The Image of Chekhov
Title | The Image of Chekhov PDF eBook |
Author | Anton Pavlovich Chekhov |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 0 |
Release | 1967 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
The Image of Chekhov
Title | The Image of Chekhov PDF eBook |
Author | Anton Pavlovich Chekhov |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 412 |
Release | 1963 |
Genre | Russia |
ISBN |
A collection of the nineteenth century Russian author's short stories which reflect his development as a writer.
The Routledge Companion to Michael Chekhov
Title | The Routledge Companion to Michael Chekhov PDF eBook |
Author | Marie Christine Autant Mathieu |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 434 |
Release | 2015-05-15 |
Genre | Performing Arts |
ISBN | 1317506863 |
The Routledge Companion to Michael Chekhov brings together Chekhov specialists from around the world - theatre practitioners, theorists, historians and archivists – to provide an astonishingly comprehensive assessment of his life, work and legacy. This volume aims to connect East and West; theatre theory and practice. It reconsiders the history of Chekhov’s acting method, directing and pedagogy, using the archival documents found across the globe: in Russia, England, America, Germany, Lithuania and Switzerland. It presents Chekhov’s legacy and ideas in the framework of interdisciplinary theatre practices and theories, as well as at the crossroads of cultures, in the context of his forays into such areas as Western mime and Asian cosmology. This remarkable Companion, thoughtfully edited by two leading Chekhov scholars, will prove invaluable to students and scholars of theatre, theatre practitioners and theoreticians, and specialists in Slavic and transcultural studies. Marie-Christine Autant-Mathieu is Director of Research at the National Center For Scientific Research, and Assistant-Director of Sorbonne-CNRS Institute EUR’ORBEM. She is an historian of theatre and specialist in Russian and Soviet theatre. Yana Meerzon is Associate Professor in the Department of Theatre, University of Ottawa. Her book publications include Adapting Chekhov: The Text and Its Mutations, co-edited with Professor J. Douglas Clayton, University of Ottawa (Routlegde, 2012).
Michael Chekhov’s Acting Technique
Title | Michael Chekhov’s Acting Technique PDF eBook |
Author | Sinéad Rushe |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Total Pages | 360 |
Release | 2019-01-24 |
Genre | Performing Arts |
ISBN | 1472503465 |
Intended for actors, directors, teachers and researchers, this book offers an exceptionally clear and thorough introduction to the renowned acting technique developed by Michael Chekhov. Sinéad Rushe's book provides a complete overview of the whole method, and includes illuminating explanations of its principles, as well as a wide range of practical exercises that illustrate, step by step, how they can be applied to dramatic texts. Part One provides an outline of the ideas that underpin the work, which help to prepare practitioners to become responsive and receptive, and to awaken their imagination. Part Two charts a journey through the foundational psychophysical exercises that can both orient an actor's training routine and be applied directly to the development of a role. Part Three focuses on more specific and elaborate methods of scene work, characterisation and the art of transformation. Drawing on the full range of Chekhov's writing in English and French, this book also examines unpublished material from the Dartington Hall archives and features interviews with actors who have worked with the technique, including Simon Callow and Joanna Merlin. It illustrates Chekhov's approach by referring to Rushe's own productions of Nikolai Gogol's short story Diary of a Madman and Shakespeare's Othello, as well as characters and scenes in Sarah Kane's Blasted and the contemporary American television series Breaking Bad. Michael Chekhov's Acting Technique is an accessible, comprehensive and contemporary point of reference for those already trained in the method, as well as an initiation and toolkit for practitioners who are just beginning to discover it.
Anton Chekhov Through the Eyes of Russian Thinkers
Title | Anton Chekhov Through the Eyes of Russian Thinkers PDF eBook |
Author | Olga Tabachnikova |
Publisher | Anthem Press |
Total Pages | 313 |
Release | 2012 |
Genre | Drama |
ISBN | 0857285742 |
The collection is comprised of twelve scholarly essays written by leading Chekhov specialists from around the world, each analysing an interpretation of Chekhov by one of three Russian thinkers of the Silver Age of Russian culture - Vasilii Rozanov, Dmitrii Merezhkovskii and Lev Shestov. It thus examines the hitherto under-researched relationship between the origins and the results of the cultural phase that came to be known as the Silver Age, and focuses specifically on the complex connections betweens Chekhov's legacy and the Russian culture of that period.
Anton Chekhov
Title | Anton Chekhov PDF eBook |
Author | Donald Rayfield |
Publisher | Northwestern University Press |
Total Pages | 740 |
Release | 2000 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 9780810117952 |
Dependents and with the tuberculosis that was to kill him at age forty-four. He was one of the greatest playwrights and short-story writers ever born, but he was torn between medicine and literature, as he was between family and friends, between a longing for solitude and a need for company. When he was a child, his family life was at times made a hell by a monstrous father, a possessive sister, and delinquent elder brothers; his own adult life was tortuously balanced between the affections of a series of mistresses and a marriage to an actress that was not as idyllic as it has traditionally been painted. Donald Rayfield's biography strips the whitewash from the image of Chekhov and shows us what lay behind his restrained, ironic facade. The result does not denigrate him but shows him in the full heroism of his brief, prodigiously creative life. Rayfield has spent more than three years combing the Chekhov archives all over Russia (Chekhov was a restless traveler for the whole of his life, going from Siberia to the Cote d'Azur) and has uncovered thousands of documents and letters from Chekhov's lovers, friends, and family, most of them never published before, which cumulatively tell of a life far more entangled and turbulent than we ever previously suspected. The many cuts made in Soviet and foreign editions of Chekhov's and his wife's letters have been restored; what once was hidden is now revealed.
Chekhov's Letters
Title | Chekhov's Letters PDF eBook |
Author | Carol Apollonio |
Publisher | Rowman & Littlefield |
Total Pages | 368 |
Release | 2018-10-15 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1498570453 |
This collection examines the letters of Anton Chekhov, which have received relatively little scholarly attention. The contributors approach the letters from a variety of angles—biography, psychology, literary criticism, poetics, and history—to characterize Chekhov’s key epistolary concerns and to examine their role in his life.