Bibliographische Detailangaben
Beteiligte: Warner, Deborah
In: New Theatre Quarterly, 12, 1996, 47, S. 229-236
veröffentlicht:
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Medientyp: Artikel, E-Artikel

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weitere Informationen
Umfang: 229-236
ISSN: 0266-464X
1474-0613
DOI: 10.1017/s0266464x00010228
veröffentlicht in: New Theatre Quarterly
Sprache: Englisch
Schlagwörter:
Kollektion: Cambridge University Press (CUP) (CrossRef)
Inhaltsangabe

<jats:p>Deborah Warner is one of the most exciting of the generation of directors who emerged during the 'eighties – incidentally claiming for women a natural entrance into a profession previously dominated by men. In 1980 she formed the Kick Theatre Company, with whom over the following, formative years of her career she directed <jats:italic>The Good Person of Szechwan, The Tempest, Measure for Measure, King Lear, Coriolanus</jats:italic>, and <jats:italic>Woyzeck</jats:italic>. In 1988, following a production for the RSC of <jats:italic>Titus Andronicus</jats:italic> in the previous year, she became one of the company's resident directors, staging <jats:italic>King John</jats:italic> and <jats:italic>Electra</jats:italic> before moving in 1990 as an associate director to the National, where her first two productions were of <jats:italic>The Good Person</jats:italic> with Fiona Shaw and <jats:italic>King Lear</jats:italic> with Brian Cox. During the 'nineties, she has extended both the nature and the range of her work, directing Shaw in <jats:italic>Hedda Gabler</jats:italic> in Dublin, <jats:italic>Coriolanus</jats:italic> in German at the Salzburg Festival, <jats:italic>Don Giovanni</jats:italic> at Glyndbourne – and, in 1994–95, the season she discusses below, a revival of Beckett's <jats:italic>Footfalls</jats:italic> at the Garrick, controversially banned by the Beckett Estate, a dramatization of Eliot's seminal inter-war poem <jats:italic>The Waste Land</jats:italic>, premiered in Brussels, <jats:italic>Richard II</jats:italic> at the Cottesloe, with a woman, Fiona Shaw, in the title-role, and a project for the London International Festival of Theatre site-specific to the old railway hotel at St. Pancras. In September 1995 she discussed her recent and future work with Geraldine Cousin, who teaches Theatre Studies in the University of Warwick, where she has just completed a study of contemporary plays by women entitled <jats:italic>Women in Dramatic Place and Time</jats:italic>.</jats:p>