I’m now completely immersed in the work on my book on Shakespeare in Berlin in the last 100 years. In particular, I’m currently digging as deep as I can into the Weimar Republic years. But since that digging is turning up a lot of little things that either have nothing to do with Shakespeare, or […]
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I have been thinking quite a bit about the problem of theatrical space lately. Open any survey of theatre history, and you are likely to find a fairly standardized account of how the spaces — the buildings, mostly — used for theatrical performances in the West have developed. Without too too much distortion, one could describe […]
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The pitch for Josie Rourke’s Measure for Measure at the Donmar, as I had understood it, was that half-way through the show, Isabella and Angelo – or rather, Hayley Atwell and Jack Lowden – would switch parts. This seemed like an intriguing twist on a long-established theatrical sleight of hand (with a pedigree as old […]
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This is not a review of The Wolves, though if I were writing such a review, I’d urge you all to snap up the last few remaining tickets for the production of Sarah DeLappe’s play, directed by Courtney Ch’ng Lancaster, co-produced by the Howland Company and Crow’s, and still on until this […]
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It’s been a while since I’ve written anything on here about the distant past — it’s been a while since I’ve written anything on here at all! — but because I’ve been playing around with data a bit this week, I thought I might as well share some of that, and […]
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[This text has been accepted for publication and will appear in a revised form in Theatre Survey 59.2 (May 2018) (published by Cambridge University Press); copyright (c) 2018, American Society for Theatre Research.]
“But everyone who is in favour of a living theatre will no longer be […]
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Rehearsal halls have to be, by definition, safe spaces. They have to be places where people can be as vulnerable as necessary, as open as they need to be, as free of inhibitions, as daring, as fearless, as liberated as the work requires.
I am sick and tired of men who […]
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Just some thoughts and responses, very much off-the-cuff, written right after I saw the show and only lightly edited:
1) I do not and will never understand the Anglo-American approach to “concept.” Taking a 17th-century play and transporting it to 1930s Spain does precisely nothing for anyone, except perhaps for the handful of people in […]
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Holger Syme's work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License.Images may be reused as long as their source is properly attributed in accordance with the Creative Commons License detailed above. Many of the photos here were taken at the Folger Shakespeare Library; please consult their policy on digital images as well.