Available Formats
Edith Craig and the Theatres of Art
By (Author) Prof Katharine Cockin
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
26th January 2017
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Individual actors and performers
Theatre studies
Feminism and feminist theory
Civics and citizenship
792.023092
Paperback
328
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
402g
This new biography explores the extraordinary life of Edith Craig (1869-1947), her prolific work in the theatre and her political endeavours for womens suffrage and socialism. At London's Lyceum Theatre in its heyday she worked alongside her mother, Ellen Terry, Henry Irving and Bram Stoker, and gained valuable experience. She was a key figure in creating innovative art theatre work. As director and founder of the Pioneer Players in 1911 she supported the production of womens suffrage drama, becoming a pioneer of theatre aimed at social reform. In 1915 she assumed a leading role with the Pioneer Players in bringing international art theatre to Britain and introducing London audiences to expressionist and feminist drama from Nikolai Evreinov to Susan Glaspell. She captured the imagination of Virginia Woolf, inspiring the portrait of Miss LaTrobe in her 1941 novel Between the Acts, and influenced a generation of actors, such as Sybil Thorndike and Edith Evans. Frequently eclipsed in accounts of theatrical endeavour by her younger brother, Edward Gordon Craig, Edith Craig's contribution both to theatre and to the womens suffrage movement receives timely reappraisal in Katharine Cockins meticulously researched and wide-ranging biography, released for the seventieth anniversary of Craigs death.
Full of fascinating nuggets of information ... Edith Craig and the Theatres of Art presents a collage of Craig's achievements, celebrating her maverick career. * Times Higher Education *
Cockin does a fine job here of recuperating this neglected yet important figure by bringing such intellectual and artistic intersections to light. * Times Literary Supplement *
The book offers much by way of update ... useful to students and scholars alike. * New Theatre Quarterly *
Katharine Cockin is Professor of English at the University of Hull, UK. She has published widely on womens suffrage literature and on the lives and work of Ellen Terry and her daughter, Edith Craig. She is editor of the eight-volume Collected Letters of Ellen Terry (2010-2017) and author of several books on Edith Craig and womens suffrage literature, including the first biography of Craig (1998), Women and the Theatre in the Age of Suffrage (2001) and two volumes of womens suffrage literature (2007).