Cover image for Charles Dickens and His Performing Selves : Dickens and the Public Readings.
Charles Dickens and His Performing Selves : Dickens and the Public Readings.
Title:
Charles Dickens and His Performing Selves : Dickens and the Public Readings.
Author:
Andrews, Malcolm.
ISBN:
9780191533716
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (346 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Preface and Acknowledgements -- List of Illustrations -- A Premiere: New York, December 1867 -- 1. A Community of Readers -- Serialization and the Bonded Reader -- Anti-theatricality and Reading for Money -- Debuts -- 2. Reading, Reciting, Acting -- Communal Reading Practices -- Public Recitalists -- Dickens the Reader -- The 'Limits of Reading' -- The Reading Texts-Novels into Scripts -- 3. Impersonation -- 'Composing out loud' -- 'Most people are other people' -- Charles Mathews -- 4. Celebrity on Tour -- The Set -- The Desk -- Props -- The Platform -- The Tour Manager and Crew -- Managing Celebrity -- 'A convict in golden fetters' -- 5. Performance -- Voice -- Gesture -- Characterization -- Narrative and Character -- Rapport -- 'Sikes and Nancy': A Reading -- 6. A 'New Expression of the Meaning of my Books' -- Authentication -- Colour and Definition -- Realism -- 'This interpretation of myself' -- Finale: London, March 1870 -- Appendix: Schedule of the Public Readings -- Abbreviations -- Notes -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- V -- W -- Y -- Z.
Abstract:
Charles Dickens's public readings have not had the attention they deserve; and yet Dickens put as much effort into perfecting his performances as he did with his novels. These performances were sensational events and won Dickens thousands of new admirers. This book tells that story and brings the events alive, with more detail than ever before. - ;Charles Dickens had three professional careers: novelist, journalist and public Reader. That third career has seldom been given the serious attention it deserved. For the last 12 years of his life he toured Britain and America giving 2-hour readings from his work to audiences of over two thousand. These readings were highly dramatic performances in which Dickens's great gift for mimicry enabled him to represent the looks and voices of his characters, to the point where audiences. forgot they were watching Charles Dickens. His novels came alive on the platform: at the end of a reading, it seemed to many that a whole society had broken up rather than that a solitary recitalist had concluded. This book tries to recreate, in greater detail than hitherto, the sense of how those. readings were performed and how they were received, how Dickens devised his stage set and tailored his books to make them into performance scripts, how he conducted his reading tours all around the country and developed a quite extraordinary rapport with his listeners. No single study of this late career of Dickens has drawn to such an extent on contemporary witnesses to the readings as well as tried to assess in some depth the significance of what Dickens called 'this new expression of the. meaning of my books'. 'I shall tear myself to pieces', he said as he waited eagerly to go on stage for his performance, and that is ironically what he did, in ways he perhaps had not quite intended: he fractured into dozens of different

characters up there on the platform, and as he thus tore himself to. pieces his health collapsed irretrievably under the pressures he put upon himself to achieve these masterly illusions. - ;In achieving all its ambitions, Andrews's book does then add yet another chapter to the extraordinary volume of Dickens's life and work. - Grahame Smith, The Review of English Studies;...makes a superb and indeed original contribution to our understanding of Dickens the novelist - David Paroissien, Dickens Quarterly;[a] richly detailed and thought-provoking study - John Bowen, TLS;[a] subtle and probing study...Andrews writes with deep imaginative sympathy of the phenomenon that was Dickens - Simon Callow, The Guardian;This intriguing study...gives us a superb account which does much to help our understanding of the phenomenon that was Charles Dickens. - Contemporary Review.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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