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JournalISSN: 0307-8833

Theatre Research International 

Cambridge University Press
About: Theatre Research International is an academic journal published by Cambridge University Press. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Drama & Politics. It has an ISSN identifier of 0307-8833. Over the lifetime, 1235 publications have been published receiving 4140 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider what kinds of "interior" audiences are invited to become immersed in in immersive theatre and draw on performances by two London-based theatre companies, Shunt and Punchdrunk, as examples of immersive theatre.
Abstract: This article considers what might be implied in the term ‘immersive theatre’, asking what kinds of ‘interior’ audiences are invited to become immersed in. To facilitate my argument I draw on performances by two London-based theatre companies, Shunt and Punchdrunk, as examples of immersive theatre which use architectural interiors: extensive environments which audiences explore in order to find the performance, and sometimes to give performances themselves. I begin with a description of how these physical interiors and the audience member's movement through them becomes part of the dramaturgy of the work, before moving on to a critique of the term ‘immersive’. This critique is initially based on analysis of its metaphorical character, using an approach derived from cognitive linguistics, and is developed through Josephine Machon's (syn)aesthetics and Heidegger's phenomenological aesthetics.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is believed that the vases of southern Italian vases represent improvised farce performed on makeshift stages by strolling actors, also called phlyakes.
Abstract: It has long been believed that the style of comedy depicted on southern Italian vases of the fourth century BC was a local Italiote form called phylax. A. D. Trendall, the leading authority on the vases, has consistently taken the view that the plays were ‘impromptu’ performances, ‘in which light, movable sets could be used to indicate the required background’. It is not surprising that this has become accepted history: the vases, it is believed, represent improvised farce performed on makeshift stages by strolling actors, also called phlyakes.

56 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: 7:84 (Scotland) Theatre Company as discussed by the authors was a revenue-funded client of the Scottish Arts Council (SAC) since 1976, but in January 1988 SAC announced that it was to withdraw the company from the list of revenuefunded clients from April 1989, and the company was taken over by David Hayman, Gerard Kelly, and Jo Beddoe.
Abstract: 7:84 (Scotland) Theatre Company was launched in 1973 through an epoch-making tour of The Cheviot, The Stag and The Black, Black Oil, pioneering small-scale touring theatre in Scotland. The arrival of the company coincided with a more general resurgence in indigenous theatre and its success heralded the rise of touring companies as an integral part of the theatrical scene. During the 1970s, its reputation was established as a campaigning left-wing company which combined music and documentary in shows touring to popular audiences throughout Scotland. Although 7:84 had been a revenue-funded client of the Scottish Arts Council (SAC) since 1976, in January 1988 SAC announced that it was to withdraw the company from the list of revenue-funded clients from April 1989. On 22 July 1988 John McGrath, writer, director and co-founder of the company resigned as Artistic Director, levelling allegations of political interference at SAC because of this proposal. The company was taken over by David Hayman, Gerard Kelly, and Jo Beddoe. By the beginning of 1992, Jo Beddoe had left the company and the intention of Kelly and Hayman to resign had been made public.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The history of the earliest documented Chinese opera performances in California (1852) and their successors during the following decades reveal how Chinese theatre in the diaspora was produced and consumed by Chinese immigrants, European visitors and Americans.
Abstract: The history of the earliest documented Chinese opera performances in California (1852) and their successors during the following decades reveal how Chinese theatre in the diaspora was produced and consumed by Chinese immigrants, European visitors and Americans. On the one hand, a familiar repertoire eased the nostalgia and reinforced the national consciousness of Chinese immigrants, while on the other, the ethnocentric reading and writing of Chinese theatre helped establish an eternal frontier in the ‘old West’ to protect American national identity in late nineteenth-century California's periods of economic and political turmoil. Finally, the exoticism of California's Chinese theatre in America contributed to a European sense of American cultural uniqueness. Chinese opera performances played a crucial role in the invention of Californian identity.

42 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202347
202272
202125
202034
201930
201820