directing
directing the art of leading dramatic performances on the stage or in films. The modern theatrical director is in complete charge of all the artistic aspects of a dramatic presentation.
It is the director's first task to discover a central mood or idea in the text of the play to be performed that will serve as a unifying determinant for the interpretation of individual scenes and characters. Then he or she must work out the movement of the actors on stage and the pacing of each line and scene. Finally, the director helps plan the lighting, scenery, sound effects, and musical accompaniment for the production. All the director's efforts are aimed at creating a fully unified aesthetic experience.
For information on motion picture directing, see motion pictures ; motion picture photography . See also drama, Western ; Asian drama ; theater ; acting ; scene design and stage lighting .
Evolution of Modern Directing
Directing in some form has always existed in the theater. In ancient Greece playwrights trained their chorus and actors, and medieval religious plays had either individual or group directors. During later centuries the stage manager was the forerunner of the director. In England, Madame Vestris and W. C. Macready were the first to place great emphasis on the importance of rehearsing, and they also introduced realistic scenery and acting techniques. The 19th-century interest in realism, coupled with far-reaching technical advances, made indispensable the director's function of integrating the various and increasingly complex aspects of play production.
Approaches to Directing
The beginning of modern directing is commonly associated with the Meiningen Players , a German acting troupe organized in 1874 by George II, duke of Saxe-Meiningen. Under the direction of Ludwig Chronegk, the group worked as a unit, setting an influential example of effective ensemble playing. Leading realistic directors of the late 19th cent. included André Antoine in France, Otto Brahm in Germany, and Constantin Stanislavsky in Russia. The most innovative of these was probably Stanislavsky, who stressed ensemble acting and the importance of actors' absolute identification with their roles.
Almost as soon as realism gained ascendancy, various antirealistic theatrical movements developed, beginning with Paul Fort's Théâtre d'Art (1890). The theories of Adolphe Appia in Germany and Edward Gordon Craig in England encouraged European directors to experiment with symbolic settings. Even conservative directors such as Harley Granville-Barker and Jacques Copeau soon realized that a realistic setting was not essential to the true rendering of a play's meaning.
In addition to producing increased artistic possibilities for directors, the rise of antirealism made the director's practical task of coordinating scene design, lighting, and acting even more essential. A director who experimented successfully with both realism and antirealism was the German Max Reinhardt . Noted for his extravagant productions, he tried to remove the barrier between actors and audience by projecting the stage into the audience and scattering actors among the spectators.
During the 1920s there were several important antirealist directors working in Germany and the Soviet Union, notably Vsevolod Meyerhold , Alexander Tairov, and Erwin Piscator . A disciple of Reinhardt, Piscator worked with the playwright Bertolt Brecht , whose theories have greatly influenced 20th-century theater. In order to emphasize the social and intellectual content of Brecht's plays, Piscator utilized stylized settings and mechanical devices such as motion pictures. Brecht wished to insure the intellectual receptiveness of his audience by making it continually aware that it was watching a play, not reality. To this end he and Piscator took the opposite of the Stanislavsky technique and schooled their actors to alienate themselves from their roles.
During the 19th and early 20th cent., the American theater was dominated by directors specializing in elaborate surface realism, with David Belasco as their prototype. A break from that tendency was made by the Group Theatre (1931-41), with Cheryl Crawford, Lee Strasberg , and Harold Clurman directing plays of social significance and promulgating Stanislavsky's theories of acting. Strasberg's Actors' Studio has produced several generations of theater and film actors devoted to the Stanislavsky technique. Enormous emotional expressiveness was also elicited by José Quintero in his direction of actors at New York's Circle in the Square and in Poland by Jerzy Grotowski in his sparely experimental productions at Wrocław's Polish Laboratory Theatre.
During the 1950s and 60s the emergence of the theater of the absurd and the theater of cruelty granted directors more scope than ever. Many directors, among them Peter Brook , began incorporating music, acrobatics, dance, film, and mime into their productions, whether the plays being performed were by Beckett, Stoppard, or Shakespeare. Theatrical happenings and the orgiastic productions of Julian Beck 's Living Theater—replete with audience participation—may be viewed either as giving the director unlimited freedom or as eliminating his function altogether.
The director was commonly of prime importance in the theatrical productions of the late 20th cent. In the Brooks tradition, a number of directors, including America's Peter Sellars, Germany's Peter Stein, France's Ariane Mnouchine, and Poland's Tadeusz Kantor, put their individual and innovative creative stamps on classical and contemporary works. A wide range of approaches and preoccupations characterized late 20th-century directors, including the social concerns of such figures as Brazil's Augusto Boal and Russia's Lev Dodin; the experimentalism of such writer-directors as America's Robert Wilson and Maria Irene Fornes, Canada's Robert Lepage, and Japan's Shuji Terayama; and the varied techniques of such other prominent directors as Jonathan Miller (Great Britain), Yukio Ninagawa (Japan), Lluís Pasqual (Spain), and Julie Taymore (United States).
Bibliography
See E. G. Craig, The Art of the Theatre (1905) and Towards a New Theatre (1913); C. Stanislavsky, My Life in Art (1948); N. Marshall, The Producer and the Play (2d ed. 1962); T. Cole and H. K. Chinov, ed., Directors on Directing (1963); H. Clurman, On Directing (1972); E. Braun, The Director and the Stage (1982); W. Bell, Sense of Direction (1984); A. Bartow, The Dirctor's Voice (1988); D. Bradby and D. Williams, Directors' Theatre (1988); L. E. Catron, The Director's Vision (1989); A. Dean, The Fundamentals of Play Directing (5th ed. 1989); W. J. Robert, Directing in the Theatre (2d ed. 1993); J. W. Frick and S. M. Vallillo, ed., Theatrical Directors (1994); J. Luere and S. Berger, ed., Playwright vs. Director (1994); M. M. Delgado and P. Heritage, ed., In Contact with the Gods?: Directors Talk Theatre (1997).
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Historic renovation returns downtown theater to roaring '20s glory: long-forgotten building opening to audiences this year after $26m makeover.(STRUCTURES)(Balboa Theatre)
Magazine article from: San Diego Business Journal; 5/28/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...to privately renovate, the theater will remain a public asset...efforts to restore the historic theater, which is listed in the National...short until the CCDC board of directors authorized the renovation...along with renovation of the theaters plumbing, electricity, heating...to Robert Mather, ...
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Wildish theater nears first curtain call.(Arts & Literature)(The 284-seat venue will open its doors Nov. 2 for a high school performance)
Newspaper article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR); 9/11/2006; 601 words
; ...classroom space, school director Mike Fisher said. The theater will continue to be used...in town. The refurbished theater is touted as a development...Chamber of Commerce executive director and a member of the community theater's board of directors. People are going to be pleasantly ...
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Foothills selling all but memories; Theater going out of business.(LOCAL NEWS)
Newspaper article from: Telegram & Gazette (Worcester, MA); 5/31/2009; 641 words
; ...Dykstra, drama director of Whitinsville...well. Her school's theater productions are...of hundreds of theaters nationally that...Greenham, producing director of the Theater at Monmouth, a...purchasing for the Theater at Monmouth, Maine...is a producing director. PHOTOG: T&G ...
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Hanover sets stage for March 14 opening; Backers hope theater spurs downtown renaissance.(NEWS)
Newspaper article from: Telegram & Gazette (Worcester, MA); 1/13/2008; 700+ words
; ...on track for a March 14 grand opening of the renovated theater, possibly with singer James Taylor as the inaugural act...into restaurants and other businesses for the upscale theater crowd - which, if plans come to fruition, would fulfill theater backers' dreams of a renaissance in the downtown ...
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Major surgery for the Bolshoi Theater.(Dance Matters)(renovation)
Magazine article from: Dance Magazine; 12/1/2004; ; 459 words
; ...returned to their upright position. During this period, the theater's front entrance will be closed and visitors will gain...suitable temporary performance venue, have caused the theater to delay its massive reconstruction plans. Though problems...acquiring a satisfactory provisional stage persist, the ...
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Small stages face new challenges drawing audiences in the shadows of media giants. (small theater productions in Los Angeles) (Special Report: Entertainment)
Magazine article from: Los Angeles Business Journal; 4/9/1990; ; 700+ words
; ...city to the stage. Theater is doing wonderfully...Evelyn Rudie, artistic director of the Santa Monica...Lyman, owner of the Directors' Theater, a 50-seat playhouse...Rushfield, executive director of the Theater League Alliance, the...
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Theater fills need in town, region.
Newspaper article from: Telegram & Gazette (Worcester, MA); 5/14/2009; 457 words
; ...fully equipped, professional theater, said Deanna S. Swan, program director at Southgate at Shrewsbury...shows. Ms. Swan said the theater was previously used as a...because you stop playing.' The theater is open to the public. Tickets...Swan, left, the program director at Southgate at ...
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First year a Wildish success.(City/Region)(The Springfield theater isn't yet turning a profit, but organizers expect that will soon change)
Newspaper article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR); 12/7/2007; 700+ words
; ...million in grants and donations to open the Wildish theater in October 2006. Overall, I think we've done extremely...Oregon Mozart Players, the Eugene Concert Choir and Dance Theater of Oregon. The cozy, 284-seat theater is becoming known for its impressive acoustics, inexpensive...it would take two ...
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Council gives tax break to theater for 7 years; Opening of Hanover is set for March 25.(LOCAL NEWS)
Newspaper article from: Telegram & Gazette (Worcester, MA); 12/4/2007; 549 words
; ...Southbridge Street that will save the theater - scheduled to open in March - about...an obviously relieved Troy Siebels, theater executive director, said after the council unanimously...federal loan guarantee for the 2,300 seat theater, a former stage and movie house now undergoing major ...
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Nonprofit status nearly a reality for Wildish Theater.(Government Local)(The school board OKs an agreement among the district, the city and Willamalane to erase the community site's debt)(Theater review)
Newspaper article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR); 7/29/2008; 522 words
; ...establishing a new, nonprofit corporation to operate the theater. The Springfield School Board's unanimous vote Monday...Renaissance Development Corporation, which opened the theater in 2006. The City Council and the Willamalane board...have an interest in seeing the ongoing success of the theater and ...
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John Frankenheimer
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...of the early 1960s, he got his start directing live television dramas in the 1950s and...completed, he decided to pursue his goal of directing. Returning to the East Coast, Frankenheimer...There, left the show to begin a film directing career in 1954, Frankenheimer was promoted...
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William Wyler
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
William Wyler Whether directing motion pictures depicting heart-stopping...reel Western Crook Buster, before directing his first feature-length film, Lazy...spent part of the World War II years directing documentaries. He traveled to Europe...
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George Cukor
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...1960s.He won an Academy Award in 1964 for directing the musical My Fair Lady. Theatrically...five times for Academy Awards for his directing. From Stage to Screen Cukor was born...That year, Cukor did most of the actual directing, but was not so credited, on One Hour...
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Seidelman, Susan
Dictionary entry from: International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers
...feature, Smithereens , 1982; began directing episodes of the television series Sex in the City , 1998; began directing episodes of the television series...Angeles), August 1995. * * * Prior to directing Smithereens , her breakthrough independent...
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Commitment
Encyclopedia entry from: West's Encyclopedia of American Law
COMMITMENT Proceedings directing the confinement of a mentally ill or incompetent person for treatment. Pursuant to statutory and case law, due process protections...
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