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Word: brustein (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...divided people into two groups, the tough-minded and the tender-minded. The distinction is not one between hard-headedness and sentimentality, but between a certain intellectual coherence and a sort of scatterbrained intellectuality. However you use the term "tough-minded," though, it clearly is applicable to Robert Brustein. He is a man who has fought for an intellectually respectable program at the Yale Drama School, where he is dean, and also one whose commentaries in the New Republic and elsewhere are extremely forthright and even acidulous, betraying taints of creeping handlinism...

Author: By Michael Ryan, | Title: Theatre Revolution as Theatre | 2/18/1971 | See Source »

...Something is eating me," writes Brustein in his new book. "I have the conviction, and it grows rather than lessens, that we are living in a profoundly decadent society. Worse, I suspect that some of the very things that are taken as symbols of transformation are themselves further signs of decline. Our age is apocalyptic, which means that human or institutional failings of any kind can become the occasion for total refusal, so that whatever is solid and firm in our tradition is abandoned along with whatever is corrupt." Stating his apocalyptic vision at the start, Brustein uses...

Author: By Michael Ryan, | Title: Theatre Revolution as Theatre | 2/18/1971 | See Source »

...Brustein is one of those respected old-line liberals who today occupy the right wing of the political spectrum in the American university. He is a man who was on the Left when it was hard to be on the Left, who put his career as a director on the line for the right of his actors to use the American flag on stage as a prop, who paid his dues to the Movement long ago. But now he has chosen to lash out against those to his left in a tone of frenzied polemic which insures that they will...

Author: By Michael Ryan, | Title: Theatre Revolution as Theatre | 2/18/1971 | See Source »

...Some of Brustein's arguments against the Living Theatre, for instance, are valid. A theatre which rejects the traditions of the dramatic art in favor of a nebulous, ephemeral attempt to draw its audience into spur-of-the-moment participation is not creating art; whatever sort of internalized art the participants may think they feel, they have not, and can not, transfer it beyond themselves into any permanent form, and permanence is the soul of art. Yet the belittling manner in which Brustein talks about the Living Theatre and its directors, and for that matter about the Yale faculty...

Author: By Michael Ryan, | Title: Theatre Revolution as Theatre | 2/18/1971 | See Source »

...REVOLUTION AS THE ATRE is the title of one of Brustein's most controversial essays, which appeared in the New Republic a year or so ago. Its thesis is that the political events of contemporary America are theatre, not reality. Thus: "When James Forman disrupts a church service to demand reparations from Episcopalians or when Sonny Carson and his followers, Mace in hand, grab the microphones at a Regional Plan Association meeting discussing New York's master plan, then we know that the incidents have been staged for the newspaper reporters and television cameras, and should, therefore, be more properly...

Author: By Michael Ryan, | Title: Theatre Revolution as Theatre | 2/18/1971 | See Source »

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