Episode 43: Being Melodramatic with the Staging Napoleonic Theatre Project episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 18, 2019 · 1H 15M

Episode 43: Being Melodramatic with the Staging Napoleonic Theatre Project

from The Theatre History Podcast

Nowadays, when someone accuses you of being "melodramatic," it's got a pejorative connotation, and usually means you're acting in an overly emotional and hyperbolic way. But melodrama, which emerged during the French Revolution, was a rich and complicated theatrical genre. Now, the team behind the University of Warwick's Staging Napoleonic Theatre project, which includes Dr. Katherine Astbury, Dr. Diane Tisdall, and Dr. Sarah Burdett, is working to both study and stage melodramas. They've already performed Roseliska, a unique piece written by French prisoners-of-war in England, and they're preparing to stage La forteresse du Danube, one of the many hits written by Renè-Charles Guilbert de Pixerècourt, who claimed to have invented the genre. They joined us to talk about melodrama's origins and how it worked onstage, as well as to demonstrate how music was an integral part of these spectacular plays.

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Episode 43: Being Melodramatic with the Staging Napoleonic Theatre Project

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This episode was published on November 18, 2019.

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Nowadays, when someone accuses you of being "melodramatic," it's got a pejorative connotation, and usually means you're acting in an overly emotional and hyperbolic way. But melodrama, which emerged during the French Revolution, was a rich and...

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