1st Edition

Theatre as a Weapon Workers' Theatre in the Soviet Union, Germany and Britain, 1917–1934

By Richard Stourac, Kathleen McCreery Copyright 1986
354 Pages
by Routledge

354 Pages
by Routledge

354 Pages
by Routledge

Based on theatrical research of unusual depth and enterprise, Theatre as a Weapon (1986) shows how the workers’ theatre of the 1920s and 1930s transformed the social function of theatre. Drawing largely on unpublished sources, it provides lively case studies of workers’ theatre in the USSR, Germany and the United Kingdom. They range from the Russian mass spectacles in front of the Winter... Read more

Part 1. We are the Blue Blouse: Workers’ Theatre in the USSR  1. The Roar of the Dynamo  2. From the Reformers to the Revolutionaries: Sources and Influences  3. Born of the Press  Part 2. Hello! – State Power!: Workers’ Theatre in Germany  4. The Origins of German Agitprop  5. Agitate! A Movement Evolves  6. Propaganda – Coping with the Crisis  7. Towards a Popular Theatre  Part 3. Theatre of Attack: Workers’ Theatre in Britain  8. From Luddite Melodrama to the Workers’ Theatre Movement  9. The Old World’s Crashing…  10. The Heyday of the WTM  11. Return to the Curtain Stage – the Decline of the WTM  12. Achievements and Weaknesses  Part 4. Conclusion  13. Three Movements

Biography

Born and educated in Austria, Richard Stourac was an actor, director, playmaker. He worked extensively in experimental and political theatre, including (in Austria) Die Komödiantien, (in Britain) Agitprop Theatre, Red Ladder Mobile Workers’ Theatre, Broadside Mobile Workers’ Theatre, Alem Fronterias (Portuguese Migrant Workers’ Theatre) and (in West Berlin) Theatermanufaktur. At the time of this book, he was lecturer in drama at the School of Creative and Performing Rights, Polytechnic of Newcastle upon Tyne. Kathleen McCreery was born in Canada, educated in the US, and has worked as an actress, writer, director, journalist, broadcaster and teacher in the US, Austria, Britain and Germany. She helped found the Red Ladder, Broadside and Alem Fronteiras theatre groups, and was tutor/director for Vukani, an anti-apartheid women’s theatre project, and the Lambeth Under-Fives Campaign drama group. At the time of writing this book, she was associate lecturer in drama at the School of Creative and Performing Rights, Polytechnic of Newcastle upon Tyne, where she also teaches creative writing.

Theatre as a Weapon matches the best analytical work in other languages, and is unique in the scope of its coverage. Both theatrically and politically, it is authoritative in its information and trenchant in its analysis.’ – Dr Edward Braun, University of Bristol