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Jacques
Copeau
Biography of a Theater
Maurice
Kurtz
October
ISBN
0-8093-2257-9 / cloth / $34.95s
192 pages / 6 X 9 / 22 b&w illustrations
Theater
The French writer, editor, and drama critic Jacques Copeau (1879-1949)
opened his Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier in Paris in 1913. Copeau
was well on his way to exerting a major influence in the theater in the
year that saw the end of the career of the dominant innovator of an earlier
generation, André Antoine, whose Théâtre Libre (Free
Stage) had featured an uncompromising realism.
In marked contrast to Antoine, Copeau returned the poetry and freshness
to Shakespeare and Moliére. By May 1914, Paris and Europe had recognized
his genius and his special gift to the theater. Yet like Antoine, Copeau
wanted to sweep "staginess" from the stage, to banish overacting,
overdressing, and flashy house trappings. To cleanse the stage of its
artificiality, he created a fixed, architectural acting space where dramatic
literature and theater technique could live in harmony and thrive in freedom
of thought and movement. A major part of his program was teaching actors
and actresses their craft.
Maurice Kurtz points out that the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier
incarnates the "ideal of Copeau's stubborn struggle to remain strong
in the face of indifference, independent in the face of success, proud
in the face of defeat. It is the story of group spirit in its purest,
most eloquent form, the spirit of personal sacrifice of all for the dignity
of their art."
Kurtz here re-creates the vitality Copeau imbued in theater artists throughout
the world. He conveys Copeau's enthusiasm, the crusading spirit that enabled
Copeau and his Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier to transform experimentation
into tradition, into the heritage of civilization. He has written a biography
of a theater that was tremendously influential in Europe and America.
Maurice Kurtz was Erwin Piscator's assistant and dramaturge in
his off-Broadway Studio Theater. He later launched the theater program
at UNESCO, where he proposed the creation of the International Theater
Institute. His plays and adaptations have been produced in New York, England,
France, Belgium, and Switzerland. The Dublin Theatre Festival gave him
an award for the best new play. He lives in Montmartre, France.
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"In
the history of the French theater, there are two periods: before Copeau
and after Copeau."
Albert
Camus
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