Clayton, J. Douglas

Pierrot in Petrograd : Commedia Dell'Arte and Balagan in Twentieth-Century Russian Theatre and Drama

McGill-Queen's University Press
€ 99,52

Leverbaar

Douglas Clayton examines the tradition of commedia dell'arte as the Russian modernists inherited it, from its origins in Italian street theatre through its various transformations: in Italy (Gozzi and Goldini's plays); in France (the development of Pierrot and the restructuring of the plot); and in Germany (Tieck's and Hoffmann's metatheatre). He also analyses crucial texts by Gozzi, Lothar, Benavente, and Schnitzler that came to play a central role in the Russian theatre. Tracing the history of commedia dell'arte on the Russian stage, he demonstrates that the introduction of the tradition was theory-driven and discusses several milestone productions in the pre- and post-revolutionary period. Clayton examines the impact of commedia dell'arte, russified as the new theatrical genre of balagan, on both popular and lesser-known Russian playwrights, and, in conclusion, explores the significance of the commedia dell'arte as a theoretical underpinning for Sergei Eisenstein's theories of theatre and film.

Gebonden | 400 pagina's | Engels
Verschenen in 1994
Rubrieken:

  • DDC: East Indo-European & Celtic literatures
  • LCC: Language and Literature » Slavic. Baltic. Albanian » Russian literature » Literary history and criticism (PG3089.C6C58 1993)
  • ISBN-13: 9780773511361 | ISBN-10: 0773511369