865 resultados para Festival Theatre
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O presente Trabalho de Projecto assenta na análise da programação e da evolução espacial e temporal do Festival Internacional de Teatro de Almada, de modo a perceber quais as linhas gerais em que se baseia a sua programação. Procura-se perceber, ao longo do trabalho, de que forma o Festival se ligou à cidade de Almada, contribuindo para a sua evolução ao nível de equipamentos culturais, recuperação urbanística e reestruturação da esfera pública. A par destes assuntos, dá-se conta igualmente da expansão geográfica do Festival de Almada para cidades como Lisboa e Porto, tentando-se perceber o que esteve nas bases da mesma e de que forma o Festival equilibrou esta necessidade de crescimento com a manutenção do vínculo com Almada.
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the music (composed expressly for the Pyne and Harrison English opera Company) by M. W. Balfe. [Text] by A. Harris and E. Falconer
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História e caracterização do Festival de Internacional de Teatro de Almada.
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Crítica de teatro a vários espectaculos apresentados em festivais em Yerevan, Arménia, e no Rio de Janeiro, Brasil.
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Portefólio da história do Alkantara Festival (1993-2014).
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From 1991, when the Dublin Gate Theatre launched their Samuel Beckett Festival featuring nineteen of Beckett’s stage plays, to more recent years, the Gate dominated Irish productions of Beckett’s theater. The Gate Beckett Festival was remounted in 1996 at the Lincoln Center, New York, and at the Barbican Centre, London, in 1999, and individual or grouped productions have toured regularly since then in Ireland and internationally. However, since the Irish premiere of Waiting of Godot at the Pike Theatre in 1955, in addition to several Beckett plays mounted by the National Theatre, many independent Irish theater companies, such as Focus Theatre, Druid Theatre, and more recently Pan Pan Theatre, Blue Raincoat Theatre, The Corn Exchange, and Company SJ (under director Sarah Jane Scaife), have produced Beckett’s drama. While acknowledging earlier Irish productions, this essay will consider the role of the Dublin Gate Beckett Festival and the Beckett Centenary celebrations in Dublin in 2006 in greatly enhancing the marketability of Beckett’s work, and will discuss the proliferation of productions of Beckett’s stage plays (as opposed to stage adaptations of the prose work, which is a topic for another essay) in the independent theater sector in the Republic of Ireland since 2006. In addition to giving an overview of these recent productions, the essay will consider some issues at stake in creating or constructing performance histories
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View to theatre from landscape.
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View to theatre from landscape.
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View to theatre from landscape.
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View of carved king post.
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View of seating area from theatre interior.
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View of carved king post from interior.
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View to underside of thatched roof with king post and bracing.
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Recognition is the aim of this account of an artist who is now remembered largely for her beauty, her wide iconic fame achieved by mass distribution of her image via photography and postcards, and her professional association with a internationally prominent producer who was also her husband. It is however a historically situated study, confining itself to readings of the kind of theatrical, social and cultural work performed by Brayton's presence in a rapidly-modernising Australia during the period between Federation in 1901 and the first World War, which event marks a disjuncture in the patterns of entertainment and cultural discourse in the new nation. Pre-war Australian theatre and vaudeville managements competed vigorously to secure the most acclaimed artists, seeing it as a kind of service and duty to boost their country's prestige along with their own coffers. Meanwhile, local playwrights and producers promoted a burgeoning repertoire of Australian dramas and films which played alongside the imported products in a complex network of cultural codes and affects.