Inicio > Literatura y estudios literarios > Obras de teatro, textos teatrales > Bloody Broadway - Plays of Menace, Murder, and Mystery - Volume 1 1900-1930
Bloody Broadway - Plays of Menace, Murder, and Mystery - Volume 1  1900-1930

Bloody Broadway - Plays of Menace, Murder, and Mystery - Volume 1 1900-1930

Amnon Kabatchnik

38,28 €
IVA incluido
Disponible
Editorial:
BearManor Media
Año de edición:
2025
Materia
Obras de teatro, textos teatrales
ISBN:
9798887718125
38,28 €
IVA incluido
Disponible

Selecciona una librería:

  • Librería Samer Atenea
  • Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
  • Kálamo Books
  • Librería Perelló (Valencia)
  • Librería Elías (Asturias)
  • Donde los libros
  • Librería Kolima (Madrid)
  • Librería Proteo (Málaga)

The entity known as Broadway began with several stage contributions by the American playwright-actor-director William Gillette. Gillette’s major success was Sherlock Holmes, a compilation of half-a-dozen short stories by Arthur Conan Doyle into a cohesive plot line. It played at Manhattan’s Garrick Theatre, garnered positive reviews, and ran for 256 performances. During the decade of 1900-1910, a number of prolific melodramatists whipped up various four-act plays featuring plays of crime and punishment populated by flamboyant villains, brawny heroes, and damsels in distress. Hal Reid’s heroines went through dangerous cliffhangers. Clyde Fitch introduced elements that became hallmarks of detective fiction - the innocent party entrapped by circumstantial evidence as a murder suspect, the lack of alibi, and the sharp cross-examination of the suspect before the attorney of the defense agrees to take on the case. In Owen Davis’s Nellie, the Beautiful Cloak Girl (1906), an inheritor of a fortune goes through a series of attempts on her life, by knives, pistols, and bombs. George M. Cohan set the frightening action of Seven Keys to Baldpate (1913) in a vacant lodge during a stormy night. Elmer Rice inserted in On Trial (1914) cinematic flashbacks to cover the events that preceded a murder trial. John Willard was hailed for the ingenious use of secret panels and sliding doors in The Cat and the Canary (1922).Acts of crime began to emerge in the works of notable playwrights, albeit in a more subtle approach-August Strindberg, Maxim Gorky, Bertolt Brecht-providing psychological insights. From England came to Broadway plays of betrayal, violence, and detection by W. Somerset Maugham, J. B. Priestley, and Daphne du Maurier, followed by the French Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus and Jean Genet, the Hungarian Laszlo Fodor, the German Ernst Toller, the Spanish Garcia Lorca, and the Italian Ugo Betti.Also, mixing their ink with blood were the American novelists Damon Runyon, James Baldwin, Arthur Miller, and William Faulkner, as well as the Nobel Prize winners Eugene O’Neil, John Steinbeck, and Ernest Hemingway.The book’s entries are presented chronologically and include a plot synopsis, production data, opinions by critics, and biographical sketches of playwrights and key actors-directors.Amnon Kabatchnik, now retired, was a professor of theater at SUNY Binghamton, Stanford University, Ohio State University, and Elmira College. He directed numerous dramas, comedies, thrillers, and musicals in New York and across the United States. He is the author of Sherlock Holmes on the Stage, Courtroom Dramas on the Stage, Horror on the Stage, Murder in the East End, as well as the seven-volume series, Blood on the Stage.

Artículos relacionados

  • What Really Goes on in the Workplace
    Sharon Ford
    What really goes on in the workplace is about strippers, prostitutes, pimps, drugs, marital affairs and just plain old drama. It doesn't matter your age: race, or gender, drama is still drama. 3 ...
    Disponible

    21,81 €

  • Finding Kate
    Maryanne Fantalis
    Kathryn’s strong will and sharp tongue have branded her a shrew in her small town.Now, not even the generous dowry offered by her wealthy father can tempt any man to court her. But when Sir William rides into town on his magnificent war horse, Kathryn’s world turns upside down.William is like a burr in Kathryn’s side from the very beginning. Even the way he insists on calling h...
    Disponible

    22,50 €

  • Mississippi Goddamn
    Jonathan Norton
       “Some shows have warnings for strobe lights. Some have them for loud gunshots.  Some for smoke.   MISSISSIPPI GODDAMN, a new play by Jonathan Norton should have one for intensity.   Granted, anyone attending a play about civil rights pioneer Medgar Evers set in 1963 Jackson, Mississippi, should expect some strife. Blood in the battle for racial equality is no surprise, but f...
    Disponible

    17,87 €

  • The Lady From Maxim’s
    Georges Feydeau / Laurence Senelick
       “It seems to me that for fertility in droll inventions, the perpetual outpouring of unforeseen misunderstandings, for the inexhaustible gaiety of dialogue, Feydeau’s new play is superior to everything he’s written so far. The most astonishing thing is the sureness with which everything is controlled, explained, justified, in the most extravagant buffoonery. The cross-purpose...
    Disponible

    21,85 €

  • Fit For A Queen
    Betty Shamieh
       “Plenty of glamorous backstabbing, diva dissing and sexual double-crossing…has every right to claim the name Dynasty for itself.  But the title character in Betty Shamieh’s bouncy, bumpy comic melodrama is the real thing. A queen, I mean, and not just of the self-dramatizing type. Scratch that. She’s more than a queen. She’s a pharaoh, one Hatshepsut, who reigned over Egypt ...
    Disponible

    17,30 €

  • Who’s Holiday!
    Matthew Lombardo
       “A raunchy riff on Dr Seuss’s yuletide tale… The little tyke has become a bottle-blonde adult who spends her days in a trailer appointed with Airstream functionality and seasonal kitsch…brassy, very funny…a holiday offering that dirties up Christmas while ultimately reveling in its spirit.” Elisabeth Vincentelli, New York Times   “This irreverent, adults-only sequel…dares to...
    Disponible

    18,16 €

Otros libros del autor

  • Bloody Broadway - Plays of Menace, Murder, and Mystery - Volume 1 1900-1930
    Amnon Kabatchnik
    The entity known as Broadway began with several stage contributions by the American playwright-actor-director William Gillette. Gillette’s major success was Sherlock Holmes, a compilation of half-a-dozen short stories by Arthur Conan Doyle into a cohesive plot line. It played at Manhattan’s Garrick Theatre, garnered positive reviews, and ran for 256 performances. During the dec...
  • Murder in the West End Volume II (hardback)
    Amnon Kabatchnik
    During the first two decades of the twentieth century, only a few criminous plays premiered in London’s West End. The Tragedy of Nan (1908), by John Masefield, is the story of Nan Hardwick, whose father was hung for stealing sheep and she moves in with her uncle, William Pargetter, a farmer. Soon Nan finds herself under the yoke of Pargetter’s shrewish wife and gossipy daughter...
  • Murder in the West End Volume II
    Amnon Kabatchnik
    During the first two decades of the twentieth century, only a few criminous plays premiered in London’s West End. The Tragedy of Nan (1908), by John Masefield, is the story of Nan Hardwick, whose father was hung for stealing sheep and she moves in with her uncle, William Pargetter, a farmer. Soon Nan finds herself under the yoke of Pargetter’s shrewish wife and gossipy daughter...
    Disponible

    43,54 €

  • Murder in the West End
    Amnon Kabatchnik
    During the first two decades of the twentieth century, only a few criminous plays premiered in London’s West End. The Tragedy of Nan (1908), by John Masefield, is the story of Nan Hardwick, whose father was hung for stealing sheep and she moves in with her uncle, William Pargetter, a farmer. Soon Nan finds herself under the yoke of Pargetter’s shrewish wife and gossipy daughter...
    Disponible

    41,24 €

  • Murder in the West End (hardback)
    Amnon Kabatchnik
    During the first two decades of the twentieth century, only a few criminous plays premiered in London’s West End. The Tragedy of Nan (1908), by John Masefield, is the story of Nan Hardwick, whose father was hung for stealing sheep and she moves in with her uncle, William Pargetter, a farmer. Soon Nan finds herself under the yoke of Pargetter’s shrewish wife and gossipy daughter...
  • Courtroom Dramas on the Stage Vol 2
    Amnon Kabatchnik
    Volume 2 concentrates on trial plays mounted in the twentieth century. The first decade featured notable dramas by Leo Tolstoy (The Living Corpse, Russia, 1900), Alexander Bisson (Madame X, France, 1908), and John Galsworthy (Justice, England, 1910). The trend continued with authors of the main stream penning plays populated with judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, jurors, ...
    Disponible

    38,00 €