ABSTRACT

Yevgeny Vakhtangov was a pioneering theatre artist who married Stanislavski’s demands for inner truth with a singular imaginative vision. Directly and indirectly, he is responsible for the making of our contemporary theatre: that is Andrei Malaev-Babel’s argument in this, the first English-language monograph to consider Vakhtangov’s life and work as actor and director, teacher and theoretician.

Ranging from Moscow to Israel, from Fantastic Realism to Vakhtangov’s futuristic projection, the theatre of the ‘Eternal Mask’, Yevgeny Vakhtangov: A Critical Portrait:

  • considers his input as one of the original teachers of Stanislavsky’s system, and the complex relationship shared by the two men;
  • reflects on his directorship of the First Studio of the Moscow Art Theatre and the Habima (which was later to become Israel's National Theatre) as well as the Vakhtangov Studio, the institution he established;
  • examines in detail his three final directorial masterpieces, Erick XIV, The Dybbuk and Princess Turandot.

Lavishly illustrated and elegantly conceived, Yevgeny Vakhtangov represents the ideal companion to Malaev-Babel’s Vakhtangov Sourcebook (2011). Together, these important critical interventions reveal Vakhtangov’s true stature as one of the most significant representatives of the Russian theatrical avant-garde.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

Vakhtangov in the twentieth and twenty-first century theatre context: justifying theatre and liberating the actor

part I|42 pages

Vakhtangov's theatrical youth

chapter 1|7 pages

The city of Vladikavkaz

Fathers and sons

chapter 2|2 pages

Freedom and nature

chapter 3|3 pages

Vakhtangov's early theatrical influences

The Brothers Adelgeim

chapter 4|7 pages

To Moscow! To Moscow!

chapter 5|4 pages

Vakhtangov before the MAT

chapter 6|12 pages

Vakhtangov at the Adashev Theatre School

chapter 7|5 pages

Vakhtangov's trips abroad

part II|76 pages

Vakhtangov at the Moscow Art Theatre

chapter 8|5 pages

First meeting with Stanislavsky

chapter 9|4 pages

Gordon Craig and Hamlet at the MAT

chapter 10|4 pages

Novgorod-Seversky enterprise

The art of the provocation

chapter 12|15 pages

Hauptmann's The Festival of Peace

chapter 13|4 pages

Life as creative play

The cultivation of a new man-actor

chapter 14|6 pages

Tackleton

The Cricket on the Hearth

chapter 15|14 pages

The Deluge

chapter 16|4 pages

The end of Leopold Sulerzhitsky

Vakhtangov as the new leader of the First Studio

chapter 17|15 pages

Ibsen's Rosmersholm

part III|37 pages

The Vakhtangov Studio

chapter 18|14 pages

In the beginning, 1913–1915

chapter 19|12 pages

The Vakhtangov Studio crisis, 1916–1919

part IV|19 pages

The Vakhtangov Studio productions

chapter 22|5 pages

Chekhov's The Wedding

part V|53 pages

Three final masterpieces

chapter 23|10 pages

Erik XIV

chapter 24|20 pages

The Dybbuk as the Theatre of Archetypal Gesture

Inventing Hebrew Theatre

chapter 25|21 pages

Princess Turandot

The threshold of creativity, or the making of a new man

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion

Turandot and the Theatre of the Eternal Mask