Buscar
Mostrando ítems 41-50 de 79
Xavier Fàbregas, investigació i acció
Artículo
Estudis escènics: quaderns de l'Institut del Teatre. 1989, Núm. 30
Acceso abierto
La sensibilitat de la passió
Artículo
Estudis escènics: quaderns de l'Institut del Teatre. 1989, Núm. 30
Acceso abierto
Record d'en Xavier
Artículo
Estudis escènics: quaderns de l'Institut del Teatre. 1989, Núm. 30
Acceso abierto
Xavier Fàbregas i la universitat de Toulouse-Le Mirail
Artículo
Estudis escènics: quaderns de l'Institut del Teatre. 1989, Núm. 30
Acceso abierto
Un català amb perspectives universalistes
Artículo
Estudis escènics: quaderns de l'Institut del Teatre. 1989, Núm. 30
Acceso abierto
Xavier, l'excepció
Artículo
Estudis escènics: quaderns de l'Institut del Teatre. 1989, Núm. 30
Acceso abierto
El Principal de València i les representacions teatrals en valencià durant el segle XIX
Artículo
Estudis escènics: quaderns de l'Institut del Teatre. 1984, Núm. 24
Acceso abierto
<p>The Principal Theatre was inaugurated in 1832 and soon became a meeting-place of the new Valencian bourgeoisie. Around it, other establishments appeared which opened their doors to a less select public: among others ...
Paisatge amb variacions de l'escenografia francesa
Artículo
Estudis escènics: quaderns de l'Institut del Teatre. 1985, Núm. 27
Acceso abierto
<p>The distrust of the theatre in the Italian manner has been followed by its revaluation; this coincides with a revival of the interest in image and distance to the detriment of the search for contact and intimacy with the audience. However, the return to the theatre in the Italian manner does not correspond with the disappearance of works about non-theatrical spaces. Image and theatre only prevail over contact and place. Priorities have changed. The experiences of Arianne Mnouchkine at the Cartoucherie, and those of André Engel and Nicky Rieti, who look for new spaces for each performance, reveal this trend. Other directors, such as Roger Planchan and Jean-Pierre Vincent, have addressed painters of the «new figuration» for their scenographies. Patrice Chéreau and Richard Peduzzi have prefered the «utopian architectures » recreating places that upset for their ambiguity although they seem familiar. For Peter Brook, on the contrary, architecture becomes scenography. Antaine Vitez and Yannis Kokkos reconstruct the «state of theatre» as it were a «state of mind». In the French scenography there is a confrontation between these two ways: the true and the false. The return to the use of the curtain is symptomatic of the return to the image of theatre created by the passing of time: a theatre of imagination and secrecy, a theatre of distance and nota theatre of proximity.</p>...
El teatre de Carme Montoriol i Puig
Artículo
Estudis escènics: quaderns de l'Institut del Teatre. 1984, Núm. 25
Acceso abierto
<p>Carme Montoriol Puig was born in Barcelona in 1893 and died there in 1966. A self-taught woman, she studied music and foreign languages. She acquired a thorough knowledge of French, Italian, German and English. From the latter language, she translated the complete sonnets of Shakespeare into Catalan, which she also handled perfectly, in their correlatively equivalent meter. She also translated plays by Shakespeare: Cymbeline and Twelfth Night of What You Will, both edited by Publicacions La Revista, and works by Pirandello, Barrie and Leona Stravis. In the field of narrative prose, she translated novels by Rudyard Kipling, Osear Wilde and Maurice Baring into Catalan, as well as No pasarán (story of the siege of Madrid) by Upton Sinclair. She wrote and published her own novels, Terese, o la vida amorosa d'una dona (Terese, or Laves of a Worman) and Diumenge de julio[ (Sunday in July). She was also prominent as a lecturer and devoted president of the Lyceum Club.</p>
<p>As a playwright she produced the following works: L'abisme (The Abyss) (1936), L'huracà (The Hurricane) (1935), Avarícia (Greed) (1936) and Tempesta esvaïda (Quelled Storm) (1956). The last of these was an operette with music by J Joaquim Serra. The first three belong to the realm of bourgeois drama. They are realistic works with one foot on the threshold of naturalism. One decognizes the influence of Ibsen, whose works she knew well. The theories of Freud also run through the works, especially L'huracà (The Hurricane). This work was received as scandalous by the society of her day, because it dealt with the theme of son in love with mother/woman. The critics vehemently disagreed, some in favor of her, some against her, but they all had to admit that this work, like the other two, possessed unquestionable literary merit.</p>
<p>In 1939 she went into exile, but soon returned homesick to Catalonia; notwithstanding, her pen, like that of many other writers of her time, remained inactive for the rest of her life.</p>...
Sis respostes de Peter Brook
Artículo
Estudis escènics: quaderns de l'Institut del Teatre. 1985, Núm. 27
Acceso abierto
<p>During Peter Brook's stay in Barcelona, owing to the performance of his version of the opera Carmen, the English director had a conversation with the students and teachers of the Institut del Teatre. For more than an ...