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Italian architecture / set design |
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Time period of French Neo-classical and Eng Restoration Theater |
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King who stressed religious tolerance (his reign lines up with Shakespeare's career) |
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Played the Sun King and patronized Moliere |
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vigorous, imaginative, violent on stage, elaborate language |
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had a stabilizing effect. Orthodoxy of French Culture (women helped to calm it down) |
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the three things that were unified in neo-classical drama |
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wrote Melite, Medee, and Le Cid. a reluctant classicist |
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only wrote 12 plays, including Andromaque, Phedre, and Esther and Athalia. worked with Moliere for a time |
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age 21 announced he'd be an actor. in Jesuit school performed in plays |
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jailed for debts. his dad bailed him out. King Louis patronized him |
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Le Doctor Amoureux, Tartuffe, The Misanthrope. owned the Petit Bourbon |
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1664 french play, provoked controversy, brought back as The Imposter |
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Italian commedia dell-arte |
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the young lover (stock character) |
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year Charles I is executed and theaters officially close |
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"siege of rhodes" guy performed it as an opera to get away with it. later in king's company |
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with Charles II in exile. part of Duke's Men |
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two guys who influenced Brit. Rest. theater |
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type of play that appealed to upper class. it satirized the foppishness of the age. |
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wrote She Would if She Could and Man of Mode |
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wrote The Plain Dealer and The Country Wife |
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wrote Love for Love and The Way of the World |
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Italy -> France -> England |
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_________ -> France -> _________ |
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raked stage, wings, painted backdrop, proscenium arch, players acting on apron |
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common features of brit. rest. theaters |
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King's Servants and Duke's Company |
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English theater built in 1661 |
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Theater Royal in Drury Lane |
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British Theater built in 1672 |
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footlights and chandeliers |
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what were used to light the British rest. theaters |
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big box office draw with a reputation for immorality |
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first professional female English playwright. wrote 17 plays for the stage |
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This century didn't have huge tech improvements or many notable writers, but theater became a major part of society |
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century where actors became more respected, and they searched for more realism. Theaters became a place where political and social ideas were examined |
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A Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage |
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Jeremy Collier wrote this in April 1698 about theater |
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The Licensing Act of 1737 |
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a document that issued restriction on the stage through the Lord Chamberlain's office |
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written by John Gay in 1728 |
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document which permitted anyone to open a theater in Paris |
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wrote The Barber of Seville (1775) and The Marriage of Figero (1781) |
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Leandro Fernandez de Moratin |
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Spaniard who explored ideals of bourgeois morality over aristocratic codes of honor and wrote El Viejo y La Nina (1786) |
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* The Italian aristocratic traditionalist
* Eventually went to Paris |
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o Born in Norway o Prolific writer, especially comedies o Preferred comedies to tragedies |
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o Wrote his own plays o One of them performed Paris and Vienna (BIG DEAL) o Acted in the lead roles of 5 tragedies and several comedies in a two week period o Assassinated at a masked ball |
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1st City Theater of Amsterdam |
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Netherlands/Holland Theater built in 1637 based on Teatro Olimpico in Italy and rebuilt after the fire of 1772 |
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The dungeon scene and the candles (they screened the candles, they caught on fire, bye bye theater) |
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the cause of the fire of 1772 that destroyed the 1st city theater of Amsterdam |
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like Paris, it was a cultural center for music and opera and many of Mozart's works premiered there |
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Gotthold Lessing (1729-1781) |
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# Imitated Shakespeare instead of the France # He adopted blank verse, sounds more human and organic # Ignore neoclassical rules # Influenced Goethe, Schiller, and the German Romantics |
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# Praises the German language # German language became a rallying point for the Germanic people # Theatre, as in France, became a forum for the bourgeois people # The establishment of the 1st German National Theatre in Hamburg (1767)-closed within two years |
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means "storm and stress" in German |
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where the first national german theater was built and closed within 2 years |
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Friedrich Schiller (1759-1805) |
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# Influenced by Shakespeare # Plays filled with emotionalism, Sturm and Drang # Die Rauber (The Robbers) # Highly dramatic situations |
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Wolfgang Goethe (1749-1832) |
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# Great theater practicioner # Prepared actors, developed ensemble spirit # Careful script preparation # A major voice and spark of the Romantic period |
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Continental Congress tried to ban theatre this year |
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Cato (1713) by Joseph Addison |
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Performed at Valley Forge for Washington’s troops (it was General Washington himself that wanted the show) |
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period that stressed social equality and got away from social classes and had an interest in nature and natural patterns instead of structure and order |
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Years of the Wars of Revolution |
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o wrote 200+ plays o Beethoven wrote some incidental music (background music) for him |
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was a well known writer of melodrama alongside Kotzebue |
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key features of melodrama |
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strict moral justice, signature music, real animals onstage, comic relief characters, hero and heroine |
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Supernatural and super-romantic (ruins, mountains, forests, rocky gorges) and Rural landscape (cottage, church, farmers) |
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2 Dominant Settings for Melodrama |
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invented in Paris in the 1840’s (lighting) |
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invented in England in the 1830’s (lighting) |
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18th Century lighting systems |
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* The standard issue melodramatic actor (poster child) * Acted in melodrama for years * Debut as Shylock in London in 1814 * A unique phenomenon or product of his time? * Byron admired him * Coleridge said, “Seeing him act was like reading Shakespeare by flashes of lightning” |
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Edwin Forrest (1806-1872) |
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American writer, wrote Metamora (1829)- about a great Indian chief |
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American actor related to the guy who killed Lincoln |
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Giselle (ballet) and Die Feen (opera) |
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a fairy ballet written in 1814 and a fairy opera written in 1833 |
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A branch of theater influenced by romanticism and exemplified by The Tempest and Midsummer Night's Dream |
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written by Victor Hugo (1830) caused an uproar |
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a number of plays throughout the 1850s based on Uncle Tom's Cabin written in 1852 |
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Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Shows |
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# T.D. Rice wrote it (1828) # Blackface (burnt cork) # Caricature of plantation slaves |
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written by Nikolai Gogol in 1836. it caused an uproar like Hernani in Russia |
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Eugene Scribe (1791-1861) |
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a frenchman. he created the Well made play (complimentary term at first, followed an exact formula) # Careful exposition of the story # Preparation for future events # Mounting Suspense # Unexpected reversals # Logical resolution # wrote 300 plays |
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places in England in the 1850s and 60s for entertainment that came from drinking and music clubs of the 30s and 40s |
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American music halls of the 1870s and 80s from saloons and beer halls |
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Romanticism was short-lived here because government censorship was very strict |
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Ivan Turgenev (1818-1883) |
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he wrote A Month in the Country (1850;1872) |
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contemporary of Ibsen who 'descended into the sewer to bathe in it" |
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Father of Modern Drama who wrote Ghosts and A Doll's House |
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from Sweden. wrote Miss Julie and later became influential in expressionism |
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year that the Puritan Commonwealth collapses |
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themes of restoration comedy |
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class, privilege, manners, sex |
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wrote the newer bourgeois drama in Italy |
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Teatro Italian's director who eventually went to Paris |
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360 separate states here. a place where France influenced everything and it was ruled by frederick the great 1712-1786 |
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neo-classical devotee from Netherlands/Holland |
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Netherlands/Holland guy who was more progressive and sought for realism instead of neo-classical |
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American amateur company that started in Philly and moved to NY in 1750 |
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the American Company of Comedians |
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started as the London Company of Comedians in 1752 but changed its name in 1763 |
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Still Waters Run Deep 1885 |
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an example of the domestic drama about ordinary people in which Alfred Wigan acted |
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time period in which directors began to arise and acting styles were established |
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played 428 roles in 2.5 years |
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year of the unification of german states |
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made the director more powerful and wrote Bayreuth Festspielhaus and made orchestra best seats in the house |
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The Duke of Saxe-Meiningen (1826-1914) |
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great theater enthusiast who toured Europe with his court theater to 38 cities including Moscow and Paris with 41 plays |
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wanted historical accuracy and made ensemble important and influenced Andre Antoine and was seen by Stanislavsky |
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theater known for realism in france (1887) |
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theater known for realism in Berlin (1889) |
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theater known for realism in London (1891) |
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theater known for realism in Moscow (1898) |
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theater known for realism in Provincetown, MA (1915) |
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the Power of Darkness (1888) by Tolstoy and Ghosts (1890) and Wild Duck (1891) by Ibsen |
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landmark naturalistic plays at the Theater Libre |
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opened with Ghosts and George Bernard Shaw was a founding member of this theater. his Widower's House play was shown there. |
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Irish Literary Theater 1899 |
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W.B. Yeats and Edward Martyn were involved with this Irish theater |
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theater in Dublin Ireland 1904 |
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theater in Chicago 1912 with Maurice Brown |
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Susan Glaspell and George Cook |
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moved to NY in 1913 and founded the Washington Square Players in 1914 and had a group named the Provincetown Players |
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Stanislavski and Danchenko |
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met at a cafe in 1897 to discuss principles for a new professional theater |
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started a system of actor training aimed at finding inner truth |
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written by Chekov and stressed symbolism and ambiguity |
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written by Strindberg about expressionism |
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a 1859 work about natural evolution |
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wrote Communist Manifesto about the working class |
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wrote The Interpretation of Dreams in 1899 |
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Symbolism guy. Introspection and subjectivity, evoking states of the mind and emotion |
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The Princess Maleine, The Intruder (1891) and The Blind (1891) are what type of plays? |
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overall set design guy used set and light to create images/impressions |
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written by Alfred Jarry and it had profanity |
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A Dream Play 1902 was forerunner. dream-like visions used in film and theater to this day |
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wrote Salome and The Importance of Being Earnest in 1895 |
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founded Elizabethan Stage Society |
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3 elements in harmony (with set design) |
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ultimate example of director as creative force. had the Deutsches Theater |
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made film version of Midsummer Night's Dream in 1935 |
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playwright/producer friend and assosciate of Shaw who worked with William Poel |
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modern dance, came up with gohos |
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actor - manager started the Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford |
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over dramatic actress who managed a theater in Paris |
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realistic actress who toured with her own company |
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written by Stravinsky in 1913 when expressionism was big |
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wrote The Firebird (1910), which caused a stir and sometimes riots |
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proscenium, chamber, and giant |
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3 theaters of Max Reinhardt |
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