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Search Results for emotionality
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Journal Article
Theater (2018) 48 (2): 125–149.
Published: 01 May 2018
... overcomes virtuosity, and so full of feelings that his performance might only point to them, like mathematicians indicating proofs just beyond their capacity. Robert Wilson Einstein on the Beach archive gesture materialism emotionality mathematics hands performance opera Copyright © 2018...
Journal Article
Theater (1992) 23 (2): 51–52.
Published: 01 May 1992
.... They become witnesses to students. emotionally and intellectually and be safe, as an actor is on
discoveries as their Institute teachers were to them. The stage. Is it too intense, too much? Can or should we live at
model of the director/actor relationship as lived at the that pitch? I honestly...
Journal Article
Theater (1984) 16 (1): 55–61.
Published: 01 February 1984
...-loving“ chief of police. They
else.” made to participate emotionally in that want him to treat the queers with “lavender
55
gloves”; even...
Journal Article
Theater (1975) 6 (2): 9–17.
Published: 01 May 1975
... in-
dependently but as the result of the total physical and psychological situation
(under no circumstances a thought process). Thus, emotionally credible music-
making is a creative act involving the entire physique of the performer and
dominating the instrumental as well...
Journal Article
Theater (1984) 15 (3): 77–80.
Published: 01 November 1984
... music with the emotionalism and ex-
paradigm of succinctness, style, and Messenger steps up to a Plexiglas altar on a plosive rhythm of primitive musical forms.
substance. The historical dimension is ab- low dais at the center of the Brooklyn Acade- As the expression ’of an oppressed class...
Journal Article
Theater (2012) 42 (3): 65–67.
Published: 01 November 2012
... the previous evening had come from the
nearby Third Ward, where the artists had worked as part of the Project Row Houses
66
architecture for a community
cultural initiative, and they responded affectionately and emotionally...
Journal Article
Theater (2006) 36 (3): 1–3.
Published: 01 November 2006
... in the Palestinian territories. Corrie’s
death has since become an emotionally charged subject for both the Left and Right.
After the election of a Hamas-majority Palestinian government, New York Theater
Workshop apparently felt the issue too charged for the increasingly sensitive politi-
cal...
Journal Article
Theater (1980) 12 (1): 6–13.
Published: 01 February 1980
... the why is involves “emotionalizing.” When an actor shows himself incapable
fundamental because experience is important, but more important of feeling real emotions during rehearsals he will surely be wrong.
is the meaning of that experience. We want to know the phenomena But the actor who acts...
Journal Article
Theater (1990) 21 (3): 16–20.
Published: 01 November 1990
...; the exploitative relationship
own impairments and failures. He wrote Standard of the can maintain the illusion of invulnerability. As with Nat in
Breed when he was getting off methadone and feeling, for a The Thrill, who is left emotionally amputated by his refusal
year and a half, very sick. “So it’s...
Journal Article
Theater (2004) 34 (2): 69–71.
Published: 01 May 2004
... represents a segment in a hellish march to the play’s grisly
and senseless conclusion.
In Kirill Serebrennikov’s 2001 production for the Center for Dramaturgy and
Directing in Moscow—which I saw at the Berliner Festspiele in October 2003—Plas-
ticine’s temporally and emotionally enclosed episodes...
Journal Article
Theater (1999) 29 (2): 56–59.
Published: 01 May 1999
.... A heroine literally swelling to tragic proportions,
NEAR AND FAR
she finds herself emotionally paralyzed when time and memory finally catch up with
her. Once she was histrionic; now the nature of her drama no longer seems clear; she
wades...
Journal Article
Theater (1977) 8 (2_and_3): 44–53.
Published: 01 May 1977
... effective only in an abstract emotionality. If
it was a role that was very close to their lifestyle, as Zit were on film and they had
a camera where they could move right up to catch even the retina of the eye or
something, they were effective. But in terms of any...
Journal Article
Theater (1986) 17 (2): 67–68.
Published: 01 May 1986
... theme persons not in favor with the government.
stripped of his Sovict citizenship and virtually whose emotionalism can be easily exploited, Most of this play’s songs have been written
exiled, his theater had been turned over to but the production itself is admirably and are sung on tape by Kulat...
Journal Article
Theater (1988) 19 (2): 39–40.
Published: 01 May 1988
..., heavy-tongued emotionalism
variably barrels past any heart-stopping awareness of her wouldn’t pass muster in a high school pageant; even if Irene
beloved walls, objects, and orchard. Worth - much underused recently - was never asked or
These blurs are more than incidental. When...
Journal Article
Theater (2000) 30 (1): 93–101.
Published: 01 February 2000
... transform in
In Phèdre this was particularly emotionally
and through the language, most spectacularly in
loaded, because Paul’s own battle with a termi...
Journal Article
Theater (1970) 3 (1_Design): 26–31.
Published: 01 November 1970
....
the audience to become physically in-
volved with the action, in Qrder to be The role of the designer in presentational
emotionally involved, but there are those theatre is far more exciting than the de-
who do-Richard Schechner, for instance. signing of pictures...
Journal Article
Theater (1997) 27 (2_and_3): 5–8.
Published: 01 May 1997
... performance turned out to be safer
livelihoods and all directors’ fieedom of choice, than publication and much less demanding
while encapsulating what we want of our society, intellectually and emotionally. Wilson’s com-
how we want it to look, what human qualities mitment to Marcus Garvey and Elijah...
Journal Article
Theater (2001) 31 (1): 35–39.
Published: 01 February 2001
...
who are exploiting postwar Kosovo. They live materially rich but emotionally poor, have
no clue of what has really happened, and are not even interested in who pulls the strings
because they themselves feel so important. Within its own limits, the play is a critical...
Journal Article
Theater (1994) 25 (2): 105–107.
Published: 01 May 1994
... emotionally tepid even for its day, “Street ...
Journal Article
Theater (1994) 25 (2): 107–109.
Published: 01 May 1994
...-and-ten-minute Mysteries and Smaller emotionally tepid even for its day, “Street
SIEGAL
Songs” is a reminder of two sad realities: that most cogent achievement, the “play” tran-
war doesn’t go away, and neither do ineffectual scends traditional...
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