Difference between revisions of "Legitimate theatre"

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "Legitimate Drama/theatre (“the legit”) are terms term which arose in England during the eighteenth century, to refer to the Patent Theatres in contrast to the “illigitimate...")
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 11:46, 7 September 2010

Legitimate Drama/theatre (“the legit”) are terms term which arose in England during the eighteenth century, to refer to the Patent Theatres in contrast to the “illigitimate” (= unregistered and unlicenced) theatres. Later applied to all five-act plays with little singing, dancing and spectacle, and which depended entirely on acting – in contrast to the encroaching farce, musical comedy, revues and melodrama (see Hartnoll). This concept was brought to South Africa by British performers and managers, but basically died out as a term in the profession in the twentieth century. However has on occasion been utilized by writers to differentiate the kind of formal, text bound theatre from a variety of other forms in the country, a necessary though contentious distinction at times, particularly as theatre practice opened up in the latter half of the twentieth century. (Loren Kruger for example distinguishes the a hegemonic belief in the legitimate stage and ironically contrasts this “ legitimate”South African theatre to the rising “New African theatre” )


Return to South African Theatre Terminology and Thematic Entries

Return to Main Page