Victorian Theatricals
By (Author) Sara Hudston
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
1st August 2006
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Plays, playscripts
Literary essays
Poetry anthologies (various poets)
Social and cultural history
822.808
Paperback
431
Width 135mm, Height 216mm
520g
A captivating study of the plays, literature and writings about private and public theatrical spectacle during the Victorian Age
By the 1890s the British theatre had transformed itself into a world where spectacles and public shows were aimed at the widest audience possible. The theatre had become big business. This anthology brings together a variety of plays and prose which sets this phenomenon in perspective and traces the development of Victorian theatricals from private home events in the late-Georgian period to full-scale Gilbert and Sullivan operettas in the 1890s. The section 'Theatrical Behaviour' looks at the world of the audience and includes extracts from Jane Austen's novel Mansfield Park; Thackeray's Vanity Fair; an anonymous playlet called Acting Proverbs; and an extract from Marie Corelli's novel Sorrows of Satan. In 'Fun and Freaks' we explore the world of popular, sensationalist entertainment through the eyes of Dickens, Thomas Hardy, Dion Boucicault and others. In the final section, 'Society', we have the scripts for four principal melodramas and serious plays of the age: The Factory Lad by John Walker; Society by T.W. Robertson; The Mikado by W.S. Gilbert and The Second Mrs Tanqueray by Arthur Wing Pinero.
Sara Hudston is a writer and freelance journalist. she was born in 1968 and educated at St John's College, Oxford, where she gained a first in English. She has also published Islomania, a book about the fascination of islands. She lives in Dorset.