This volume is the first authoritative historical textbook to look at the origins, development and evolution of seaside pierrot troupes and concert parties and their popular performance heritage. It will provide, for the first time, a definition of the pierrot troupe and its evolution from the roots of European popular traditions such as the commedia dell'arte and minstrelsy, to links between music hall and contemporary popular culture. Tony Lidington will explore how pierrot troupes grew from a single idea into a major international cultural industry and how it boosted morale and national…mehr
This volume is the first authoritative historical textbook to look at the origins, development and evolution of seaside pierrot troupes and concert parties and their popular performance heritage. It will provide, for the first time, a definition of the pierrot troupe and its evolution from the roots of European popular traditions such as the commedia dell'arte and minstrelsy, to links between music hall and contemporary popular culture. Tony Lidington will explore how pierrot troupes grew from a single idea into a major international cultural industry and how it boosted morale and national identity during the two World Wars, before sublimating into contemporary pop music and comedy. Tony's continuing practice as research provides an experiential framework for the historical and ethnographic analysis of the form. This book will be of vital interest to students, researchers, and performers of outdoor (al fresco) arts, clowning and comedy, minstrelsy, vernacular music-making and music hall.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Tony Lidington is associate lecturer of Drama at the University of Exeter, UK. Tony has been a professional showman for 40 years - researching and implementing British popular entertainment forms in a wide variety of contexts throughout the country. He is founder and performer of the last-remaining professional seaside pierrot troupe the "Pierrotters" and has performed at countless resorts and events as his alter ego "Uncle Tacko!"
Inhaltsangabe
List of figures Thanks! Support for writing and illustrations Acknowledgements Note about cover images Preface: "The Pierrot fable" Introduction 1 "Here we are again!": Current practice 2 "Trope to troupe": The origins of Pierrot in Britain 3 Minstrels: White and black 4 "The Seaside Minstrels" 5 Proliferation 6 "Bringing Blighty to the Boys with troupes for the troops": Pierrot troupes and concert parties in the First World War 7 Ambiguities in the evolution of the form and its developments during the inter-war years 8 Khaki-clad pierrot heroes: British concert parties/pierrot troupes in the Second World War 9 "It's that troupe again ...": Concert party adaptations for the airwaves and post-war British pop culture 10 "Impacts and reverberations": The ways in which the seaside troupe format has directly affected contemporary culture 11 Conclusion: Pierrots and concert parties provide a portal to past, present and future popular culture Appendices Appendix 1: Timeline of pierrot/concert-party projects by Tony Lidington Appendix 2: Programme for Moore & Burgess Minstrels, April 14th 1877 Appendix 3: early members of Clifford Essex's troupe Appendix 4: Table illustrating the date of the first connections to seaside resorts by steamer and railway Appendix 5: Spreadsheet of troupes with the words "Royal" or "Imperial" in the title Appendix 6: List of troupes formed prior to the First World War Appendix 7: Song books & publishers for pierrot troupes and concert parties Appendix 8: List of troupes operating in the First World War Appendix 9: Pierrot troupe list for 1918-1939 Appendix 10: Numbers of ENSA performances (from information provided by Basil Dean) Appendix 11: Annual budgetary expenditures for ENSA Appendix 12: List of seaside shows opening 1946-1961 Appendix 13: The Roosters Glossary of terms References Index
List of figures Thanks! Support for writing and illustrations Acknowledgements Note about cover images Preface: "The Pierrot fable" Introduction 1 "Here we are again!": Current practice 2 "Trope to troupe": The origins of Pierrot in Britain 3 Minstrels: White and black 4 "The Seaside Minstrels" 5 Proliferation 6 "Bringing Blighty to the Boys with troupes for the troops": Pierrot troupes and concert parties in the First World War 7 Ambiguities in the evolution of the form and its developments during the inter-war years 8 Khaki-clad pierrot heroes: British concert parties/pierrot troupes in the Second World War 9 "It's that troupe again ...": Concert party adaptations for the airwaves and post-war British pop culture 10 "Impacts and reverberations": The ways in which the seaside troupe format has directly affected contemporary culture 11 Conclusion: Pierrots and concert parties provide a portal to past, present and future popular culture Appendices Appendix 1: Timeline of pierrot/concert-party projects by Tony Lidington Appendix 2: Programme for Moore & Burgess Minstrels, April 14th 1877 Appendix 3: early members of Clifford Essex's troupe Appendix 4: Table illustrating the date of the first connections to seaside resorts by steamer and railway Appendix 5: Spreadsheet of troupes with the words "Royal" or "Imperial" in the title Appendix 6: List of troupes formed prior to the First World War Appendix 7: Song books & publishers for pierrot troupes and concert parties Appendix 8: List of troupes operating in the First World War Appendix 9: Pierrot troupe list for 1918-1939 Appendix 10: Numbers of ENSA performances (from information provided by Basil Dean) Appendix 11: Annual budgetary expenditures for ENSA Appendix 12: List of seaside shows opening 1946-1961 Appendix 13: The Roosters Glossary of terms References Index
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Internetauftritt der buecher.de internetstores GmbH
Geschäftsführung: Monica Sawhney | Roland Kölbl | Günter Hilger
Sitz der Gesellschaft: Batheyer Straße 115 - 117, 58099 Hagen
Postanschrift: Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg
Amtsgericht Hagen HRB 13257
Steuernummer: 321/5800/1497
USt-IdNr: DE450055826