Oscar Asche : An Edwardian in Transition single work   criticism  
Issue Details: First known date: 1996... 1996 Oscar Asche : An Edwardian in Transition
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'Oscar Asche is one of a number of Edwardian actor-managers who have been largely ignored by theatre historians in favour of the dominant figure of Herbert Beerbohm-Tree. Asche was one of that generation of directors, which also included Lewis Waller, Sir John Martin-Harvey, and Arthur Bourchier, who regarded the staging of pictorial productions of Shakespeare as a sign of status – a claim to be taken seriously in his profession. He had an adventurous career, representative in many respects of the energy and enterprise that characterized the Edwardian theatre – yet his work also exemplified attitudes and practices that would be discounted by a generation of playgoers enthused by different ways of interpreting Shakespearean drama, a new theatrical aesthetic, and the broader social and educational aims of the non-commercial stage. After his death in 1936, he was remembered more as the author of one of the new century's most successful romantic fantasies – Chu Chin Chow – than as a Shakespearean actor-manager.'

Source: Abstract.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon New Theatre Quarterly vol. 12 no. 47 August 1996 12804529 1996 periodical issue 1996 pg. 216-228
Last amended 25 Jan 2018 10:05:46
216-228 Oscar Asche : An Edwardian in Transitionsmall AustLit logo New Theatre Quarterly
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