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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 6241 through 6250 of 6518

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29. Collected Essays on Drama 1889–1900: “King Harlekin” 10 Jun 1899, N/A
Translated by Steiner Online Library

Rudolf Steiner
This is not a bitter satire, but a humorous poem. The poet understands the necessities of life and describes them without pessimism; but he finds the humorous mood that alone makes it possible to get over the pessimism.
29. Collected Essays on Drama 1889–1900: “The New Century” 24 Jun 1899, N/A
Translated by Steiner Online Library

Rudolf Steiner
He appropriated the legacy of the forgotten genius, "reworked" it in the manner indicated, handed over the philosophical under his name, the dramatic under the name of the Stratford actor Shakespeare to his fellow and posterity.
Worthy performances of this drama could make a significant contribution to the understanding of this struggle. If the stage is to give a picture of the world, it must not exclude itself from the highest thing there is for people in this world, from spiritual needs.
It was no easy task that the Dresden court actors Paul Wiecke and Alice Politz undertook with the artists of the Weimar Theater. But it was all the more rewarding. The solution can be described as a successful one for the time being.
29. Collected Essays on Drama 1889–1900: Viennese Theater Conditions 01 Jun 1889, N/A
Translated by Steiner Online Library

Rudolf Steiner
By charging prohibitively high prices and, in particular, by introducing the "Stammsitz" subscription, the Burgtheater has created an audience that usually has money, but not always an understanding of art. The most frivolous need for entertainment has taken the place of a sense of art. Don't misunderstand us!
A nation like Germany has something better the moment its first stages set a higher standard. If the Burgtheater understands how to create an art-loving audience, then the German writers will deliver good plays to this theater.
29. Collected Essays on Drama 1889–1900: The Burgtheater Crisis 11 Jan 1890, N/A
Translated by Steiner Online Library

Rudolf Steiner
For all his importance as an actor and director, Sonnenthal lacked any understanding of dramatic art. We fear the same from v. Werther and Savits. The names Spielhagen, Paul Heyse and Hans Hopfen were also mentioned.
But what Ludwig Speidel does not seem to know, because he only passes over his name in passing, is that we actually have a good dramaturgical writer who has shown in recent years with every new publication that he has grown, and that is now Heinrich Bulthaupt. Equipped with a fine understanding of the inner technique and aesthetics of drama, few can compete with him when it comes to a penetrating understanding of the art of acting. When Ludwig Speidel accuses him of showing little understanding of the peculiarities of the Burgtheater's acting art, we have a number of things to say about this.
29. Collected Essays on Drama 1889–1900: Our Critics 18 Jan 1890, N/A
Translated by Steiner Online Library

Rudolf Steiner
It is true that Hebbel himself once hinted in the drama that his creation is to be understood in this sense, to be judged from this point of view; but such hints are too tenuous for our critics. One would have to be thoroughly educated to understand them. And so we had to listen to the most petty questions being asked about Hebbel's cosmic poetry, such as: whether the figures are possible, whether the ending is satisfying and so on.
The king does not perish like an ordinary tragic hero, but undergoes a process of purification. Through the inner experience he has had with the passionate Jewish girl, a new man emerges in him.
29. Collected Essays on Drama 1889–1900: Style Corruption by the Press 01 Feb 1890, N/A
Translated by Steiner Online Library

Rudolf Steiner
We mean the corruption of the German style and the German treatment of language. One should not underestimate this fact. A national party in particular must attach importance to the fact that its views and ideas are expressed in a manner appropriate to the nation and in keeping with its nature.
29. Collected Essays on Drama 1889–1900: A Book on Viennese Theater Life 01 Mar 1890, N/A
Translated by Steiner Online Library

Rudolf Steiner
We have shown that stage managers and critics are losing their understanding and audiences are losing their receptiveness to artistic value, and that there is now only a need for light merchandise, sensational plays and frivolous entertainment.
29. Collected Essays on Drama 1889–1900: The Old and the Young 02 Mar 1890, N/A
Translated by Steiner Online Library

Rudolf Steiner
We appreciate youth because we love strength. We also understand the Sturm und Drang that overshoots the mark, but we firmly reject youthful, powerless, rabble-rousing megalomania.
We know well what will be said about these lines in the circles concerned: this is written by a person who is still afflicted by the "old" view of art, who still believes in this garbage of aesthetics and so on, a person who lacks any understanding of the spirit of the age. But my dear "young ones", only believe this: if anything is easy to understand, it is you. For the rest of us need only remember what we understood before we learned anything, then we can grasp you. We are not impressed by such shallowness, by such immaturity.
29. Collected Essays on Drama 1889–1900: The Cologne Hänneschen Theater 08 Jan 1898, N/A
Translated by Steiner Online Library

Rudolf Steiner
To unfold the dramatic action in such a way that these simple forces underlie and dominate the process is the poet's art. The characters who appear in dramatic creations can be reduced to a few basic types.
In Heinrich Laube's case, it was particularly praised that as a director he understood the art of thread drawing. This thread-drawing consists of nothing other than bringing complicated dramatic processes back to a simple basic structure.
29. Collected Essays on Drama 1889–1900: The State National Theater 15 Jan 1898, N/A
Translated by Steiner Online Library

Rudolf Steiner
Those who disagree are not talking about real states, but about an ideal state that leads its existence in cloud cuckoo land. Anyone who has an understanding of the nature and conditions of existence of art would have to admit that a higher branch of culture cannot be better served than by keeping it as free as possible from the influence of the state.

Results 6241 through 6250 of 6518

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