The Act and the Image: Including Our TownOdyssey Press, 1969 - 292 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 94.
Pàgina 37
... play unfolds . The dramatic action of the play is revealed as each character in turn unveils his own dynamic thoughts , desires , and feelings . The action can never be explicitly stated by the playwright because of the very nature of ...
... play unfolds . The dramatic action of the play is revealed as each character in turn unveils his own dynamic thoughts , desires , and feelings . The action can never be explicitly stated by the playwright because of the very nature of ...
Pàgina 131
... play be classical or contemporary , from the actor's imaginative response to the images and the action of the play . There is no more sense in being dogmatic about the " only " style suitable for Our Town than there is for Romeo and ...
... play be classical or contemporary , from the actor's imaginative response to the images and the action of the play . There is no more sense in being dogmatic about the " only " style suitable for Our Town than there is for Romeo and ...
Pàgina 134
... play seemed unalterably realistic , Our Town would seem to be that play . And yet the conception of the play is what might easily be called expres- sionistic or mechanistic , for the mechanics of these activities are part of the image of ...
... play seemed unalterably realistic , Our Town would seem to be that play . And yet the conception of the play is what might easily be called expres- sionistic or mechanistic , for the mechanics of these activities are part of the image of ...
Continguts
Introduction | 1 |
METAPHORS AND IMAGES | 2 |
THE ACTORS CONCENTRATION | 6 |
Copyright | |
No s’hi han mostrat 15 seccions
Frases i termes més freqüents
acting actor actress art thou audience BENVOLIO character comes CONSTABLE WARREN create Crowell house dead death desire Doc Gibbs doth dramatic action Emily Emily's emotional Enter exercises Exeunt Exit experience express expressionistic eyes father feelings Friar Laurence George gesture and movement girl give Grover's Corners hand hast hath HOWIE NEWSOME imagery imagination inconstant moon JOE CROWELL JOE STODDARD kiss Lady Capulet look lovers Mama Mantua married means MERCUTIO metaphor mind Montague morning Mother Gibbs move never night NURSE object Paris passion Pause perception performance person phrasing play Prince projection purpose REBECCA relationship response rhythm role Romeo and Juliet Rosaline SAMPSON SIMON STIMSON SOAMES speak speech STAGE MANAGER stress style subject-person tell theater thee there's things Thornton Wilder thou art Town Tybalt Verona villain WEBB wedding wife words young