Chorus Member Joined: 12/3/13
Suggestions? Favorites? Least favorites?
Fiction or non-fiction, looking for a few new reads.
Be The Parade Passes By - About Gower Champion
The Abominable Showman - About David Merrick
Everything Is Possible - Re the original Follies
As others come to mind, I will post them. These titles may be out of print so try Amazon
I have to ask: what would a FICTION Theater History book be? Lies?
Better Nate Than Ever by Tim Ferderle is a fiction theatre book.
Chorus Member Joined: 12/3/13
I thought I should have clarified that before I posted. Please include fictional novels that center around the theater. For example, many consider "The Cather in the Rye" to be a valuable source for New York City history even though it is fiction.
So, really, you are looking for any books about theater, at all?
Ginger -- That's a CHILDREN'S book, and nothing to do with Theater History -- which is what the op originally asked for. (As far as I can tell.)
Check out Jenn Tepper's series of books: The Untold Stories of B'way.
As the OP said, "please include fictional novels that center around theatre."
That is a fiction novel which centers around theatre, regardless of the intended audience.
His original post did not make that clarification. His OP asked for theater history books. Sheesh.
Either way, my original post was a response to your question about fictional theatre books. I was pointing out that they do exist.
Broadway Legend Joined: 7/18/11
The Season by William Goldman
Act One by Moss Hart
Ghostlight by Frank Rich
No, my question was asking what a fictional theatre HISTORY book would be like. I know there are fictional books involving theater. There are fictional books about EVERYTHING.
Broadway Legend Joined: 7/29/08
I've read and liked
Stop the Show!, Nothing Like a Dame, Not Since Carrie, Song of Spiderman
Also check out the book or DVD series Broadway: The American Musical
I think we can reasonably interpret "fictional theatre history book" as a historical fiction about theatre.
The two best of the countless books I've read:
THE SEASON, William Goldman (mentioned above)
SONDHEIM & CO. (rev. ed.), Craig Zadan
The worst:
Any of the many editions of HISTORY OF THE THEATRE, Oscar G. Brockett.
Think of Brockett as a pocket encyclopedia. He refuses to cut anything and instead relies on countless paragraphs that list "major playwrights of the 1820s" and the like. It is virtually unreadable as a book. I know because I was forced to teach it for years.
(To be fair, my "best" selections cover the second half of the 20th century, while Brockett is trying to cover all theater history since before the Greeks. But that's his fault, not mine.)
Updated On: 7/25/14 at 06:09 PM
Not mentioned yet-- Everything Was Possible - Ted Chapin
Broadway Legend Joined: 12/31/69
Looks like this is coming out soon…. http://www.bearmanormedia.com/index.php?route=product%2Fproduct&product_id=781
's a PLAY but Compleat Female Stage Beauty is a work of fiction based upon historical events taking place in the Restoration period theatre.
The Libertine is as well come to that.
Eric, Everything Was Possible was mentioned nezr the top.
5, 6, 7, Nate
The Ruby Preston books
Nothing Like A Dame
LOL... I shoulda read better. Oh well, it bears repeating. I would put it up there with The Season (though the homosexual thoughts in that book are badly dated and come off as pretty offensive, it's still a terrific read.)
Agreed, it does bear repeating. I couldn't put it down.
Playing Underground: A Critical History of the 1960s Off-Off-Broadway Movement by Stephen J. Bottoms
Caffe Cino: The Birthplace of Off-Off-Broadway by Wendell C. Stone
On Edge: Performance at the End of the Twentieth Century by C. Carr
Ridiculous!: The Theatrical Life and Times of Charles Ludlam by David Kaufman
Act One by Moss Hart or Second Act Trouble by...I forget who.
Broadway Legend Joined: 5/20/03
Underfoot in Show Business by Helene Hanff
Diary of a Mad Playwright by James Kirkwood
Ooh. I like this thread. Any recommendations for, well, the kind of books that wouldn't be on any respectable theatre history instructor's syllabus?
Less of the academic process stuff and more of the memoir/behind-the-scenes/gossipy-name-dropping-and-full-of-sometimes-wickedly-funny-theatre-anecdotes type of reads?
Videos