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Journal Article
Theater (1999) 29 (2): 146–153.
Published: 01 May 1999
..., GOVERNMENT OF CLOWNS that’s an important trend in entertainment and idence of the pursuit of dreams and personal in theater, as it is in politics. All over we see liberty are the acts and the images they present. “Food, Not Bombs’’ springing up, and coalitions organizing civil rights...
Journal Article
Theater (2008) 38 (3): 67–83.
Published: 01 November 2008
...Praise Zenenga Praise Zenenga's article navigates the long and troubled history between Zimbabwe's theater artists, and national government and local police strongmen. Zenenga uses the Zimbabwean Censorship and Entertainment Control Act of 1967 as his departure point and compartmentalizes...
Journal Article
Theater (1986) 18 (1): 42–51.
Published: 01 February 1986
....” So far the play has been staged in Calcutta with Usha Ganguli playing the life of a typically middle-class Bengali woman who works as a clerk in a government office. All references to Joya Sen in this essay refer to the character played by Usha. In Madras, Kroetz's silent text was danced...
Journal Article
Theater (2020) 50 (3): 49–61.
Published: 01 November 2020
... to propose a musical celebrating Poland’s hundred-year anniversary of independence by valorizing Jan Paderewski. Cioffi concludes that the nationalistic impulses of the right-wing government are shielded by their choice of American artists for a state-sponsored project, and of Paderewski, household name...
Journal Article
Theater (2025) 55 (1): 69–75.
Published: 01 February 2025
... political positions (ministers in governments, members of parliaments, other elected officials of national or local importance), Theater 55:1 doi 10.1215/01610775-11534107 © 2025 by Zvonimir Dobrovi 69 dobrovi Mounir Samuel s The Shisha Sessions, Queer Zagreb Season, Zagreb Dance Center, Croatia, 2024...
Journal Article
Theater (1990) 21 (1_and_2): 111–112.
Published: 01 February 1990
...- 1982; S.E.L.A!: Southeast Los ercise in nostalgia, but to hold a mirror AngelesA Performance Piece, where up to the state of government funding the ethnically diverse and economical- for the arts today.” ’Emner...
Journal Article
Theater (1980) 11 (3): 108–112.
Published: 01 November 1980
... the American commercial theater in all its overthrow of the then ruling Argentinian splendor, at its very best, and we ought to civilian government. He was named be ashamed of ourselves. Is it too much to Secretary of Labour...
Journal Article
Theater (2008) 38 (3): 23–37.
Published: 01 November 2008
... to demonstrations of government support for free speech, perhaps most notably the 1965 establishment of the National Endowment for the Arts. The NEA’s founding docu- ment declared that “it is necessary and appropriate for the Federal Government to help create and sustain not only a climate encouraging freedom...
Journal Article
Theater (2001) 31 (3): 153–159.
Published: 01 November 2001
... clear about what we want to achieve with our death-penalty play, Not in My josbeck Okay, so is the next step to create the- Name [which the Living Theatre performs in ater advocating new government? New York’s Times Square whenever...
Journal Article
Theater (1988) 19 (3): 96–100.
Published: 01 November 1988
... The Egyptian government, however, gathered together, swaying from waist uses the Moulid and other traditional up, their arms and heads bobbing like rituals to weld the religious zeal of the sunflowers. Behind me...
Journal Article
Theater (1977) 9 (1): 87–90.
Published: 01 February 1977
... not GDR was expressed again last sum- East German government to dissolve number as many exiled writers as the mer, through his performance in an its people after they allegedly "for- Chinese; our excuse must be that our East Berlin production of Danton's feited the confidence of the govern...
Journal Article
Theater (2006) 36 (2): 1–3.
Published: 01 May 2006
... opinion pages. In 1985, Pinter and Arthur Miller investigated the Turkish military dictatorship’s alleged persecution of writers on behalf of International P.E.N. The author has advocated for the rights of Kurds in Turkey (calling that government’s policies “genocide” and dramatizing...
Journal Article
Theater (1996) 27 (1): 75–82.
Published: 01 February 1996
... to be. Yet what else is there? Peanuts from the government, a few capricious donations from rich individuals, and corporations who are shunning the arts in favor of “safer”community and education projects. Though I’m aware that we have it better in Europe, I’m still worried. It’s not just...
Journal Article
Theater (1981) 12 (2): 83–87.
Published: 01 May 1981
.... plays at that time with great success. The upper ranks of the government took a step forward and permitted their satirical art...
Journal Article
Theater (2001) 31 (1): 79–91.
Published: 01 February 2001
... to storm the palace and kill the czar, the Spanish agitational theater during the Civil War asked them to enlist in the popular Republican army and defend the Popular Front govern- ment they had recently elected...
Journal Article
Theater (1989) 20 (3): 18–20.
Published: 01 November 1989
... type of fermentation.” This was October Revolution. It was no coincidence that one of the new written in the 1920s by a prominent Russian government’s first proclamations in the realm of art was philologist and outstanding writer-Yuri Vnya- Lenin’s decree...
Journal Article
Theater (2002) 32 (3): 61–67.
Published: 01 November 2002
... not in the book. It comes as no surprise to a seasoned observer that Schlingensief would take on the virulent problem of right-wing radicalism at the very moment when the red-green federal government—the coalition of Social-Democrats and Green Party members who hold a majority in the German parliament...
Journal Article
Theater (1996) 27 (1): 83–98.
Published: 01 February 1996
... of their advocacy of rights for the homeless. (They proudly point to the fact that it was entirely government-funded, since the teepee was built with 78 U.S. mailbags in a rent- free public park area.) By contrast Bloomsburg Theater Ensemble owns two buildings, operates with an annual budget of $750,000...
Journal Article
Theater (1998) 28 (2): 91–95.
Published: 01 May 1998
.... Sometimes it s less benign. The huge arts festivals put on by the Shah of Iran in the early 70s are still unmatched examples of how a repressive government can buy respectability. (World-famous directors made gorgeous art in ancient ruins; petitions on behalf of imprisoned and tortured writers were slipped...
Journal Article
Theater (1991) 22 (2): 5–13.
Published: 01 May 1991
...: they decided to conducted until 1929 by Anatoly Lunacharsky. The fulfill their obligations to their audiences. A few days after government established, as we would say now, a regime of the October Revolution, the members of the theater's the most favorable conditions: this was essential, since...