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playwright Jean Claude Van
Itallie, a member of the company, the piece was conceived with the idea that the actors would act as priests and that there would be a sense of one-ness amongst the congregation that they are questioning the same things in which the priest is questioning. Questions such as where does evil come from? What provokes people to commit murder? Is maintaining innocence a possibility within the contaminated world that which we walk upon? Though most of the piece is done in choreographed movement, mime, human sound-effects, hand-held instruments, there is text as well coming directly from the Bible along with a number of speeches written exclusively for the show.
192:. One actor counts slowly to twelve while the other actors partake in the re-enactment in slow motion, moving to a new position and new sound effect per count. This scene is run forward, backwards, and out of order to the point that it becomes so ritualized that there is now an element of comedy in play within this depiction of someone's untimely death. There is a sense of realization of how the horror of the murder rushes over the ensemble as they break free from their rigid formation and become instead a group of individuals fleeing from the evil that has just occurred. The ensemble then moves to the retelling of the banishment of
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oriented, Chaikin's was internal and oriented within the troupe itself. In 1963, Chaikin said "Working together, we teach ourselves." The ensemble worked in the "poor theater" style. There was no need for sets, costumes, props, or any of the other theatrical elements. There were no moving lights, only enough stationary light to be able to see. There was no music, instead, the actors would use their voices to create the sound effects. There were hardly any aspects of "rich" theater involved.
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of sexual love which takes place alongside a recitation of how the descendants of Adam begat the rest of mankind. This passionate celebration of sexuality is very much embraced onstage. The ensemble eventually collapses slowly to the floor when, at first, a hum falls over the group which soon turns into song. They eventually rise to their feet and travel down the aisles embracing audience members and smiling until the song is complete.
109:, Chaikin wrote "Traditional acting in America has become a blend of that same kind of synthetic 'feeling' and sentimentality which characterizes the Fourth of July parade, Muzak, church services, and political campaigns." This further explains the purpose for the Open Theater and the reasoning behind opening such a space.
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only a bare stage. It was not only a matter of economics, it was essential to demonstrate the profound power of the actor's imagination and the actor's ability to create place; i.e. scenery through the power of belief via total technique and through the use of transformation not only of character but of time and place.
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Chilton's exploration of a "post-method", post-absurd acting technique, by way of a collaborative and wide-ranging process that included exploration of political, artistic, and social issues, which were felt to be critical to the success of avant-garde theatre. The company, developing work through an
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for tax evasion. He felt that the Living
Theater had become less interested in artistic exploration and experimentation, and more interested in political activism and he felt that actors needed specific training to do the sorts of pieces that the Living Theater did. The group's intent was to continue
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from the Garden of Eden. Four actors take the shape of the serpent that convinces Eve to eat the forbidden fruit and are present as Eve then moves to convince Adam to partake of it. After being banished by God from the Garden, the actors then partake in a ritual enactment of the first true discovery
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takes an extremely non-direct route in order to answer these questions. The play opens with a group of actors onstage where one recites a graphic description of an autopsy while the other members of the group are creating different sound effects and movements that match the text. Then the remaining
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The Open
Theater formed as an offshoot of the Living Theater. The Living Theater initially divided because actor Joseph Chaikin felt that the troupe had become less interested in artistic exploration and experimentation, and more interested in political activism. He felt that actors needed specific
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Chaikin's theatrical exploration came from within; he was interested in the personal experience of the actor, and of the actor's relationship to the rest of the community. He developed improvisational exercises designed to help the actor become freer. The technique was initially inspired by method
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During the sixties we were concerned with stripping away. Chaikin and the Open
Theater actors worked to reveal the actor's imagination as projected by the actor's presence. We showed that full, exciting theatrical productions could be done with nothing but actors and two benches or four chairs or
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aims to remind the audience of the idea that we are all caught in a neverending battle between the fact that we are neither as innocent nor as guilty as we may think we might be, having fallen victim to the at times foul planet that we reside on. The goal of the play was not to find answers the
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typifies what is extraordinary about the Open
Theater. The production is a perfect example of experimental theatre at the time and how willing the company was to employ unconventional theatre techniques that were based on improvisation in order to create a very pointed piece. According to the
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Chaikin used ensemble casts as a way to explore the relationship between the actor and the outside world. He relied on the performers to interact not as characters in fictional settings, but as real people in real situations. While the Living
Theater's ensemble was very external and audience
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acting, in which the actor draws on his or her own experiences and emotions, but the goal of
Chaikin's work was to free the actor from the natural restraints of method acting. He called his technique the "sound and movement" technique. In his book entitled
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I felt a terrific longing for a kind of ensemble. I wanted to play with actors, actors who felt a sensitivity for one another... In order to come to a vocabulary, we had to teach each other: we had no ambitions other than to meet and play around...
134:... Off-off broadway is really an attack on the fourth wall. I want to destroy the fourth-wall business. I have difficulty believing most of what happens on Broadway. Mary Martin's like a character in a television commercial: nobody'’s like that.
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Chaikin disbanded the Open
Theater in 1973, amid fears that it was becoming too institutionalized. He later went to work for the Public Theater. Chaikin continued to create workshops, but he was increasingly working on mainstream projects.
86:'s "poor theater" in Poland. According to playwright Megan Terry, the notion of a minimalist aesthetic was fueled by the company's quest to achieve narrative insight and political accountability through the body of the actor:
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which criminalized the interstate transport of females for "immoral purposes". However, the movie producers pointed out that no actual sex had taken place and that the actors had not crossed a state line since the town of
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specific questions which were asked, but rather to visualize these inquiries through improvisation and to help the actors, as well as the audience members, to find their own personal truths.
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After the company's dissolution, its members formed The
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Endgame, American Hurrah, The Mutation Show, Nightwalk, and Terminal.
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130:'s impulse was a terrific dissatisfaction with what is possible on
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training to do the sorts of pieces that the Living Theater did.
425:(Autumn 1977). "American Experimental Theatre: Then and Now".
357:(1st ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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Some of the company's best known works include Terry's
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Joseph Chaikin: Exploring at the Boundaries of Theater
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295:"Joseph Chaikin 67; Actor and Innovative Director"
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244:in Death Valley in a scene in the 1970 movie
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631:– via ProQuest Historical Newspapers.
653:Defunct theatre companies in New York City
578:"Screen: Antonioni's 'Zabriskie Point'"
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321:"A Brief History of the Open Theater"
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213:(1966) with musical compositions by
602:Flatley, Guy (February 22, 1970).
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293:Blumenthal, Ralph (2003-06-24).
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78:process drawn from Chilton and
576:Canby, Vincent (10 Feb 1970).
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497:"Poor Theatre - Drama Online"
190:John F. Kennedy assassination
548:Liz Diamond (July 1, 1999).
155:Disbanding and further works
349:Blumenthal, Eileen (1984).
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501:www.dramaonlinelibrary.com
107:The Presence of the Actor
521:"Joseph Chaikin papers"
428:Performing Arts Journal
219:Jean-Claude van Itallie
100:Theatrical explorations
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525:Kent State University
234:Other works included
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143:The ensemble met on
32:experimental theatre
604:"Antonioni Defends
472:xroads.virginia.edu
403:Richard Kostelanetz
325:xroads.virginia.edu
264:Spiderwoman Theater
613:The New York Times
419:Carolee Schneemann
300:The New York Times
259:is in California.
57:), Peter Feldman,
55:The Living Theatre
478:on March 31, 2002
468:"tableofcontents"
395:Lawrence Kornfeld
387:Stanley Kauffmann
331:on March 31, 2002
16:(Redirected from
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383:Sam Shepard
229:The Serpent
227:(1966) and
201:The Serpent
185:The Serpent
177:The Serpent
164:Productions
67:Julian Beck
63:Sam Shepard
59:Megan Terry
642:Categories
562:2023-01-11
531:2023-01-11
506:2016-04-22
482:2016-04-21
407:Carl Weber
364:0521285895
335:2023-01-11
306:2016-04-22
270:References
38:Foundation
622:119016835
527:Libraries
210:Viet Rock
618:ProQuest
252:Mann Act
231:(1969).
139:Location
132:Broadway
48:director
587:20 July
449:3245333
30:was an
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