On Producing ShakespeareB. Blom, 1964 - 335 pages |
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Page 208
... imagination : undistracted by pictorial realism , their imagination responds to his bidding — and lo ! it is midnight between the rival camps . The robbery on Gads Hill is a good example of an incidental but important effect of the ...
... imagination : undistracted by pictorial realism , their imagination responds to his bidding — and lo ! it is midnight between the rival camps . The robbery on Gads Hill is a good example of an incidental but important effect of the ...
Page 229
... imagination of the spectators . ( vi ) Transcending the Visible Scene The poetic drama does not stop there in its power to cast a spell upon the audience . Shakespeare learnt that his playhouse and his poetical medium could create the ...
... imagination of the spectators . ( vi ) Transcending the Visible Scene The poetic drama does not stop there in its power to cast a spell upon the audience . Shakespeare learnt that his playhouse and his poetical medium could create the ...
Page 231
... imagination . We have all seen sheets of lightning and heard bursts of thunder , but we have never known the thunder ... imaginative inspiration , we find ourselves ( expressly or by implication ) closest to the objective detail 136 King ...
... imagination . We have all seen sheets of lightning and heard bursts of thunder , but we have never known the thunder ... imaginative inspiration , we find ourselves ( expressly or by implication ) closest to the objective detail 136 King ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION TO SECOND EDITION | 16 |
THE ACTING TRADITION OF | 108 |
31 | 117 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
action actors Alarum appearance atmosphere audience Baldwin banquet Banquo battle Brutus Burbadge Casca Cassius Chamber Chamberlain's character climax comedy Cranford Adams Creation in Words Creation in Words—of Desdemona dialogue door dramatic dramatist E. K. Chambers E. M. W. Tillyard effect Elizabethan entry example eyes Falstaff Folio furniture give Globe Playhouse Gloucester Granville-Barker Hamlet Heavens Heminges Henry Henry IV Henry VI Hotspur Iago imagery imagination Julius Caesar King John King Lear Lady Macbeth lines Lord Macduff Measure for Measure Merchant of Venice Midsummer Night's Dream miming murder opening Othello perhaps play players plot poet poet's poetic drama Prince prompt-book rhythm Richard Richard III Romeo and Juliet says scene Scene-Rotation seems sequence Shake Shakespeare sleepe soliloquy speaks speech stage Stage-Posts stagecraft Study and Platform Study curtains suggests Tarras theatre thee theme thou Tiring-House Troilus and Cressida Twelfth Night unlocalised