• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: The Titanic of Everyday Life
  • Beteiligte: Schechner, Richard; Winnacker, Susanne
  • Erschienen: MIT Press - Journals, 2004
  • Erschienen in: TDR/The Drama Review
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: 10.1162/105420404772990682
  • ISSN: 1054-2043; 1531-4715
  • Schlagwörter: Literature and Literary Theory ; Visual Arts and Performing Arts
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  • Beschreibung: <jats:p> In this issue's Critical Acts section, a stage is upended, King Lear is played by a cast of women, a director travels to Karbala, and angels perch on window ledges. In Sjoerd Wagenaar's Strakstuk, the entire stage floor tilts, and props, set pieces, and the theatrical frame itself slide away, leaving the actors clinging to bed frames, much as the passengers of the Titanic held on to the rails of the ship as it listed and sank. In the CalArts production of King Lear, Lear was played by an African American woman, yet it had little to do with racial and sexual identity and everything to do with political power, according to Una Chaudhuri. Lear's director, Travis Preston, chronicles a journey to Karbala that greatly influenced his production. And on his journey through Deborah Warner's Angel Project, James Westcott finds that even the most commonplace is made strange by the meticulous choreography of uncertainty. </jats:p>