The playwrights quote texts in Filipino, the language of nationalism in the Philippines. |
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There are poets, playwrights, essayists and those who can write articles on various topics among them. |
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His work was to become hugely influential on artists, playwrights and dramatists, film-makers and photographers throughout the 20th century. |
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I think he probably broke some world record for making novice playwrights feel like pond scum. |
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Journalists, novelists, poets, playwrights, historians, and film-makers have all reconstructed the affair and put it to various uses. |
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The influence of playwrights like Pinter and Beckett was more apparent in his teens. |
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There's no shortage of playwrights wrestling with the knotty problems of the modern world. |
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It was a productive time for both film-makers and playwrights, with houses full and involvement high. |
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He is said to be one of our leading playwrights, who may have reasons transcending merely legal ones for his incognito. |
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They specialise in the less well-known works of major European playwrights such as Ionesco. |
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Young directors work closely alongside the playwrights, both eager to enable each other to learn and discover from each other. |
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We take on two wannabe playwrights per year and match them up to dramaturges. |
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Long before Shakespeare's death the playwrights had lost confidence in their power to offer a conspectus or compendious view. |
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Eighteenth century playwrights and novelists often made their hero a criminal, a highwayman or confidence trickster. |
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Second, most actors and playwrights remained anonymous or adopted pen-names. |
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All in all, it is reminder that even with a natural talent, playwrights do not necessarily spring fully formed. |
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The most notable of the playwrights are Aeschylus, Euripides and Sophocles. |
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He compares the preoccupation with the extremes of the Jacobeans to the extremes of recent playwrights. |
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Actually, late sixteenth-century playgoers, actors and playwrights considered the stage as a set of funerary items and buildings. |
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George F Walker is one of Canada's most prolific and widely-produced playwrights. |
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As you know, the relationship between playwrights and dramaturges is rather delicate. |
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There's a rising generation of playwrights who have been very fortunate to teach and who are starting to have impact. |
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Ever since, we have circled each other amiably, two playwrights on similar trajectories. |
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The North-west playwrights showcase will then feature two plays by up-and-coming North-West writers. |
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The artists presenting work ranged from traditional monologuists and playwrights to dancers and emcees making their first forays into theater. |
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I had a little tiff with my friend Lisa after the playwrights left in which I brought Brownies to Lisa's place and invited her to eat one. |
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Even under the Stuarts, when scholars were becoming wary of it, it was still celebrated by poets and playwrights. |
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The Chelsea Theatre is committed to presenting new plays by new writers alongside premieres by established playwrights. |
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It could be that a fashion for clever-clever post-modernism has drained the soul from our playwrights and the politics from their writing. |
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He never forgot birthdays, bread-and-butter letters or calls to give his students, his friends, playwrights and actors best wishes for their first nights. |
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The plot may have been plundered on countless occasions by playwrights, film-makers and novelists, but nevertheless its emotional impact still packs a powerful punch. |
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The playwrights who wrote for the public stage depicted characters who demonstrated a fetishistic preoccupation with clothes and who dressed ostentatiously. |
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If cosmetic, commercial reality has found favour, spare a thought for those playwrights who have taken the people's idiom and heightened it with poetic overtones. |
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The sense of topicality, of playwrights engaging with matters of public concern, helps override the structural weaknesses from which both plays suffer. |
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Without these valorous adventurers, Napoleon would be as difficult to understand as Shakespeare, without the pre-Elizabethan playwrights. |
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Numerous poets and playwrights had first-hand experience of the wars. |
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She said that the solution to the problem is not to make theatres hire more black actors but to get more black playwrights to write plays for them. |
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The playwrights seem to suggest that by not opening up, men remain lost. |
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Dramaturgy and workshops were held throughout the year to assist playwrights in preparing their work for potential production. |
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Novelists, poets and playwrights all see such biographers as parasites. |
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There was a line-up of Late Review personalities along one wall, among them several very well-known playwrights whose names remain forever on the tip of your tongue. |
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Sarwat Siddiqui, the winner of a young writers' project from Fordham University, will join the playwrights. |
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I was fascinated by the ability of playwrights to construct the worlds into which we are drawn. |
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It took me some minutes to adjust to the thought that I was sitting between two of the great playwrights of the age. |
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Some 39 poets, essayists, authors and playwrights will participate in it. |
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He is one of the most performed European playwrights alive, with more than 900 productions staged in more than 40 languages. |
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This inaugural season explored the role of the artist in society through the lens of Canadian playwrights. |
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He is eager to give Canadian playwrights the opportunity to create works on a larger scale by making more resources available to them. |
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Before the emergence of copyright, writers, musicians, playwrights, and other creative artists relied upon state sponsorship and elite patronage. |
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Moreover, due to the demographic decline in small Anglophone communities, the opportunities to present works by Anglophone playwrights are few. |
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These grants were used for networking, bringing dramaturges and playwrights to festivals and professional development activities. |
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The Playwrights Guild of Canada represents professional playwrights writing predominantly in the English language. |
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Whether they be painters, poets, dancers or playwrights, professional artists of all stripes walk a tightrope. |
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Rather than seeing himself as a descendant of a long line of respected Irish playwrights, he claims his influences are film directors and V-sign flicking punks. |
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Here, the audience is the winner just as much as the great playwrights. |
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In his last phase, he wrote tragicomedies, also known as romances, and collaborated with other playwrights. |
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The new emphasis on speech also caused producers to hire many novelists, journalists, and playwrights with experience writing good dialogue. |
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With a voice as round as he was, he loved to pontificate to producers, fellow theater owners, union leaders, actors, playwrights, journalists, stagehands and mayors. |
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The world's first published author, Homer, dealt extensively with it, as did the immortal playwrights for whom its unavoidability became the leading theme in Greek tragedy. |
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The performance you will see tonight presents works by teenage playwrights from those cities, selected through an extended process of dramaturgical development. |
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We should follow the example of Terence Rattigan, one of the finest playwrights this country has ever produced. |
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New faces and new characters created by playwrights famed and unfamiliar inspirit the start of Marathon 2003, the theater's 26th annual festival of new one-act plays. |
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In many ways ours is a simple diet, but-as all the world knows-it has nourished a complex and remarkable assortment of poets and playwrights, politicians and pugilists, actors and orators, philosophers and wits. |
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As the great tragic playwrights of ancient Greece taught us, we ought to start afresh from that point, not least so that we can develop a new idea of reception and hospitality for Europe. |
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Poets, scholars, and playwrights dreamed and put pen to paper. |
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Nicola began inviting him to remount his productions of works by O'Neill, Williams, and other American playwrights, but with American actors instead of Dutch ones. |
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Councils were organized to abolish the use of racial stereotypes in theatre and to integrate black playwrights into the mainstream of American dramaturgy. |
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Countless painters, novelists, playwrights, poets, photographers, actors, filmmakers and couturiers from every nation under the sun have stayed here a while or made their home here, inspired and bewitched by the city's magic. |
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Those poets put me in touch with novelists and eventually playwrights. |
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How can we justify to playwrights a decline in their rights that results in a further loss of income and control over the distribution of their works, both on stage and via the Internet? |
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It's a matter of survival for us and respect for the works of playwrights. |
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A review of the relevant literature reveals that much of the important criticism and scholarship on theatre in Canada is written by playwrights, producers and other members of theatrical communities. |
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She has designed the premiere productions of plays by many of Canada's most illustrious playwrights through her long association with companies such as the Tarragon Theatre. |
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Besides exhibitions that present works created by Czech artists, Czech film projections and theatre performances featuring plays written by Czech playwrights, the Czech Centres organize Czech courses abroad, too. |
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Students will present works by Canadian and other playwrights, and develop original material based on personal narratives, local community issues, or global concerns. |
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Like all playwrights of the time, he dramatised stories from sources such as Plutarch and Holinshed. |
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Examples of classicist playwrights are Pierre Corneille, Jean Racine and Moliere. |
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The influence of these French rules on playwrights in other nations is debatable. |
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In the English theatre, Restoration playwrights such as William Wycherly and William Congreve would have been familiar with them. |
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At the beginning of the reign of James I, King of England, in 1603 Jonson joined other poets and playwrights in welcoming the new king. |
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These theatres stage a high proportion of straight drama, Shakespeare, other classic plays and premieres of new plays by leading playwrights. |
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During the 1950s and 1960s many major British playwrights either effectively began their careers with the BBC, or had works adapted for radio. |
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In the 18th century, Oliver Goldsmith and Richard Brinsley Sheridan were two of the most successful playwrights on the London stage at that time. |
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Important modern playwrights include Nobel laureate Harold Pinter, Tom Stoppard, Alan Ayckbourn, John Osborne, Michael Frayn and Arnold Wesker. |
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Crawford lists numerous playwrights whose work owes something to that of Shaw. |
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The Archives of Welsh Authors include the work of authors, poets, playwrights, scholars, journalists and archdruids of the Gorsedd. |
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Other influential writers and playwrights include Oscar Wilde, Jonathan Swift and the creator of Dracula, Bram Stoker. |
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Famous playwrights within this genre include Beckett, Sartre, Ionesco, Adamov, and Genet. |
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The tragic playwrights Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides took most of their plots from myths of the age of heroes and the Trojan War. |
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Famous contemporary playwrights and novelists are Nobel prize winner Elfriede Jelinek, Peter Handke and Daniel Kehlmann. |
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Famous contemporary Austrian playwrights and novelists include Elfriede Jelinek and Peter Handke. |
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Those writers were an important influence the many Moroccan novelists, poets and playwrights that were still to come. |
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Venetian playwrights followed the old Italian theatre tradition of Commedia dell'arte. |
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From 1940 into the 21st century, American playwrights, poets and novelists have continued to be internationally prominent. |
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Especially useful are the inclusions of experimental playwrights, dramaturges, and directors such as Talvin Wilks and Edgar White. |
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Venice has long been a source of inspiration for authors, playwrights, and poets, and at the forefront of the technological development of printing and publishing. |
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Other notable playwrights whom Esslin groups under the term, for example Arthur Adamov and Fernando Arrabal, were at some point members of the Surrealist group. |
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These were connected with another great symbol of the literary revival, The Abbey Theatre, which served as the stage for many new Irish writers and playwrights of the time. |
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Griselda Gambaro, Copi, Roberto Cossa, Marco Denevi, Carlos Gorostiza, and Alberto Vaccarezza are a few of the most prominent Argentine playwrights. |
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Barrie was involved in the 1909 and 1911 attempts to challenge the censorship of the theatre by the Lord Chamberlain, along with a number of other playwrights. |
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There was a concentrated Expressionist movement in early 20th century German theatre, of which Georg Kaiser and Ernst Toller were the most famous playwrights. |
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These pioneering playwrights were unafraid to present their characters as ordinary, impotent, and unable to arrive at answers to their predicaments. |
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The Spanish Tragedy was often referred to, or parodied, in works written by other Elizabethan playwrights, including William Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, and Christopher Marlowe. |
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On the other hand, Jonson received less attention from the new critics than did some other playwrights and his work was not of programmatic interest to psychoanalytic critics. |
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Vulgar Latin was the colloquial form spoken during the same time and attested in inscriptions and the works of comic playwrights like Plautus and Terence. |
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More recently the playwrights Alan Ayckbourn, Harold Pinter, Michael Frayn, Tom Stoppard and David Edgar have combined elements of surrealism, realism and radicalism. |
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Also, Beacham, 123 stated that Roman playwrights, including Accius, who wrote a Bacchae, Pheonissae, and Meleager, based them on Euripidean models. |
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When the Roundheads closed the English theaters in 1642, would-be playwrights were forced to pen closet dramas, deploying the full range of theatrical devices on paper alone. |
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Their playwrights knew better. Scandal, murder, hair-rending and railing against the gods sold tickets. King is not a philosopher. He knows how to sell tickets. |
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However, most Irish playwrights went abroad to establish themselves. |
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Most playwrights of the period typically collaborated with others at some point, and critics agree that Shakespeare did the same, mostly early and late in his career. |
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This popularity was helped by the rise of great playwrights such as William Shakespeare and Christopher Marlowe as well as the building of the Globe Theatre in London. |
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Tennessee Williams is well established as one of the 20th century's great playwrights, but his play Baby Doll has taken a long and roundabout route to the British stage. |
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