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Realism and the Modern Theatre. Introduction to the Study of Theatre By K. Kruszka. Beliefs. A call to return the theatre to “serious” pursuits as opposed to the commercial interests of melodrama and comedy. Theatre shouldn’t be a frivolous entertainment but serious, artful expression.
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Realism and the Modern Theatre Introduction to the Study of Theatre By K. Kruszka
Beliefs A call to return the theatre to “serious” pursuits as opposed to the commercial interests of melodrama and comedy. Theatre shouldn’t be a frivolous entertainment but serious, artful expression.
1850 - 1950 • Rise in urban poverty and crime – social problems • Charles Darwin and the “Survival of the Fittest” • Sigmund Freud and psychoanalysis and the unconscious • Humanity was a the mercy of its environment, not in control at all
Realism in Theatre • Truth lies in the observable physical world • Truth can only be discovered through scientific observation • Art is to be for the betterment of humankind, with artist as scientist • Plays were set in contemporary times because that is all the playwright could observe firsthand. • Subjects were contemporary life and its problems.
Unity in design to create the illusion of reality • Setting was part of the play so actors used it rather than performing in front of it. • Details had to be three dimensional rather than painted if they were to appear real. • Actors blocked to resemble natural movement • Group toured Europe and became very popular and copied.
Naturalism – Andre Antoine • Created use of the 4th Wall • Had real objects onstage (trees, sides of beef) to further enhance the naturalism. • Actors should appear to be people, not actors and say lines conversationally. • Box sets used over wing and backdrop to show “rooms”
“The Lower Depths” by Gorki examined life in the flophouse. All stage elements reflected this setting.
Realism Becomes Dominant • Naturalism had an invited audience to avoid censorship, which limited popularity. • Naturalism difficult for audiences to follow. • Realism offered a style of reality that was watch-able and that audiences could appreciate. • Realism is still the dominant form of theatre, especially in the United States.
Moscow Art Theatre • Chekhov’s plays demanded a new style of acting that would teach actors how to create realistic, multi-layered characters while also being understood by the audience. • Stanislavski developed a method of acting, often called Realism, which trained actors for performing realism. It is the most popular training method today in the United States.
Stanislavski’s Method • A system, still used today, where actors create characters through observation, sense memory, and personal observation. • The relationship between actor and director is one in which they find the play and its characters together through the rehearsal process. • Endowment, Objective, Inner Monologue
Playwrights Heinrich Ibsen - Norwegian A Doll’s House, HeddaGabler • Credited with writing the first pieces of realism that attacked society’s values. • Ibsen’s plays tackled issues of the role of women, euthanasia, morality of war and other social issues.
George Bernard Shaw English Pygmalion, Saint Joan, Man and Superman • Almost always wrote comedies that dealt with social issues of the times. Made realism accepted in England.
Americans • Eugene O’Neill – Long Day’s Journey Into Night, When Mourning Becomes Electra • Tennessee Williams – A Streetcar Named Desire, The Glass Menagerie, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof • Arthur Miller – Death of A Salesman, The Crucible, All My Sons • Edward Albee – Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf, The Goat