Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2123/2500

Title: The Theatre Programme: A Public Discourse at a Staging of Maxwell Anderson's 'Anne of the Thousand Days'
Authors: Heim, Caroline
Keywords: theatre programmes
reception studies
performance research
Maxwell Anderson
'Anne of the Thousand Days'
Issue Date: 17-Jun-2008
Abstract: The term ’public discourses’ describes a range of texts or signifiers that inform the conditions of audience reception. Public discourses include myriad written, visual, spatial, auditory and sensory texts experienced by an audience at a particular theatrical event. Ric Knowles first introduced this term in 'Reading the Material Theatre'. Whereas Knowles was interested in how public discourses modified the conditions of reception, my broader research is to explore how these public discourses become texts in themselves. This paper will discuss one public discourse, the theatre programme, as it related to a staging of Maxwell Anderson’s Anne of the Thousand Days at the Brisbane Powerhouse in June 2006. The significance of the programme was explored at symposiums held after the performances. Audiences generally view programmes before a performance and after a performance and its significance as a written text changes. The program became a sign vehicle that worked to expound and explicate the meaning of the play for the audience. This public discourse became a significant written text contributing to the textual whole of the theatrical event.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2123/2500
ISSN: 978-1-74210-012-8
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