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Journal Article
Theater (2007) 37 (3): 73–85.
Published: 01 November 2007
...Jacob Gallagher-Ross Yale School of Drama/Yale Repertory Theatre 2007 Henrik Ibsen, circa 1860. Courtesy of Steven F. Sage Jacob Gallagher-Ross Ibsen the Oracle Ibsen and Hitler: The Playwright, the Plagiarist, and the Plot for the Third Reich by Steven F. Sage 2006: Carroll...
Journal Article
Theater (1984) 15 (2): 74–89.
Published: 01 May 1984
...- (Sh scoups up mure eurthj as a symbol of our tion by a prominent physician. And a MARYA: Chopin, T was wondering. native homeland so that - (A !mk entm. church service where Momrt’s Requiem CHOPIN:’What? Hitler steps out, swz$es the earth and rumbles would...
Journal Article
Theater (2002) 32 (2): 45–55.
Published: 01 May 2002
...Rebecca Ann Rugg © 2002 by Yale School of Drama/Yale Repertory Theatre 2002 Gary Beach and Roger Bart in The Producers. Photo: Paul Kolnick Rebecca Ann Rugg What It Used to Be Nostalgia and the State of the Broadway Musical “Springtime for Hitler and Germany!” A surprise...
Journal Article
Theater (2002) 32 (2): 1.
Published: 01 May 2002
...Erika Munk © 2002 by Yale School of Drama/Yale Repertory Theatre 2002 “The other houses were bombed but Hitler’s was not it was burned but funny, it was more than funny it was absurd and yet so natural. We all not down and there we were in that big window where Hitler got together...
Journal Article
Theater (1980) 11 (2): 55–62.
Published: 01 May 1980
... the 1920s, Griindgens remained in Germany, where 1930s, Hitler and World War II from a he became the darling of Goring, and was josephme Derenne as Erika Mann in an sympathetic point of view and to minimize eventually appointed general supervisor of anti-Nazi cabaret sketch...
Journal Article
Theater (1986) 18 (1): 94–97.
Published: 01 February 1986
... antagonists - Franco, Hitler, Goering, TROUPE’S SPAIN/36 Mussolini, a Catholic Bishop represen- ting the Church and an anemic Bour...
Journal Article
Theater (1999) 29 (3): 146–152.
Published: 01 November 1999
... Or KAULICH freed by the Red Army From Hitler’s gulag hears after a four day foot march From out of a broken window his wife screaming Sees a soldier of the glorious Red Army Throwing her onto the bed forgets his ABCs Of communism and beats in the comrade liberator’s Skull gives his self...
Journal Article
Theater (2000) 30 (1): 49–55.
Published: 01 February 2000
... was way ahead of contemporary theorists of performativity. Minetti’s life almost spans a century. His acting career began in Weimar Berlin, continued in Hitler’s capital until the allied bombings forced the theaters to close in 1944, and picked up...
Journal Article
Theater (1999) 29 (2): 98–107.
Published: 01 May 1999
... in Ger- man principalities, and was constantly revised and debated throughout Europe up through Hitler’s time. Tabori’s perspective is unusual. Contentious, provocative, and irreverent, Tabori seems almost obsessed in his persistent efforts to demonstrate the- atrically that Jewish...
Journal Article
Theater (2000) 30 (3): 23–25.
Published: 01 November 2000
..., Hitler had tried to take power in Bavaria with the Munich Beerhall Putsch. Two years after the premiere, Germany’s economy was again in ruins after the Great Depression, and only a year later Hitler’s party was the largest in Germany. He was to put bread...
Journal Article
Theater (2021) 51 (2): 24–37.
Published: 01 May 2021
... for a direc- torship at the Festspielhaus Hellerau.1 This institute was to be affiliated with Helle- rau, with artists, scientists, and historians working together on the reconstruction of the two best-­known assassination attempts on Hitler. Our plan was to first rebuild and then blow up the Wolf s Lair...
Journal Article
Theater (1992) 23 (3): 62–66.
Published: 01 November 1992
... at the hands of the nazis in their comedy has been remodeled to fit the modern The Great Dictator, and dares to play the role of Hitler adversaries their laughter is intended to subvert. One of the himself. Tyrannized by poverty and blinded by greed, most popular circuses in Europe now features...
Journal Article
Theater (2001) 31 (1): 27–33.
Published: 01 February 2001
... other levels are lost. The Hitler figures on the poster for The Fall sur- prised me. What’s it about? If you put Hitler on the wall, it’s OK, because no The main character’s the Ubermutter...
Journal Article
Theater (1969) 2 (1): 106–112.
Published: 01 February 1969
... a style of Creon that isn't the problem. There were two reasons for this. One, that it's based on a German version which has to do with Hitler, which is indeed a very different situation from the United States. Frequently there are situations that Brecht created in his Antigone...
Journal Article
Theater (2000) 30 (3): 127–128.
Published: 01 November 2000
... into print in English in the past two enormous radio in Joan Schenkar’s The Last of decades, Vivian Patraka’s Spectacular Suffering: Hitler—that point to “what cannot be Theatre, Fascism, and the Holocaust is the first mapped.” Patraka implies that the theater...
Journal Article
Theater (2012) 42 (3): 43–47.
Published: 01 November 2012
... Catholic? . . . Theater 42:3 doi 10.1215/01610775-1597611­ © 2012 by Kirk Lynn 43 lynn Good. Aren’t you glad Hitler didn’t have any children? Don’t answer. I’m only trying to establish the idea that it would be an entirely different...
Journal Article
Theater (2000) 30 (2): 164–168.
Published: 01 May 2000
..., the unparalleled creativity and excesses of the Weimar Republic, to the rise and fall of Hitler. In addition to its important contribution...
Journal Article
Theater (2003) 33 (3): 132–134.
Published: 01 November 2003
... that added to its dimness. In any case Pacino faced an uphill Žght all the way. The gangster charade for the Hitler story is so thin that its...
Journal Article
Theater (2003) 33 (3): 135–137.
Published: 01 November 2003
... that added to its dimness. In any case Pacino faced an uphill Žght all the way. The gangster charade for the Hitler story is so thin that its...
Journal Article
Theater (2003) 33 (3): 138–141.
Published: 01 November 2003
... that added to its dimness. In any case Pacino faced an uphill Žght all the way. The gangster charade for the Hitler story is so thin that its...