This study of British amateur theatre in the inter-war period examines five different but interwoven examples of the belief, common in theatrical and educational circles at the time, that amateur drama had a purpose beyond recreation.

Amateur theatre was at the height of its popularity as a cultural practice between the wars, so that by 1939 more British people had practical experience of putting on plays than at any time before or since.

Providing an original account of the use of drama in adult education projects in deprived areas, and of amateur theatre in government-funded centres for the unemployed in the 1930s, it discusses repertoires, participation by working- class people and pioneering techniques of play-making. Amateur drama festivals and competitions were intended to raise standards and educate audiences. This book assesses their effect on play-making, and the use of innovative one-act plays to express contentious material, as well as looking at the Left Book Club Theatre Guild as an attempt to align the amateur theatre movement with anti-fascist and anti-war movements. A chapter on the Second World War rectifies the neglect of amateur theatre in war-time cultural studies, arguing that it was present and important in every aspect of war-time life.

Don Watson builds on current scholarship and makes use of archival sources, local newspapers, unpublished scripts and the records of organizations not usually associated with the theatre. His work explores the range and diversity of amateur drama between the wars and the contributions it made to British theatre.

This edition is published in association with the Society of Theatre Research.

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List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations

Introduction: Amateur Theatre and History
Chapter 1: ‘A Theatrical Revival on Democratic Lines’: Drama and the People after the Great War
Chapter 2: 'A Co-operative Community Effort': Educational Settlement Theatre
Chapter 3: Social Control or Self-expression? Amateur Drama and the Unemployment Crisis
Chapter 4: Competitions, Festivals, Politics
Chapter 5: ‘The Terribly Urgent Struggle’: The Left Book Club Theatre Guild 1936-39
Chapter 6: ‘A Remarkable Revival in Dramatic Work and Interest’: Amateur Drama during the Second World War
Conclusion: The Contribution of Theatre with a Purpose

Notes
Bibliography
Index

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A new evaluation of amateur theatre and social action between 1919 and 1949.
Provides a new perspective on the social and cultural history of the inter-war and war years
The Bloomsbury series of Cultural Histories of Theatre and Performance recognizes that historical knowledge has always been contested and revised. Since the turn of the twenty first century, the transformation of conventional understandings of culture created through new political realities and communication technologies together with paradigm shifts in anthropology, psychology and other cognate fields have challenged established methodologies and ways of thinking about how we do history. The series embraces volumes that take on those challenges while enlarging notions of theatre and performance through the representation of the lived experience of past performance makers and spectators. The series aim is to be both inclusive and expansive, including studies on topics that range temporally and spatially, from the locally-specific to the intercultural and transnational.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350232082
Publisert
2025-08-07
Utgiver
Vendor
Methuen Drama
Vekt
340 gr
Høyde
232 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
20 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
224

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Don Watson is an independent historian based in North East England. His previous publications include Squatting in Britain 1945-1955: Housing, Politics, and Direct Action (2016) and No Justice Without A Struggle: The National Unemployed Workers’ Movement in the North East of England 1920-1940 (2014). He has been contributing to historical journals for more than thirty years.