The Opera House on the London stage

<p>The staging of drama in the 18th century London theatre was a process very unlike the one of today. While the prompter attended to many production details, there was no direction as such, and there was little consistent centralised control over the performances given by the actors. Further,...

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Main Author: Burden, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
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author Burden, M
author_facet Burden, M
author_sort Burden, M
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description <p>The staging of drama in the 18th century London theatre was a process very unlike the one of today. While the prompter attended to many production details, there was no direction as such, and there was little consistent centralised control over the performances given by the actors. Further, plays, operas, and other genres were often re-worked and re-shaped during the rehearsal process, particularly if it was a new play, or an opera where the singers were exercising ‘choice of book’ by replacing their arias for ones they felt were more suitable.</p> <p>In an environment of such fluidity, little of this practice was the subject of official documentation, and many details have been lost. But the playwright and librettist themselves commented frequently in both spoken plays and opera librettos on the very institutions for which they were writing. This paper selects one drama - The Master of the Opera of 1737 - and choosing four case studies, traces the extent to it can illuminate a number of particular issues of theatrical practice; these include rehearsal procedures, performance conventions, and audience behaviour.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:4375e8ad-fda1-4e58-a166-bc46478bb6f02022-03-26T14:55:30ZThe Opera House on the London stageJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:4375e8ad-fda1-4e58-a166-bc46478bb6f0OperaPerformance18th Century musicEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2010Burden, M<p>The staging of drama in the 18th century London theatre was a process very unlike the one of today. While the prompter attended to many production details, there was no direction as such, and there was little consistent centralised control over the performances given by the actors. Further, plays, operas, and other genres were often re-worked and re-shaped during the rehearsal process, particularly if it was a new play, or an opera where the singers were exercising ‘choice of book’ by replacing their arias for ones they felt were more suitable.</p> <p>In an environment of such fluidity, little of this practice was the subject of official documentation, and many details have been lost. But the playwright and librettist themselves commented frequently in both spoken plays and opera librettos on the very institutions for which they were writing. This paper selects one drama - The Master of the Opera of 1737 - and choosing four case studies, traces the extent to it can illuminate a number of particular issues of theatrical practice; these include rehearsal procedures, performance conventions, and audience behaviour.</p>
spellingShingle Opera
Performance
18th Century music
Burden, M
The Opera House on the London stage
title The Opera House on the London stage
title_full The Opera House on the London stage
title_fullStr The Opera House on the London stage
title_full_unstemmed The Opera House on the London stage
title_short The Opera House on the London stage
title_sort opera house on the london stage
topic Opera
Performance
18th Century music
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