Cover image for From Stage to Page : Critical Reception of Irish Plays in the London Theatre, 1925-1996.
From Stage to Page : Critical Reception of Irish Plays in the London Theatre, 1925-1996.
Title:
From Stage to Page : Critical Reception of Irish Plays in the London Theatre, 1925-1996.
Author:
Harris, Peter James.
ISBN:
9783035301199
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (320 pages)
Series:
Reimagining Ireland ; v.41

Reimagining Ireland
Contents:
Contents -- Acknowledgements ix -- Preface by Professor Richard Allen Cave xi -- Introduction 1 -- CHAPTER ONE Juno and the Paycock (Royalty Theatre, 16 November 1925) 19 -- CHAPTER TWO The Big House (Playhouse Theatre, 21 February 1934) 53 -- CHAPTER THREE Red Roses for Me (Embassy Theatre, 26 February 1946) 87 -- CHAPTER FOUR The Hostage (Theatre Royal, Stratford East, 14 October 1958) 115 -- CHAPTER FIVE Philadelphia, Here I Come! (Lyric Theatre, 20 September 1967) 143 -- CHAPTER SIX The Freedom of the City (Royal Court Theatre, 27 February 1973) 171 -- CHAPTER SEVEN Translations (Hampstead Theatre, 12 May 1981) 201 -- CHAPTER EIGHT Portia Coughlan (Royal Court Theatre, 14 May 1996) 229 -- Afterword 255 -- Bibliography 267 -- Index 281.
Abstract:
In December 1921 the Anglo-Irish Treaty was signed, which led to the creation of the Irish Free State and the partition of Ireland the following year. The consequences of that attempt to reconcile the conflicting demands of republicans and unionists alike have dictated the course of Anglo-Irish relations ever since. This book explores how the reception of Irish plays staged in theatres in London's West End serves as a barometer not only of the state of relations between Great Britain and Ireland, but also of the health of the British and Irish theatres respectively. For each of the eight decades following Irish Independence a representative production is set in the context of Anglo-Irish relations in the period and developments in the theatre of the day. The first-night criticism of each production is analysed in the light of its political and artistic context as well as the editorial policy of the publication for which a given critic is writing. The author argues that the relationship between context and criticism is not simply one of cause and effect but, rather, the result of the interplay of a number of cultural, historical, political, artistic and personal factors.
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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