Shakespeare and the American Popular Stage

Shakespeare and the American Popular Stage
Title Shakespeare and the American Popular Stage PDF eBook
Author Frances Teague
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 162
Release 2006-10-19
Genre Drama
ISBN 052186187X

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An account of popular Shakespeare performances in America, and of musicals based on Shakespeare's plays.

Shakespeare on the American Yiddish Stage

Shakespeare on the American Yiddish Stage
Title Shakespeare on the American Yiddish Stage PDF eBook
Author Joel Berkowitz
Publisher University of Iowa Press
Total Pages 305
Release 2005-04
Genre History
ISBN 1587294087

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The professional Yiddish theatre started in 1876 in Eastern Europe; with the assassination of Tsar Alexander II in 1881, masses of Eastern European Jews began moving westward, and New York—Manhattan’s Bowery and Second Avenue—soon became the world’s center of Yiddish theatre. At first the Yiddish repertoire revolved around comedies, operettas, and melodramas, but by the early 1890s America's Yiddish actors were wild about Shakespeare. In Shakespeare on the American Yiddish Stage, Joel Berkowitz knowledgeably and intelligently constructs the history of this unique theatrical culture. The Jewish King Lear of 1892 was a sensation. The year 1893 saw the beginning of a bevy of Yiddish versions of Hamlet; that year also saw the first Yiddish production of Othello. Romeo and Juliet inspired a wide variety of treatments. The Merchant of Venice was the first Shakespeare play published in Yiddish, and Jacob Adler received rave reviews as Shylock on Broadway in both 1903 and 1905. Berkowitz focuses on these five plays in his five chapters. His introduction provides an orientation to the Yiddish theatre district in New York as well as the larger picture of Shakespearean production and the American theatre scene, and his conclusion summarizes the significance of Shakespeare’s plays in Yiddish culture.

Shakespeare on the American Stage: From the Hallams to Edwin Booth

Shakespeare on the American Stage: From the Hallams to Edwin Booth
Title Shakespeare on the American Stage: From the Hallams to Edwin Booth PDF eBook
Author Charles Harlen Shattuck
Publisher [Washington] : Folger Shakespeare Library, 1976-c1987
Total Pages 200
Release 1976
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN

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This set of essays, which surveys major developments in the winding down of nineteenth-century methods of Shakespeare staging, spans the decades from the 1880s to about 1920. The Epilogue describes the American celebration of the Tercentenary of Shakespeare's death.

Shakespeare in America

Shakespeare in America
Title Shakespeare in America PDF eBook
Author Alden T. Vaughan
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 236
Release 2012-04-05
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0199566380

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This book is a lively account of how American culture has embraced the English playwright and poet from colonial times to the present. It ranges widely, following the story of Shakespeare's reception in America from the scholarly - criticism, editions of the plays, and curricula - to the light-hearted - burlesques, musical comedies, and kitsch.

Shakespeare in a Divided America

Shakespeare in a Divided America
Title Shakespeare in a Divided America PDF eBook
Author James Shapiro
Publisher Penguin
Total Pages 322
Release 2020-03-10
Genre History
ISBN 0525522298

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One of the New York Times Ten Best Books of the Year • A National Book Critics Circle Award Finalist • A New York Times Notable Book A timely exploration of what Shakespeare’s plays reveal about our divided land. “In this sprightly and enthralling book . . . Shapiro amply demonstrates [that] for Americans the politics of Shakespeare are not confined to the public realm, but have enormous relevance in the sphere of private life.” —The Guardian (London) The plays of William Shakespeare are rare common ground in the United States. For well over two centuries, Americans of all stripes—presidents and activists, soldiers and writers, conservatives and liberals alike—have turned to Shakespeare’s works to explore the nation’s fault lines. In a narrative arching from Revolutionary times to the present day, leading scholar James Shapiro traces the unparalleled role of Shakespeare’s four-hundred-year-old tragedies and comedies in illuminating the many concerns on which American identity has turned. From Abraham Lincoln’s and his assassin, John Wilkes Booth’s, competing Shakespeare obsessions to the 2017 controversy over the staging of Julius Caesar in Central Park, in which a Trump-like leader is assassinated, Shakespeare in a Divided America reveals how no writer has been more embraced, more weaponized, or has shed more light on the hot-button issues in our history.

Shakespeare and the American Musical

Shakespeare and the American Musical
Title Shakespeare and the American Musical PDF eBook
Author Irene G. Dash
Publisher Indiana University Press
Total Pages 249
Release 2010
Genre Music
ISBN 0253354145

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The Bard on Broadway

Caliban by the Yellow Sands

Caliban by the Yellow Sands
Title Caliban by the Yellow Sands PDF eBook
Author Percy MacKaye
Publisher
Total Pages 274
Release 1916
Genre
ISBN

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