Abstract
‘Verbatim Theatre’ has been the term utilized by Derek Paget during his extensive researches into that form of documentary drama which employs (largely or exclusively) tape-recorded material from the ‘real-life’ originals of the characters and events to which it gives dramatic shape. Though clearly indebted to sources such as the radio ballads of the 'fifties, and to the tradition which culminated in Joan Littlewood's Oh what a Lovely War, most of its practitioners acknowledge Peter Cheeseman's work at Stoke-on-Trent as the direct inspiration - in one case, as first received through the ‘Production Casebook’ on his work published in the first issue of the original Theatre Quarterly (1971). Quite simply, the form owes its present health and exciting potential to the flexibility and unobtrusiveness of the portable cassette recorder - ironically, a technological weapon against which are ranged other mass technological media such as broadcasting and the press, which tend to marginalize the concerns and emphases of popular oral history. Here, Derek Paget, who is currently completing his doctoral thesis on this subject, discusses with leading practitioners their ideas and working methods. Derek Paget teaches English and Drama at Worcester College of Higher Education, and has also had practical theatre experience ranging from community work to the West End, and from Joan Littlewood's final season at Stratford East to the King's Head, Islington.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Visual Arts and Performing Arts
Reference11 articles.
1. Sheffield Radio play ‘based on verbatim material’, and York Shoestring's Life in a Chocolate Factory used taped interviews with Rowntree workers in 1972
2. Evening Standard review by Murdin Lynda , 15 11 1985
3. Parker Charles was producer and prime-mover of the radio ballads, the first of which, The Ballad of John Axon, was broadcast in 1957
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72 articles.
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