In the post-war world of the 1950s and 60s; the format of theatre space became a matter for a debate that aroused passions of an intensity unknown before or since. The proscenium arch was clearly identified as the enemy; accused of forming a barrier to disrupt the relations between the actor and audience. An uneasy fellow-traveller at the time; Francis Reid later recorded his impressions whilst enjoying performances or working in theatres old and new and this book is an important collection of his writings in various theatrical journals from 1969-2001 including his contribution to the Cambridge Guide to the Theatre in 1988. It reports some of the flavour of the period when theatre architecture was rediscovering its past in a search to establish its future.
#3717937 in eBooks 2012-04-23 2012-04-23File Name: B007WRUUPE
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