The evolution of Bengali group theatre

Author(s):  
Arnab Banerji
Keyword(s):  
1984 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-87
Author(s):  
William Michelsen

On Grundtvig and the Present TimeBy William MichelsenThis is a detailed review of Ejvind Larsen’s book The Living Word (Det levende ord, Copenhagen 1983), which is a series of essays on Grundtvig’s life and writings as seen by one of our contemporary writers. Ejvind Larsen was editor-in-chief of Information, a daily newspaper, while he was writing the book, and at the same time he was rewriting his and Ebbe Kløvedal Reich’s play on Grundtvig from 1973 into The Sweet Morning-Dream of the Heart; the play was performed by a group theatre throughout Denmark in the anniversary year.The play complements the book, among other things in its treatment of Grundtvig’s first marriage. The first 170 pages are a much enlarged revision of the author’s own book on Grundtvig and Marx from 1974, plus a chapter on Shakespeare’s influence, published in Grundtvig Studies 1973 under the title A Natural Philosopher after Grundtvig’s Heart. The last three chapters deal especially with Grundtvig’s relationship to women and are written under the strong influence of Freud and Melanie Klein. Ejvind Larsen maintains that Grundtvig was very close to his mother as long as she lived (until 1822), and in particular after 1810. Emphasis is laid on the poetry collection Little Songs (Kvædlinger, 1815), which has a poetic dedication to her and which supplies the retrospectively arranged poems with strongly self-critical notes from a strict orthodox viewpoint. Larsen actually claims that in 1810 Grundtvig “asked to be beaten into conversion” , or in other words, that his Christian breakthrough in 1810 was a masochistic self-delusion.The reviewer protests against this interpretation. Grundtvig knew he was spiritually sick at heart in the period October 1810 to spring 1811, and he himself says as much in letters and notes. But this illness was the first visible sign of the manic-depressive psychosis which later incapacitated him in 1844 and 1867 and which to a lesser degree left its mark on his psyche. Grundtvig was well aware of this, as is already clear from a letter to Christian Molbech in May 1808. It is also well-known from other writings on him (Provost Fr. Schmidt’s diaries), that his outbursts were no more violent than that in the spring of 1811 he could control them in the presence of others. Noone denies that in his meeting with Clara Bolton in 1831 and in his marriage to Marie Toft Grundtvig came to a far deeper understanding of himself than in the years following 1810. But it is untenable to reduce the recognition of the contradictory elements in Grundtvig’s attitude when his father demanded that he gave up his work in Copenhagen to become his curate, to masochistic self-delusion.Luther could not be obedient to God without being disobedient to his father. Grundtvig could not be obedient to God without at the same time being obedient to his father.The reviewer thus insists that it was a healthy self-awareness that forced Grundtvig to leave Copenhagen on January 5th and apply to the King for the position of curate to his father, even though this self-awareness was also accompanied by a depressive condition. The decisive influence of his mother’s letter six months previously is not denied, but nonetheless this was the beginning of a process of self-awareness in Grundtvig which was to last the rest of his life.The major achievement in Larsen’s book, according to the reviewer, is his treatment of the poem The Gospel of Woman (Kvinde-Evangeliet) (Grundtvig's Song-Work, Vol. I l l p. 399ff), which has sofar remained quite unnoticed. The reviewer calls it “the Gospel of the Present Time” , because it has not been able to be understood until now. The positive influence of the feminine on Grundtvig is emphasized in the book, making it an impressive and very inspiring volume, a worthwhile starting-point for a further study of Grundtvig’s life and work and a debate on the perspectives that are opened up in Grundtvig’s ideas and personal development.


2021 ◽  
pp. 77-105
Author(s):  
Liza Gennaro

Jerome Robbins’ surpassing of de Mille as the primary and most influential choreographer of his period is acknowledged. His training with Gluck Sandor and actors from the Group Theatre exposed him to Constantin Stanislavski’s early acting methods and his creative years at Camp Tamiment honed a brand of humor that he would use throughout his Broadway career. I consider Robbins first musical, On the Town (1944), developed from his ballet Fancy Free (1944), in the context of de Mille’s Broadway success and argue that he was at first imitative of her but ultimately found his voice and surpassed her in terms of success and output. The chapter includes analysis of selected Robbins’ choreography in what I consider the first phase of his Broadway career: On the Town (1944), Billion Dollar Baby (1945), High Button Shoes (1947), Look, Ma, I’m Dancin’! (1948), Miss Liberty (1949), Call Me Madam (1950), and The King and I (1951). I explore how Robbins developed a system for creating dance in musicals that employed the early acting techniques of Constantin Stanislavski as well as Lee Strasberg’s Method Acting. Both techniques embraced theatrical realism and informed Robbins’ creation of dances that were seamlessly embedded into musical theater librettos. His meticulous attention to the where, when, and why of his dance creations and his comic sensibility established a model for the generations of choreographers that followed him.


Author(s):  
Alan Filewod

One of the foremost American playwrights of the first half of the twentieth century, Clifford Odets is best known for his social realist plays and screenplays, of which Waiting for Lefty (1935), Awake and Sing! (1935), Golden Boy (1937), and Rocket to the Moon (1938) have attained canonical status. A committed leftist and briefly a member of the Communist Party, his meteoric trajectory from actor in the experimental Group Theatre in New York to Hollywood screenwriter has been narrated, first by Harold Clurman in The Fervent Years and then by generations of subsequent critics and biographers, as the tragedy of a tormented and politically ambivalent visionary who struggled to reconcile his radical beliefs with the rapid celebrity that took him to Hollywood. During his later life, his reputation was tainted as a result of his voluntary if ambivalent testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee in the McCarthy inquisitions. Odets’ importance to theatrical modernism rests on his first play, Waiting for Lefty, which enacted the cultural politics of the Popular Front by absorbing the militancy of agitprop in the social humanism of dramatic realism.


2014 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-19
Author(s):  
AMEET PARAMESWARAN

I analyseSahyande Makan: The Elephant Project(2008), a cross-cultural theatrical production in Malayalam and Japanese by the Kerala-based group Theatre Roots and Wings, as an instance of ‘zooësis’. The performance presents the state of an elephant in the space of a Kerala temple festival ritual,pooram. The elephant moves into a fantasy of the wild as it is under the physiological condition of musth. Approaching the question of the performing animal as intersectional, this performance challenges anthropocentrism and its assumed binary of human/animal, and draws a possible relation between domestic and wild, or the world of norms and freedom, both for elephants and for humans. I argue that by taking embodiment as the site of exploring discipline as well as imagining a freeing, and by positing an alternate way of ‘being worldly’ through affect and senses, the performance articulates what Donna Haraway has posited as the process of ‘becoming with’.


2000 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 333-346
Author(s):  
Ian Watson

The tendency for ‘performance studies’ to embrace and even supplant ‘theatre studies’ can usefully enlarge our perceptions of the relevance of theatricality to other disciplines and activities – but fully extended into the ‘performativities’ of everyday life can be counterproductive when definitions are so loose as to be redundant. Here, Ian Watson considers the boundary-crossing qualities of two variants on the ‘performance paradigm’ – Eugenio Barba's bridge-building concept of ‘Barter Theatre’ and Augusto Boal's deliberately provocative ‘Invisible Theatre’. He proceeds to relate the characteristics identified to an event no less clearly staged, though less often discussed as such: the set-piece political speech, in this case President Clinton's acceptance of his renomination as Democratic candidate at his party's Chicago convention in 1996. Ian Watson is an Advisory Editor of NTQ who teaches at the Rutgers campus of the State University of New Jersey. The last of his several contributions to the journal was his report on the Ninth International Gathering of Group Theatre in Ayacucho, Peru, in NTQ58 (May 1999).


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helen Krich Chinoy
Keyword(s):  

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