Modern Playhouses
An Architectural History of Britain's New Theatres, 1945 -- 1985
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:22nd Mar '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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- Paperback£37.99(9780198864080)
Modern Playhouses is the first detailed study of the major programme of theatre-building which took place in Britain between the 1950s and the 1980s. Drawing on a vast range of archival material - much of which had never previously been studied by historians - it sets architecture in a wide social and cultural context, presenting the history of post-war theatre buildings as a history of ideas relating not only to performance but also to culture, citizenship, and the modern city. During this period, more than sixty major new theatres were constructed in locations from Plymouth to Inverness, Aberystwyth to Ipswich. The most prominent example was the National Theatre in London, but the National was only the tip of the iceberg. Supported in many cases by public subsidies, these buildings represented a new kind of theatre, conceived as a public service. Theatre was ascribed a transformative role, serving as a form of 'productive' recreation at a time of increasing affluence and leisure. New theatres also contributed to debates about civic pride, urbanity, and community. Ultimately, theatre could be understood as a vehicle for the creation of modern citizens in a consciously modernizing Britain. Through their planning and appearance, new buildings were thought to connote new ideas of theatre's purpose. In parallel, new approaches to staging and writing posed new demands of the auditorium and stage. Yet while recognizing, as contemporaries did, that the new theatres of the post war decades represented change, Modern Playhouses also asks how radically different these buildings really were, and what their 'mainstream' architecture reveals of the history of modern British architecture, and of post-war Britain.
a highly nuanced account of the welfare state and its architecture a substantial addition to a growing scholarship concerned with the impact of affluence, and perceived affluence, on shaping post-war government policy * Social History *
Alistair Fair knows this by-way of 20th century British history better than anyone, and has ransacked the archives to produce an excellent, thorough, and scholarly survey of it * C20 Magazine *
an essential record of how we got to where we are * Sightline *
- Winner of Shortlisted for the 2019 Alice Davis Hitchcock Medallion of the Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain, for the best book published about UK architectural history or by a UK scholar Shortlisted for The Society for Theatre Research Book Prize.
ISBN: 9780198807476
Dimensions: 240mm x 164mm x 25mm
Weight: 632g
312 pages