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Journal Article
Theater (1975) 6 (2): 4–8.
Published: 01 May 1975
...Walter Felsenstein Copyright © by yale/theatre 1975 1975 FELSENSTEIN Walter Felsenstein is the foremost living director of opera and musical theater. The company he founded in East Berlin, the Komische Oper, has become since its inception...
Journal Article
Theater (1984) 15 (3): 32–36.
Published: 01 November 1984
... innovation threatens the men with unemployment. Edgar and Hermann, two Munich linotype operators, find themselves being retrained to operate a video display screen terminal word processor, and they are both unprepared for the situation. Their sense of masculinity, as well as their sense of self at work...
Journal Article
Theater (1995) 26 (1_and_2): 156–161.
Published: 01 February 1995
...Paul McKinley The scenario: A Thursday night, very late. An online chat forum on Utopia and theater. As usual, there are many silent viewers lurking, invisibly watching the participants' comments scroll by, adding to the discussion here and there. The SysOp – or system operator, who acts...
Journal Article
Theater (2001) 31 (1): 76–77.
Published: 01 February 2001
... the telegraph operator Scrubbed clean here, fragrant there, aubanel Tra la la la . . . Tra la la...
Journal Article
Theater (1973) 4 (2): 112–116.
Published: 01 May 1973
... up through La Turista and Cowboys #2 was exciting and renewing; what has come after has been discouraging. Operation Sidewinder, written about two years after La Turista,was a sprawling monstrosity. An army computer intended for the detection of UFOs and designed in the form...
Journal Article
Theater (2017) 47 (2): 108–115.
Published: 01 May 2017
... of his trade. He says that he has “two tools to talk about this evening . . . they are both saws and they come from a similar family. They are both reciprocating saws” (24). He continues to explain how the saws work, showing them in operation — a low-­key Brechtian chat unveiling the means...
Journal Article
Theater (1985) 17 (1): 4–15.
Published: 01 February 1985
... don’t adapt so good OPERATORS ARE BARELY VISIBLE was employed in cutting wick for the candles, atten- But of course you go on paying rent BEHIND BEN. ding the shop, going of errands, etc. I disliked the This is why the Indians...
Journal Article
Theater (2016) 46 (1): 65–71.
Published: 01 February 2016
.... To be fair, much of this curious tension comes from the complex intersection where the book’s subject lives. Planning, funding, building, and operating new or expanded arts facilities combine urban planning and architecture, sociology and psy- chology, economics and acoustics, politics and power, all...
Journal Article
Theater (2002) 32 (2): 63–69.
Published: 01 May 2002
... to becoming the three graces; with the exception of the shriek operator, (pronounced “E-shriek”) an unknown god of unknown origin, who is named for the special symbol of logical notation as described in the appendix of The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy 2d edition (1999). The traditional parts...
Journal Article
Theater (1983) 15 (1): 12–17.
Published: 01 February 1983
... definition of “theatrical cited as ST). In what follows, I will continuously refer to this book, competence” - of some intellectual operations preliminary to the even if the purpose of my present discussion - among other things understanding of a performance. (Later on I will include these opera...
Journal Article
Theater (2016) 46 (2): 7–33.
Published: 01 May 2016
... could: having seen Gillette star as Thorne in his own play, Stein declared him the master of an acting style peculiar to “melodrama . . . that had to do with telegraph operators.”3 Though theatergoers once took this genre for granted, we have all but forgotten it now. It is high time we remember...
Journal Article
Theater (1985) 16 (3): 7–11.
Published: 01 November 1985
... comes at a price, of course. The trick of turn- most LORT theaters. That is, ANT has a Director who makes all ing the small, new theater organization instantly into a major opera- major artistic and most operating decisions, and who also expresses tion is not accomplished free of charge or free...
Journal Article
Theater (1979) 10 (3): 64–74.
Published: 01 November 1979
... was I essentially retired all the company and started over from scratch. operative around the country or at least it was a vision that went - I started casting each play on the basis of what the play needed; in around the country...
Journal Article
Theater (2014) 44 (2): 5–19.
Published: 01 May 2014
... of programming, as with any festival or venue, and come with a specific set of expectations. By essentially orchestrating a dramaturgy of liveness, which simultaneously operated as institutional critique, Dewey’s work generated the creation, assemblage, and distribution of meaning that in many ways would...
Journal Article
Theater (2004) 34 (3): 146–152.
Published: 01 November 2004
... in . . . the elation of specta- cle.” “The imagined theatre,” he writes with an uncanny prescience on his final page, “enacts the operation of power, and every operation of power deploys spectacle to command the cultural imaginary.” Power. Who owns it? Who deploys it? The key to Filewod’s book is here in his...
Journal Article
Theater (1973) 4 (3): 118–122.
Published: 01 November 1973
... or more works are kept in repertory on weekends the year 'round. These are New York's little opera companies, and they have the same relationship to the Lincoln Center operations that off-Broad- way once had, and that off-off -Broadway now has, to the Broadway...
Journal Article
Theater (2023) 53 (2): 56–67.
Published: 01 May 2023
... an operating room and I still don t know how I m alive here today. For me, theater was always more important than my life, until I started this play, which begins with pain and ends with a spine operation. I did pretty much everything lying on a bed; I recorded voice audios because I couldn t sit down to write...
Journal Article
Theater (1969) 2 (3): 104–124.
Published: 01 November 1969
... be unlikely to turn over profit even on a capacity basis twelve months per year-regardless of what so-called luxurious educational operation depended upon its up port.^ If the planners had wished for profit, they should have consulted with some experienced experts in the ghastly art...
Journal Article
Theater (1969) 2 (3): 55–74.
Published: 01 November 1969
... in 1964 when the $300,000 grant from the Rockefeller Foundation came through; consequently, in Loper's words, ". . . planning for the first year [ 1965-661 was considerably less than methodical. We should probably have waited for another year before actually going into operation, but conditions...
Journal Article
Theater (1979) 10 (2): 49–53.
Published: 01 May 1979
... separate touring groups, 7:84 Scotland, and 7:84 England, and performing wherever it's to be found: in clubs, pubs, com• which have operated independently of each other, although both munity centres, halls, and only occasionally in regular theaters. are headed by McGrath...