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Abbey Theatre, 1899-1999, The: Form and Pressure


Abbey Theatre, 1899-1999, The: Form and Pressure

Hardback by Welch, Robert (Professor of English and Director of the Centre for Irish Literature and Bibliography, Professor of English and Director of the Centre for Irish Literature and Bibliography, University of Ulster at Coleraine)

Abbey Theatre, 1899-1999, The: Form and Pressure

£145.00

ISBN:
9780198121879
Publication Date:
21 Oct 1999
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
294 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 28 May - 2 Jun 2024
Abbey Theatre, 1899-1999, The: Form and Pressure

Description

A century ago this year, productions of W. B. Yeats's The Countess Cathleen and Edward Martyn's The Heather Field inaugurated the Irish Literary Theatre, which was to take its name from its home in Abbey Street, Dublin. Despite riot, fire, and critical controversy, the Abbey Theatre has housed Ireland's National Theatre ever since: at once the catalyst and focus for the almost unprecedented renaissance of drama witnessed by Ireland in the twentieth century. This is the first history of the Abbey to discuss the plays and the personalities in their underlying historical and political context, to give due weight to the theatre's work in Irish, and to take stock of its artistic and financial development up to the present. The research for the book draws extensively on archive sources, especially the manuscript holdings on the Abbey at the National Library of Ireland. Many outstanding plays are examined, with detailed analysis of their form and their affective and emotional content; and persistent themes in the Abbey's output are identified - visions of an ideal community; the revival of Irish; the hunger for land and money; the restrictions of a society undergoing profound change. But these are integrated with accounts of the Abbey's people, from Yeats, Martyn, and Lady Gregory, whose brainchild it was, to the actors, playwrights, directors, and managers who have followed - among them the Fays, Synge, O'Casey, Murray, Robinson, Shiels, Johnston, Murphy, Molloy, Friel, McGuiness, Deevy, Carr, and many others. The role of directors and policy-makers, and the struggle for financial security, subsidy, and new-style 'partnerships', is discussed as a crucial part of the theatre's continuing evolution.

Contents

Prologue 1. ; 1. 1899-1902, 'Four Green Fields' ; 2. 1902-1910, 'Screeching in a Straightened Waistcoat' ; 3. 1911-1925, 'O Absalom, my son' ; 4. 1926-1951, 'The birth of a nation is no immaculate conception' ; 5. 1951-1966, 'I remember everything' ; 6. 1966-1985, 'History is personal' ; 7. 1985-1999, 'The dead are not the past, the dead are the future' ; Epilogue ; Notes ; Bibliography ; Index

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