Playwright versus Director: Authorial Intentions and Performance Interpretations
Giving equal space to the sanctity of script and the artistic freedom of directors, this book addresses the difficulties encountered by playwrights and directors as they bring a script to the stage. Inspired directors can help a writer of genius turn his play into exciting theatre, but playwrights find that giving directors leeway to interpret and modify text can result in directors' overriding authorial intentions. This book presents the best that has been written by literary theorists on the current definitions of text and attempts to depart from quick rule-of-thumb assessments of the problem.

Drawing from definitive articles in literary and theatre journals, part one gives the reader basic concepts and terminology. Interviews with playwrights and directors, showing the complexity of the issue, appear in part two, and part three includes case studies of playwrights and directors who faced production crises. Legal aspects of collaboration are considered in part four. The book concludes with a positive approach and possible solution to the problem.

1132779348
Playwright versus Director: Authorial Intentions and Performance Interpretations
Giving equal space to the sanctity of script and the artistic freedom of directors, this book addresses the difficulties encountered by playwrights and directors as they bring a script to the stage. Inspired directors can help a writer of genius turn his play into exciting theatre, but playwrights find that giving directors leeway to interpret and modify text can result in directors' overriding authorial intentions. This book presents the best that has been written by literary theorists on the current definitions of text and attempts to depart from quick rule-of-thumb assessments of the problem.

Drawing from definitive articles in literary and theatre journals, part one gives the reader basic concepts and terminology. Interviews with playwrights and directors, showing the complexity of the issue, appear in part two, and part three includes case studies of playwrights and directors who faced production crises. Legal aspects of collaboration are considered in part four. The book concludes with a positive approach and possible solution to the problem.

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Playwright versus Director: Authorial Intentions and Performance Interpretations

Playwright versus Director: Authorial Intentions and Performance Interpretations

by Sidney Berger
Playwright versus Director: Authorial Intentions and Performance Interpretations

Playwright versus Director: Authorial Intentions and Performance Interpretations

by Sidney Berger

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Overview

Giving equal space to the sanctity of script and the artistic freedom of directors, this book addresses the difficulties encountered by playwrights and directors as they bring a script to the stage. Inspired directors can help a writer of genius turn his play into exciting theatre, but playwrights find that giving directors leeway to interpret and modify text can result in directors' overriding authorial intentions. This book presents the best that has been written by literary theorists on the current definitions of text and attempts to depart from quick rule-of-thumb assessments of the problem.

Drawing from definitive articles in literary and theatre journals, part one gives the reader basic concepts and terminology. Interviews with playwrights and directors, showing the complexity of the issue, appear in part two, and part three includes case studies of playwrights and directors who faced production crises. Legal aspects of collaboration are considered in part four. The book concludes with a positive approach and possible solution to the problem.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313286797
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 08/30/1994
Series: Contributions in Drama and Theatre Studies , #54
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.50(d)
Lexile: 1310L (what's this?)

About the Author

JEANE LUERE, Professor Emeritus at the University of Northern Colorado, has published extensively in the fields of English literature and the humanities. Luere has received grants from the Ford Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities, and has conducted research on theatre during 13 months at the library of the University of Firenze, Italy, and for 14 months at the University of Teheran, Iran, while teaching humanities at these universities. She has published articles and research in many journals such as Theatre Journal, Studies in American Drama: 1945-Present, and South Atlantic Review.

SIDNEY BERGER is Director, School of Theatre, University of Houston and Producing Director, Houston Shakespeare Festival.

Table of Contents

Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
Theories of Authorship and Interpretation
Literary Assumptions about Text
Literature's New Criticism Applied to Theatre
Remarks of Playwrights and Directors
Alley Forum: Playwrights, Directors, and the Postmodern Stage
Robert Anderson, Playwright
Sidney Berger, Director
Danny Mann, Director, and Edward Albee, Playwright
Lanford Wilson, Playwright
Robert Wilson, Performer, Director, Writer
Jose Quintero, Director
Tiers of Director/Playwright Interchange: Five Case Studies
A "Director's Director": Tennessee Williams and A Streetcar Named Desire
A Tyrant Director? William Inge and Joshua Logan
A Director's Distortion of a Modern Classic: Arthur Miller's Shift in Stance
A Playwright-Director with a Classic: Albee's Direction of Beckett
Director, Playwright, and Cast: Caryl Churchill's Approach to Text
Theatre Aesthetics and the Law
Contractual Provisions of the Dramatists' Guild, Inc.
Collaboration and American Law: The Rights of Playwrights: Performance Theory and American Law by Robert Hapgood
Afterword
Works Cited
General Bibliography
Index

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