Advanced Search
Print - Close Window
www.praeger.com/catalog/GM1304.aspx
All Greenwood Products
Actor as Anti-Character Dionysus, the Devil, and the Boy Rosalind
(Click to Enlarge)
This book is not currently available for purchase Online. Please call 1-800-225-5800 to backorder.
Book Code: GM1304
ISBN: 0-313-31304-0
ISBN-13: 978-0-313-31304-2
216 pages
Greenwood Press
Publication: 6/30/2000
List Price: $119.95 (UK Sterling Price: £70.00)
Availability: Out of stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Series Title: Contributions in Drama and Theatre Studies
Series Number: 93
  • Endorsement From Peter Thompson
    author of Shakespeare's Theatre and Shakespeare's Professional Career:
    This is a refreshingly original book, one which invites the reader to look again at the relationship between dramatic 'characters' and the actors who play them. As Lesley Soule shows, the debate about the paradox of acting is much older than Diderot. Where does the actor go when the character is in motion? Did the original audiences of As You Like It see Rosalind or the boy who played her? or both? With a dexterity that is, by any reckoning, extraordinary, Lesley Soule contrives to enhance our appreciation of dramatic literature by inviting us to read it with the eyes of a performer. The outcome is not a devaluing but a revisioning of plays. At the heart of this challenging book is a rare sensitivity to the arts and crafts of performance.
Description: Working from the premise that the stage performer's primary functions derive from celebrative rituals, this book describes the figure of the actor as "anti-character" in premodern popular theatre. Particularly in plays belonging to the popular, performative tradition, the actor simultaneously impersonated and subverted the character of the playtext. By doing so, he affirmed the ritual-celebrative authority of the performer and audience over the ideological authority of the written text. Included are close analyses of three major playtexts in performance: Aristophanes' Frogs, the medieval mystery plays, and Shakespeare's As You Like It.
The introduction briefly lays out the basic theatrical theory underlying the phenomenon of actor as anti-character. The book then explores three paradigmatic figures: the god Dionysus, archetypal model of the comic actor; the Devil, as both farcical individual and wild demonic chorus, who brought carnival disruption to medieval religious drama; and the Elizabethan boy player of Rosalind in Shakespeare's As You Like It who, using the marketplace techniques of traditional popular performance, colluded with his rowdy audience to subvert a sophisticated character from a literary romance.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Dionysus
  • Dionysus Domesticated
  • The Devil
  • The Devil's Descendants
  • The Boy Rosalind
  • Epilogue: "Purged from Barbarism"
  • Appendix: "A Rosalind to Love"
  • Works Cited
  • Index
LC Card Number: 99-058876
LCC Class: PN2071
Dewey Class: 792
All rights reserved. Copyright © 1999-2008 Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.
88 Post Road West, Westport CT 06881, (203) 226-3571