured permission now and then to produce an opera upon a private stage. For these musical entertainments he took as a model the masques, or court celebrations, which had been the most popular form of private theatricals in the days of Elizab

were now regularly roofed; and the stage was artificially lighted by lamps. The shifting of scenery demanded the use of a curtain; and i

tuality to the scene. At the same time the platform receded, and the groundlings no longer stood about it on the sides. The gallants were banished from the stage, and the greater part of the audience was gathered directly in front of the actors. Some traces of the former platform system, however, still remained. In front of the curtain, the stage projected into a

George Etherege in 1664 reached its culmination with Sheridan in a little more than a hundred years; and during this century the drama became more and more natural as the years progressed. Even in the days of Sheridan, however, the conventions of the theatre were still essentially unreal. An actor entered a room by walking through the

o chairs no longer indicated that two persons were to be seated, the two chairs being removed indicating that the two persons were not to be seated." At the first performance of Boucicault's London Assurance, in 1841, a further innovation was marked by the introduction of the "box set," as it is called. Instead of representing an interior scene by a series of wings set one behind the other, the scene-shifters now built the side walls of a room solidly from front to rear; and the actors were made to enter, not by walking through the wi

the "apron" stage and made possible the picture-frame proscenium; and the removal of the "apron" struck the death-blow to the Drama of Conversation and led directly to the Drama of Illusion. As soon as the picture-frame proscenium was adopted, the audience demanded a picture to be placed within the frame. The stage became essentially pictorial, and began to be

s. Sunsets and starlit skies, moonlight rippling over moving waves, fires that really burn, windows of actual glass, fountains plash

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Contents

The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 1 WHAT IS A PLAY
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 2 No.2
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 3 No.3
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 4 No.4
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 5 No.5
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 6 THE ACTOR AND THE DRAMATIST
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 7 No.7
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 8 No.8
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 9 No.9
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 10 No.10
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 11 No.11
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 12 No.12
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 13 No.13
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 14 No.14
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 15 EMPHASIS IN THE DRAMA
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 16 TRAGEDY AND MELODRAMA
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 17 COMEDY AND FARCE
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 18 No.18
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 19 No.19
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 20 THE PUBLIC AND THE DRAMATIST
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 21 DRAMATIC ART AND THE THEATRE BUSINESS
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 22 THE HAPPY ENDING IN THE THEATRE
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 23 THE BOUNDARIES OF APPROBATION
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 24 IMITATION AND SUGGESTION IN THE DRAMA
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 25 HOLDING THE MIRROR UP TO NATURE
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 26 BLANK VERSE ON THE CONTEMPORARY STAGE
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 27 DRAMATIC LITERATURE AND THEATRIC JOURNALISM
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 28 THE INTENTION OF PERMANENCE
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 29 THE QUALITY OF NEW ENDEAVOR
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 30 THE EFFECT OF PLAYS UPON THE PUBLIC
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 31 PLEASANT AND UNPLEASANT PLAYS
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 32 THEMES IN THE THEATRE
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The Theory of the Theatre, and Other Principles of Dramatic Criticism
Chapter 33 THE FUNCTION OF IMAGINATION
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