
Subscription Theater
Description
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Subscription Theater points to the importance of printed ephemera such as programs, tickets, and prospectuses in questioning any assumption that theatrical collectivity is confined to the live performance event. Drawing on new media as well as old, Franks uses a database of over 23,000 stage productions to reveal that subscribers introduced nearly a third of the plays that were most frequently revived between 1890 and the mid-twentieth century, as well as nearly half of all new translations, and they were instrumental in staging the work of such writers as Shaw and Ibsen, whose plays featured subscription lists as a plot point or prop. Although subscribers often are blamed for being a conservative force in theater, Franks demonstrates that they have been responsible for how we value audience and repertoire today, and their history offers a new account of the relationship between ephemera, drama, and democracy.
Reviews / Votes
"Drama and theater scholars will find much to admire in Franks's Subscription Theater...The book is bold in its claims, careful in its argumentation, and self-aware in its practice. Even those readers who will perhaps have anticipated the claim that theatrical ephemera are not, in fact, ephemeral will come away with new methods for reading a multimedia archive and new ways to approach performance events through a material apparatus. Readers will also come away with an expanded sense of the literary and of the ways in which Victorian and Edwardian theatergoers made theater-and themselves." (Victorian Studies) "Matthew Franks convincingly argues that subscription underlay the development of theater audience and repertoire in the modern period. His conclusions are original and make a substantial contribution to both theater history and print culture studies." (Elizabeth Carolyn Miller, University of California, Davis) "Matthew Franks offers valuable knowledge about the wider cultural context-social as well as artistic-of British and Irish Edwardian 'new' drama and stagecraft, the regional repertory movement, and the widespread phenomenon of amateur theater. His methodological focus on printed ephemera presents exciting new ways of thinking about documentary evidence in theater history." (Claire Cochrane, University of Worcester)More details
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Content
Chapter 1. Private Subscription: The Incorporated Stage Society and Ephemeral Repertoire
Chapter 2. Public Subscription: Audience Impressions in Dublin, Glasgow, and Liverpool##
Chapter 3. Subscription On and Beyond the Stage
Chapter 4. Affiliative Subscription: Paying to Play with Amateur Groups
Chapter 5. Virtual Subscription: The Mask as Readers' Theater
Epilogue. Subscribe Now
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
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