Overview
In The Theory of the Modern Stage, leading drama critic, Eric Bentley,
brings together landmark writings by dramatists, directors and thinkers
who have had a profound effect on the theatre since the mid nineteenth
century, from Adolphe Appia to Emile Zola. Here, Antonin Artaud sets out
a manifesto for a Theatre of Cruelty, Bertolt Brecht discusses the
tension between entertainment and instruction in experimental drama and
Bernard Shaw defends himself as a realist, while W. B.
Yeats
describes the creation of a People's Theatre. The ideas of theatre's
great makers are revealed by their best expositors, as Eric Bentley
writes about Stanislavsky belief in the importance of emotional memory
when creating a dramatic role and Arthur Symons considers Richard Wagner
and the relationship between genius, art and nature.