Theatre: Collaborative Acts, 4th edition

Published by Pearson (January 8, 2012) © 2013

  • Ronald J. Wainscott Indiana University
  • Kathy J Fletcher
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Theatre: Collaborative Acts stimulates creative thinking and discussions of artistic, social, and ethical questions through its interwoven themes of theatre as culture, collaboration, spatial art, and a fusion of the past and present.

The central premise of Theatre: Collaborative Acts is that theatre is collaboration or co-labor, which exists on many levels. To participate in theatre, as either audience member or practitioner, means to be at once an individual and part of a larger whole.  It allows us to escape, relax, and refocus.  Through the study of theatre, students develop an informed perspective for a lifetime of theatre-going in appreciation to help them enjoy, analyze, understand, read, visualize, and get the most out of many different types of theatre experiences.  The Fourth Edition continues to emphasize the diversity of purpose and effect of theatre, and the collaborative nature of the theatrical process.

Four major themes and principles:

Theatre is cultural study: looking at theatrical events and how they are created provides a window into the way a society views itself, drawing examples from multicultural theatre, not just the Western tradition

Theatre is collaboration: theatre-making is a shared experience including both theatre practitioners and audience members.

Theatre is a spatial art: critical to theatrical collaboration is the way space is used, adapted, transformed, and the way theatrical artists interact in and with that space. 

Theatre is a dynamic fusion of past and present: it represents a unique opportunity to see how the past and present are interrelated.

Boxed features:

“Exploring Collaboration” boxes include profiles of successful artistic teams and feature a variety of approaches to the

        artistic process.  (ex. p. 152)

“Exploring Historical and Cultural Perspectives” boxes offer a window on specific theatrical events. (ex. p. 63)

“Artists of the Theatre” boxes feature colorful and influential theatrical figures of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. (ex. pp. 146-147)

Special features:

Theatre of Diversity photo gallery demonstrates diversity in types of theatre and theatrical experiences. (pp. 123-131)

Contemporary Theatre photo gallery provides an overview of contemporary theatre practice. (pp. 251-259)

Key Theatrical Events timeline of selective theatrical, social, and artistic events allows students to place their explorations in a wider context. (pp. 321-335)

Pedagogy:

An end of chapter study guide, Chapter Review concludes each chapter with the following resources (ex. pp. 159-160):

“Questions and Activities” provide springboards for class discussions and outside projects.

“Key Terms and Concepts” (in boldface in the chapter) are arranged by topic and followed by page reference number.

“For Further Exploration” provides a reference list of articles, books, videos, and websites.

  • Includes new information about important professional productions, from current Broadway, Resident, and Off-Broadway productions, including Ruined (2009), The Book of Mormon (2011), War Horse (2007/2011), and In the Next Room (2009), looking critically at the ethical questions and important life messages these plays address–and the ways in which different theatrical traditions address them. (ex. p. 254)
  • To give students a varied and international perspective, this edition features new artist and historical boxes on the musical as political theatre, a long run in the avant-garde theatre, a South Korean musical, the Chinese classical space, and more.  (ex. p. 119)
  • Provides a deeper focus on contemporary theatre and the American musical, two areas where many students may already be familiar with but will be able to approach with a deeper appreciation. (ex. pp. 316-317)
  • Incorporates updates to the timeline of important events in theatre, which takes you through theatrical traditions and influences across cultures and time. (pp. 321-335)
  • Offers 101 new, detailed captions for photographs, to help students appreciate the full significance of each visual example.  (ex. p. 254)

ACT ONE Theatre and Its Audience

CHAPTER 1 CULTURAL COLLABORATION: Theatre and Society

Theatre as Entertainment and Art                                 

The Social Functions of Theatre           

Social Control of Theatre                     

Theatrical Choice in North America     

Cultural Context and Personal Experience        

 

CHAPTER 2 EXPERIENCING THEATRE: Collaboration of Actor, Audience, and Space 

The Audience  

The Nature of Acting

From Play to Production       

Space  

Theatre and Transformation

 

CHAPTER 3 ANALYZING THEATRE: Thinking and Writing About Live Performance

Theatre, Film, and Television    

Analyzing Production   

Thinking About Actor Performances    

Thinking About Space and Design        

Understanding Style     

Evaluating Production  

The Role of the Critic   

Writing About Production        

When It All Works      

 

CHAPTER 4 UNDERSTANDING THE PLAY: A Theatrical Blueprint  

Plot     

Character        

Thought           

Language         

Music

Spectacle

 

CHAPTER 5 INTERPRETING THE PLAY: Understanding Genre, Reading, and Writing       

Dramatic Genre           

Reading a Play 

Writing About a Play

 

ACT TWO Collaboration in Art and Practice

CHAPTER 6 THE DIRECTOR: Vision and Leadership   

Has Someone Always Been in Charge?

Interpretation   

Developing Concept

Communicating and Managing the Artistic Vision

Collaborating with the Playwright         

Directors and Absent Playwrights         

Collaborating with Designers    

Collaborating with Actors        

Collaborating with the Stage Manager  

The Rehearsal Process 

Opening the Production           

 

CHAPTER 7 THE ACTOR: From Mask to Contemporary Performance

Development of the Actor        

Acting Styles and Methods      

The Actor’s Work       

 

CHAPTER 8 THE PLAYWRIGHT: Imagination and Expression

The Changing Position of the Playwright           

The Playwright and Production 

Development of New Plays      

 

CHAPTER 9 THE DESIGNER: Materializing Conception and the World of the Play   

The Development of the Designer         

The Designers’ Choices           

The Scenic Designer’s Work   

The Lighting Designer’s Work  

The Costume Designer’s Work

The Sound Designer’s Work    

Integrating All the Designs

 

CHAPTER 10 THE PRODUCER: Coordination, Promotion, Economics

Early Producers           

The Role of the Producer         

The Economics of Theatre       

 

ACT THREE Collaboration in History

CHAPTER 11 FOUNDATIONS: Classical Theatrical Forms       

Classical Greece          

Classical Rome

Medieval Europe         

Classical India 

Classical China

Classical Japan

 

CHAPTER 12 REINTERPRETATIONS: Europe Rediscovers the Western Classics   

The Italian Renaissance

Elizabethan England     

The Spanish Golden Age         

Seventeenth-Century France    

Restoration England     

Eighteenth-Century Europe and the Americas

 

CHAPTER 13 REVOLUTIONS: Romanticism to Postmodern Experiment        

Romanticism    

Nineteenth-Century Melodrama           

Nineteenth-Century Realism and Naturalism     

The Avant-Garde from the Late Nineteenth Century to the 1960s

Modern and Contemporary Popular Theatre 

The Recent Avant-Garde and Postmodern Experiment

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