1st Edition

The Second Wave (Routledge Revivals) British Drama for the Seventies

By John Russell Taylor Copyright 2014
    242 Pages
    by Routledge

    238 Pages
    by Routledge

    In the 1970s the revolution that had swept the British theatre in the 1950s had already become accepted as the new establishment. Areas that had been previously regarded as remote ideals - including permanent repertory companies, a lively provincial theatre and an extensive spread of avant-garde and fringe theatrical activities - were now considered commonplace. In this title, first published in 1971, John Russell Taylor assesses the prospects of the British theatre at the start of the 1970s and indicates its points of weakness and its strengths. In this context are placed the key figures among the second wave of dramatists, and detailed critical commentaries on the work of writers such as David Mercer, Tom Stoppard and Peter Terson. This is an indispensable introduction for any student with an interest in the history and development of the British theatre and the people who have played instrumental roles in this.

    Newer than New;  Peter Nichols;  David Mercer;  Charles Wood;  Edward Bond;  Tom Stoppard;  Peter Terson;  Joe Orton;  David Story;  Three Farceurs: Allan Ayckbourn,  David Gregan,  Simon Gray;  Three Social Realists:  John Hopkins, Alan Plater, Cecil P. Taylor;  The Legacy of Realism: William Corlett, Kevin Laffan, Christopher Hampton, Barry England, Anthony Shaffer, Robert Shaw, David Caute;  The Dark Fantastic: Peter Barnes, Colin Spencer, David Pinner, David Selbourne, David Hare, Roger Milner, David Halliwell, Howard Brenton, Heathcote Williams;  Epilogue;  Bibliography of Playscripts

    Biography

    Taylor, John Russell