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Full Description
Bertolt Brecht's epic theatre sought to change how spectators watched performances, equipping them to critique and intervene in the world outside the theatre. Taking its cue from his call for theatre to develop 'the art of spectatorship', this major new study explores vision, observation, and spectatorship in twelve of his plays, spanning his career. It relates this analysis to Brecht's own formative experiences of spectatorship, to his poems and theories, and to productions directed by Brecht and his close collaborators. Finally, it investigates Brecht's attempts to transform the composition of the audience and cultivate critical spectatorship at the Berliner Ensemble, the theatre he founded with his wife, the actor Helene Weigel, in East Berlin after the Second World War.
Brecht's plays foreground scenarios in which watching matters, as characters witness acts of injustice, watch trials or punishments, engage in surveillance, or observe scientific experiments. These instances of onstage spectatorship play a key role in Brecht's drive to transform the viewing practices of the theatre audience, showing the audience what characters notice, what they overlook, and how they use or ignore the knowledge that they have gained through spectatorship. Drawing on archival material and sources that have previously been rarely consulted, Laura Bradley shows how Brecht and his close collaborators - Erich Engel, Benno Besson, Peter Palitzsch, and Manfred Wekwerth - dealt with onstage spectatorship in performance, presenting characters as observers and spectators from whom the theatre audience should learn. By combining analysis of text, performance, and reception, Brecht and the Art of Spectatorship provides rich insights into Brecht's plays, rehearsal methods, and stagings, and the experiences of spectators at productions of his plays in the Weimar Republic, in exile, and in the GDR.
Contents
Introduction
1: Exploring Spectatorship: Brecht and Baal
2: Stop That Romantic Staring! Drums in the Night and The Threepenny Opera
3: Turning Spectators into Producers: The Lehrstück
4: Everyday Theatre and the Art of Observation: The Mother, The Caucasian Chalk Circle, and Saint Joan of the Stockyards
5: Watching the Third Reich: Fear and Misery and Arturo Ui
6: Blindness and (In)Sight: The Life of Galileo, Mother Courage and her Children, and The Good Person of Szechwan
7: Building New Audiences at the Berliner Ensemble
Conclusion: The Playwright as Spectator



