ABSTRACT

For literary scholars, plays are texts; for scenographers, plays are performances. Yet clearly a drama is both text and performance. Dramatic Spaces examines period-specific stage spaces in order to assess how design shaped the thematic and experiential dimensions of plays. This book highlights the stakes of the debate about spatiality and the role of the spectator in the auditorium – if audience members are co-creators of the drama, how do they contribute?

The book investigates:

  • Roman comedy and Shakespearean dramas in which the stage-space itself constituted the primary scenographic element and actors’ bodies shaped the playing space more than did sets or props

  • the use of paid applauders in nineteenth-century Parisian theaters and how this practice reconfigured theatrical space

  • transactions between stage designers and spectators, including work by László Moholy-Nagy, William Ritman, and Eiko Ishioka 

Dramatic Spaces aims to do for stage design what reader-response criticism has done for the literary text, with specific case studies on Coriolanus, The Comedy of Errors, Romeo and Juliet, Tales of Hoffman, M. Butterfly and Tiny Alice exploring the audience’s contribution to the construction of meaning.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

chapter |25 pages

Inside the theater

Audience experience at The Menaechmi and The Comedy of Errors

chapter |25 pages

“Bodied forth”

Spectator, stage, and actor in early modern English theaters

chapter |32 pages

Audience performance

The claque in nineteenth-century French theater

chapter |35 pages

How Modernism played in Berlin

Moholy-Nagy's Hoffmann at the Kroll Opera House

chapter |17 pages

Box set to the infinite power

Metatheatricality and set design in Albee's Tiny Alice

chapter |37 pages

Design and double vision

Spectatorial experience and M. Butterfly