1st Edition

Contemporary Mise en Scène Staging Theatre Today

By Patrice Pavis Copyright 2013
384 Pages
by Routledge

384 Pages
by Routledge

384 Pages
by Routledge

  ‘We have good reason to be wary of mise en scène, but that is all the more reason to question this wariness ... it seems that images from a performance come back to haunt us, as if to prolong and transform our experience as spectators, as if to force us to rethink the event, to return to our pleasure or our terror.’ – Patrice Pavis, from the foreword Contemporary Mise en Scène is... Read more
1 Where did mise en scène come from? 2 On the frontiers of mise en scène 3 The difference between mise en scène and performance 4 Tendencies in French scenography 5 The mise en jeu of contemporary texts 6 The intercultural trap: rituality and mise en scène in the video art of Guillermo Gómez-Peña 7 Theatre in another culture: a Korean example 8 Media on the stage 9 The deconstruction of postmodern mise en scène 10 Physical theatre and the dramaturgy of the actor 11 The splendour and the misery of interpreting the classics 12 Staging calamity: mise en scène and performance at Avignon 2005 13 Conclusions: Where is mise en scène going?

Biography

Patrice Pavis is Professor of Theatre Studies at the University of Kent. He was formerly Professor of Theatre Studies at Paris VIII University. His Dictionary of the Theatre has been published in 30 different languages.

'The topic of this book formed the basis of a series of ten lectures given by Pavis at the University of Kent in 2005 whilst he was in residence as Leverhulme Visiting Professor. The lectures were insightful, comprehensive, entertaining and remarkably witty: words which well describe this extremely important book...Pavis has a truly remarkable ability to simultaneously describe, analyze and evaluate performance practice – at once the naïve audience member and the supreme analytical and critical theoretician...As this persistent and tireless lexicographer deconstructs, anatomizes and rebuilds various understandings and possibilities of mise en scène, the truly awe-inspiring range and breadth of the book is revealed.  The possibilities of mise en scène emerge as the social, cultural and artistic energy behind making theatre and performance; in effect the phrase takes on the qualities of an active verb – ‘to theatre’. This analysis is undertaken with tremendous energy, enthusiasm and optimism, but also with a gentle humility that is constantly aware of the fundamental ephemerality and transience of theory.' Christopher Baugh, Studies in Theatre and Performance

"French theatre semiotician Patrice Pavis reminds us that despite its emergence from the histories of directing and scenography, mise en scène is “an abstract, theoretical notion, not a concrete and empirical one” (4), and it is worth revisiting its legacies in this postdramatic age." - Jeanmarie Higgins, Theatre Journal