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Peter Brook's Tempest

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2021

Extract

Peter Brook's “experiment,” as it became known, was originally launched by Jean-Louis Barrault in Paris in May, 1968, under the auspices of the Théâtre des Nations, and later performed in London. Barrault had invited Brook and the Royal Shakespeare Company to organize a company of international artists—actors, directors, scenic designers (including Joe Chaikin, Victor Garcia, and Geoffrey Reeves)—to examine and experiment with some fundamental questions in form: what is theatre, what is a play, what is the relationship of the actor to audience, and what are the conditions which serve all of them best? As a frame of reference for this research, Brook decided to work on ideas from The Tempest. The play appealed to Brook because, according to him, it had always appeared on the stage as something sentimental and pallid.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1969 The Drama Review

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References

1 From my interview with Brook in London, June 1968.